Medium band, Pandemonium Steel Orchestra, will kick off today’s lengthy proceedings when the country’s top 31 medium and large bands hit the stage in the annual Panorama Conventional Bands competition at the Queen’s Park Savannah from 1 pm.
Shell Invaders Steel Orchestra will lead the way later on as the Large Bands, featuring between 100 and 150 players, take the stage.
Though there have been competitive ties before, this year’s competitions have been noteworthy for the number of deadlocks—three each in the medium and large categories leading up to today’s semis.
It would meanwhile occur to many that last year’s large band final yielded a tie involving BP Renegades and Massy All Stars—two of this year’s strong contenders. In January, there was also a two-way tie for first place among the small bands with nothing to separate T&TEC New East Side Dimension and Golden Hands with 279 points.
The preliminary ties mean that today’s encounters will see 15 large and 16 medium bands on stage instead of the stipulated 14 bands per category, “in order of merit.”
The preliminary round of competition among the large bands failed to find an adjudged difference between the performances of third-placed BP Renegades and T&TEC Tropical Angel Harps, each on 273 points.
And there were four bands tying for 6th place on 271 points—Phase II Pan Groove, NLCB Fonclaire, Heritage Petroleum Skiffle, and RBC Redemption Sound Setters. Four bands also tied for 10th on 269 points—Nutrien Silver Stars, Shell Invaders, Heritage Petroleum Siparia Deltones, and NLCB Buccooneers.
There was, however, a one-point difference between frontrunners Republic Bank Exodus Steel Orchestra on 276 points and First Citizens Supernovas on 275. The ties mean that all 15 preliminary contestants will be on stage today.
At the preliminary stage for the medium bands, there was nothing to separate Curepe Scherzando from San City Steel Orchestra for 11th place with 257 points apiece. There was a similar situation involving the three 14th-placed bands—Pandemonium Steel Orchestra, Trinidad Valley Harps, and NGC Steel Xplosion.
The third tie was for 17th place, involving two bands that did not qualify for today’s contest—Valley Harps Steel Orchestra and Power Stars. Last week’s large band preliminaries began in the East Zone with Exodus and Supernovas delivering stirring but contrasting versions of their selected tunes—Too Own Way by Voice and Kes the Band’s Cocoa Tea respectively.
There were capacity crowds to witness the proceedings both in Lopinot and St Augustine.
When the action moved to the North Zone on Monday, however, audiences outmatched anything witnessed in the East with police contingents called in to manage huge flows of pedestrian and road traffic.
When the judges made their way down to the South Zone on Tuesday, it was clear that the competition would be equally keen, as the results eventually reflected—NLCB Fonclaire leading the way.
Tobago’s two-band challenge was equally intriguing, with Redemption Sound Setters emerging superior, playing Lord Kitchener’s 1976 Road March winning, Flag Woman.
Overall, Bet Meh by Machel Montano and Cocoa Tea shared the honours as the most played tunes—three times apiece.
Today’s marathon proceedings will determine the top ten bands in each category to face each other in the finals. The medium band finals will be hosted in Tobago on February 23 and the large band finalists will face each other at the Queen’s Park Savannah on March 1. Semifinal ties can expand the numbers.