Tobago Correspondent
As soon as Katzenjammers Steel Orchestra was announced the winner of the Medium Band Panorama Finals 2025, Pan Trinbago president Beverly Ramsey-Moore wasted no time in addressing the criticism she knew was coming.
In a Facebook post yesterday, she told the critics to “rock so with the bull (sic).”
In the post, she questioned why past executives could perform with their bands without issue, while her band’s participation now seemed problematic.
She then sarcastically suggests that judges, whose integrity was previously unquestioned, somehow feared her, probably “with a gun pointed to their heads saying (katzen) jammers or nothing.”
Ramsey-Moore said the judges had no reason to compromise their integrity.
But hours before her Facebook post, standing firmly behind her band’s victory, Ramsey-Moore preemptively dismissed any allegations of bias, making it clear that Katzenjammers’ success was based on talent, ability and pure skill—as decided by the judges—not personal connections.
Katzenjammers, managed by Ramsey-Moore, secured another win with an arrangement by Kersh Ramsey—Ramsey-Moore’s nephew.
However, just like after the band’s victories in 2023 and 2024, she was quick to shut down any claims that family ties influenced the outcome, calling out critics as “fully dunce.”
Asked on Sunday night by Guardian Media how concerned she was about another round of possible criticism, especially after she had had to—on several occasions over the past two years—defend the band, its skills and her ties with the arranger, she said, “I’m not afraid to answer that question.
“I am not running from that at all. I own it (Katzenjammers). Kersh is my nephew, but he is an excellent musician.
She pointed out that many current executive members also played in their bands, which the organisation’s constitution allowed.
“As long as you’re in Pan Trinbago, you must be a member of a band. So, whether it is this president or any other president or even members of the executive.
Katzenjammers is the band I belong to, and they deserve to win; they played well. All the other bands were excellent, but there can be only one winner if there is not a tie.”
Throughout yesterday, some in the pan community raised concerns about fairness. But Ramsey-Moore made it clear that she would not entertain any accusations of wrongdoing, standing by Katzenjammers’ victory as a well-earned triumph.
Meanwhile, Chief Secretary Farley Augustine said it was unfair to project upon Ramsey-Moore any malfeasance as the reason why her band won.
“The other side of the coin is, should they not participate at all?” he asked.
He described the criticism as foolish.