Stick around pan long enough - in all its manifestations as a musical instrument and agent of social mobilisation and change - and you eventually realise that any “beating” experienced will come from its own hands.
For example, one of my most embarrassing
panyard moments came when my pan instructor delivered a public boof on me for
knocking the skirt of a double second with the wooden end of a pan stick, in
order to rein in fellow student chatter.
“If that was a piano, you would bang on it like
that?” she asked. That cut deep, as someone who has advocated vociferously against
the use of “beat” to describe the “playing” of this instrument.
So, though I had witnessed such a violation over
the years, and had felt bad about it, as a pan playing newbie it was important
that I internalised the lesson and displayed respect and appreciation for the
instrument to which I routinely assign glorious accolades.
Certainly, I have never been a domestic
disaster tourist daring to brave otherwise prohibited turf once a year and then
to pronounce authoritatively on its egalitarian impacts.
It has long been clear to me that the
instrument, together with the social movement that keeps it alive and valuable,
has consistently delivered “beatings” of its own on cynics, sceptics, and the ignorant
who have attempted to diminish its value as the single greatest thing we do as
a country.
Be clear, when Merchant sang Pan in Danger in
1985 it was meant to be a rallying call to recognise its value as a national
asset and not something marginal to the development effort.
His message was sadly adopted as a double-edged
sword to simultaneously signal some kind of decline … which never came … and to
trigger jingoistic protectionism.
But Merchant was in fact administering licks on
politicians and others, including the pan leadership, for not recognising the
vast potential of something that had much wider meaning for T&T society.
It was also not an appeal to “patriotic” passions
to achieve pan exclusivity. For, even then, as the song concedes, pan playing
and innovation had already leapt an invitingly low fence and gone their merry
way to the UK and elsewhere. Such sharing suggests no loss by the sharer.
Pan beatings on fascist emotions over pan have
since come fast and furious. Everybody, everywhere now knows and uses the
appropriate size of the rubber on a pan stick.
Though we remain the place where you find the
best players playing the best songs guided by the best arrangers on the best pans,
tuned by the best tuners in the world, the steelpan is now a global musical,
social, and economic asset benefiting players, audiences, and musical landscapes
far and wide.
This is not to say that we should continue
missing valuable intellectual property opportunities when it comes to some
aspects of pan innovation, music, musical arrangements, design, and other
attributes.
Because of pan, one can argue that we are the
country with the most people per capita who can play a musical instrument beyond
the rudiments of classroom introduction. There is no cause to be insecure about
it.
All the while, though, and because music (as
with all art) is about taste and aesthetic preference, there will always be
those who just do not like it. That’s fair enough. But pan is clearly more than
the music it delivers.
There is also the set who, even as they linger restlessly
on the periphery of the instrument and all it means, gratuitously and routinely
attempt to drag pan into their dark, grimy, tribal spaces.
Last weekend’s Small Bands Panorama Finals put
a sound beating on all of them. Small bands from small communities with big
sounds lashed hard. Young people were also there to belie a lack of generational
enthusiasm.
Even when the players and followers grow to become
paying patrons and supporters, there is this nonsense about young people not
being interested in pan.
Reducing “support for pan” to occupied seats at
a competitive venue betrays a complete lack of understanding of what pan means
to us.
The steelpan “saved” many of us at the height
of pandemic lockdowns, beating both pessimism and the ridiculous notion of mere
seasonal relevance.
This year’s Panorama contests are also witnessing
a generational transition in the area of musical arrangement. This is not solely
because of organised events; it is happening because pan is not in danger.
The success of pan is not contingent on the
quantum of state largesse – however desirable it might be as a supportive
mechanism resulting from official edict or proclamation.
There is a lot of work to be done by all
concerned – Pan Trinbago being but one of many stakeholders. But pan will not
be beaten. It delivers licks of its own. Bun dem!
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