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RECORDED PAN CONCERT IN TRINIDAD

Sanch Breaking New Ground with Technology

"Now is the time to break new ground. All I want is for people to hear this system. We want Trinidad to get an idea of what good sound quality is in an outdoors broadcast.’’ And that is the reason for the January 13th, Recorded Pan Concert at the Savannah in Port-of- Spain, being presented by Sanch Electronix. In an interview with Sean Douglas and reported in the Trinidad Express, Simeon Sandiford, Founder and Managing Director of Sanch, asserted that "We think we’ve got good technology for recording pan [and] we’ll broadcast a CD to show how life-like it sounds.  We’ll play our CD music loudly enough to simulate exactly how it was when it was recorded with 100 players.’’ 

The program for the Recorded Pan Concert will include "From Tabanca to Rain’’ played by Neal and Massy All Stars Steel Orchestra. Producer Sandiford disclosed that the All Stars CD was being released after taking 14 years to compile and was so named because its selections ranged from "Curry Tabanca’’ (1987) to "Rain Melody’’ (2001). Other selections include Kitchener’s "Heavy Roller’’, "Pan Earthquake’’ and "The Power of Music’’ and Sparrow’s "Doh Back Back.’’

Emphasizing the raison d’etre for the concert Sandiford pointed out: "What we want to do is demonstrate to people that this music is not a joke. At [Trinidad] Panorama people don’t hear the detail of the music, and that’s not doing any good for the future of the [instrument, compositions, arrangements and] industry’’. He remarked that the fete atmosphere at Panorama meant that patrons never truly got to hear the steelband music. Sandiford also said that "At Panorama players get into a frenzy and play their music too fast, causing a lot of technical problems. In our recordings we have music played at Panorama, in the panyards just before the bands go to the Savannah and in panyards at the slower speeds of their normal practice sessions.

From the musicianship development perspective, he said that recorded pan music would help standardize the performance of pan players. Recorded CDs, Sandiford added, could also help younger pannists learn older and [classic] songs: "Most learn aurally anyway, so you just put on the CD for them in the panyard and they learn’’.

Another use of recorded pan music, Sandiford said, was to help steelbands experiment with different orchestral arrangements of their various sections. "Just like conventional orchestras, setting up different groups of instruments in different areas of the concert hall evolved over time, so too we are still evolving the process of how to set up a steelband properly. So a recording allows you to sit back and critique, ‘Am I hearing this section properly?’ Steel orchestras are still set up by trial and error, and it was never done scientifically. [For] over 15 years the recordings I have done in the Savannah are very variable because of different set-ups, barring differences in the quality of the players, you should still have a benchmark’’. Sandiford is convinced that high quality recordings will serve to create that measure.

Another aid to better pan playing and audience listening is the libretto-like Appreciation printed in the Tabanca To Rain CD booklet for the popular Carnival song "Rain Melody".

RAIN MELODY – AN APPRECIATION

Calypso

Rain Melody

Composer and Singer

Barnet Henry (Preacher)

Arranger

Leon "Smooth" Edwards

Recording Date

Feb 23/24 2001, 8.00 p.m. to 3.00 a.m.

Recording Engineer

Simeon L. Sandiford

Steel Orchestra

Neal and Massy Trinidad All Stars

Venue

Panyard, Duke Street, Port of Spain, Republic of Trinidad and Tobago

Players

28 tenors, 6 double tenors, 14 double seconds, 10 triple guitars, 10 quads, 6 tenor basses, 15 six basses, 1 nine bass, 13 piece rhythm section

Real time

Musical status

0.00

Prelude to a Thunderstorm

0.13

Count and panyard ambience

0.17

Introduction in B major

0.30

Rain motif. Repeat at 0.32, 0.34, 0.36

0.44

Thunder-clap

0.45

First water motif (baroque). Drum solo. 16 heartbeats of anxiety

0.55

Crescendo

1.06

Verse

1.31

Chorus. Rain motif at 1.35, 1.39, 1.59

2.10

Variation on verse

2.44

Middle pans solo

3.07

Rain. Repeated at 3.08, 3.09, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, 3.14

3.17

Reggae licks on snare drum. Repeated at 3.21, 3.25

3.27

Stretching of rain motif; Rain coming...coming...coming…Scratchers and Iron in unison with melody. Repeated at 3.31, 3.35

3.41

Decrescendo. Time to shelter

3.48

Rain. Rain motif at 3.51 and 3.55

3.57

Jam

4.21

Modulation. Water rising to flood levels

4.32

Rain motif

4.43

Change key to C sharp major

4.55

Second water motif (baroque). Bystander’s electronic watch alarms

5:03

Call and response (frontline and bass). Ecstasy of playing in rain

5.27

Re-harmonization of melody

5.50

Decrescendo. Time to shelter

5.53

Third water motif (baroque)

6.13

Crescendo

6.19

Bass solo on verse

6.45

Ripples. Rain motif on basses at 6.47, 6.51, 6.55, 6:59, 7.03,7.07, 7.11

7.15

Unison passage to simulate trumpet fanfare. Remember Alla Hornpipe from Water Music Suite

7.17

Call and response (frontline and middle pans)

7.25

Weather forecast. Rain motif at 7.28

7.34

Turbulence. Changing weather pattern. Thunderstorm imminent

7.50

Call and response (frontline and middle pans)

7.56

Change key to E Flat Major. Jam. Bass plays verse, frontline plays chorus. Rain motif at 7.58, 8.00,8.02, 8.04, 8.06, 8.08, 8.10, 8.12

8.12

Thunderstorm. Frontline creating water. Bass playing verse. Cymbals answering bass to simulate four strikes of lightning at 8.20, 8.28, 8.36,8.44. Rain motif on middle pans at 8.16, 8.20, 8.24, 8.28, 8.32, 8.36, 8.40, 8.44 Remember Pastorale Symphony 4th movement

8.43

Ecstasy of playing in rain again

8.46

Jam. – Raindrops. Rain motif at 8.49, 8.53, 8.57, 9.01

9.02

Modulation. Rain motif on middle pans at 9.05, 9.09, 9.13, 9.17. Rain motif at 9.19, 9.21, 9.23, 9.27, 9.29, 9.31, 9.33

9.35

Prelude to a hailstorm (tenor sticks reversed). Rain motif on middle pans at 9.38, 9.42, 9.46

9.48

Drum solo. Anxiety as time ticks away awaiting hailstorm. Band inadvertently runs out of sync with rhythm

9.52

Hailstorm. Rain motif on middle pans at 9.54, 9.58, 10.02, 10.06

10.08

Calm after hailstorm. Rain motif at 10.08, 10.10, 10.12, 10.14. Remember Pastoral Symphony 5th Movement.

10.23

Decrescendo and finale

© 2001 Simeon L. Sandiford & Jason "Stumps" Lewis

 

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Last update: 03/19/12

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