Panyard Vibes – The Home of Steelband Music

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Panorama 2026 — Small Conventional Steelband Finals Results


As we continue to populate this new blog with information about Panorama 2026, this post features the outcome of the Small Conventional Steelband competition results. We  posted the results on our sister blog when the competition took place. This feature is to bring the results to our official steelband music blog. 

The 2026 National Panorama Small Conventional Steelband Finals have crowned Southern Stars Steel Orchestra and Uptown Fascinators Steel Orchestra as joint champions. The event took place on Saturday, January 10, 2026, at Skinner Park, San Fernando, where sixteen bands delivered a night of tight performances and fierce musical competition.

In a rare outcome, judges recorded six ties across the final standings—one of the highest tie counts ever seen in a Panorama final. The top of the table was no exception, with two bands sharing the championship title.

🏆 Winners & Top Placings

🥇 Joint 1st—283 points
Southern Stars Steel Orchestra (D’ South Band)  
Selection: “Let Us Build A Nation Together”  
Arranger: Duvone Stewart

🥇 Joint 1st—283 points
Uptown Fascinators Steel Orchestra  
Selection: “Band From Space”  
Arranger: Ojay Richards

🥉 3rd Place — 278 points
Golden Hands  
Selection: “All Aboard”

🎖 4th Place—276 points
Tunapuna Tipica Steel Orchestra  
Selection: “Party Hot”

This year’s Small Conventional Finals will be remembered not only for its musical quality, but for the remarkable number of ties—a testament to how closely matched the bands were in creativity, execution, and overall performance.

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Small Conventional Bands Panorama Finals
Where: Skinner Park, San Fernando
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Calypso Dial, where rhythm lives. Steelband and Calypso music pulse year‑round, not only at Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Panorama 2026 — Single Pan Results Now on Panyard Vibes


Back in November 2025, we posted the results of the Single Pan Panorama Finals for Carnival 2026 — but at that time, Panyard Vibes wasn’t even an idea yet. The results were originally published on Sokah2Soca, where the journey began.

Now here we are—Panyard Vibes is alive, and we’ve made sure to upload the full record to our Pan blog. This is just the start. We’ll be posting the Panorama 2026 results for all categories, so the full celebration of steelpan excellence lives right here.

Panorama 2026 began with the Single Pan Band Finals in late November 2025 at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port of Spain. From the very first note, the energy signaled the start of Carnival.

Winners – Single Pan Band Category
🥇 San Juan East Side Symphony Steel Orchestra (Back-to-Back Champions)

A commanding performance of “Jumbie” by Machel Montano, arranged by Duvone Stewart, secured the title and continued their winning legacy after their 2025 victory.

Respect to all 25 bands who brought the music, the discipline, and the spirit of pan to the stage.

Panorama is more than results—it’s the sound, the movement, and the feeling. And while recordings capture the music, nothing compares to experiencing steelpan live.

This is the sound of Carnival 2026. Next up, small conventional band performances and results.  

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Single Pan Band Panorama Finals 
Original recording: WeCapture 
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Calypso 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Calypso Dial, where rhythm lives. Steelband and Calypso music pulse year-round, not only at Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
“Jumbie (Madness Muv Short Edit)” by Machel Montano is featured at the top, while the arrangement by San Juan East Side Symphony, led by Duvonne Stewart, appears lower in the listing alongside other steelband performances. 

Monday, March 16, 2026

When DJs Got Loud, Black Stalin Spoke for Pan: Respect the Steelband


The late Leroy Caliste, better known to the world as Black Stalin, gifted us with many powerful songs, but one that continues to resonate deeply within the steelband community is “Respect the Steelband.”

This song emerged at a critical moment in Trinidad and Tobago’s Carnival history. During that time, the growing presence of DJ music trucks on the road was beginning to overshadow the traditional steelbands. The sound systems were so loud that as masqueraders danced through the streets on Carnival Monday and Tuesday, the music of passing steel orchestras could barely be heard.

Black Stalin used his voice to address this very issue. Through “Respect the Steelband,” he reminded us of the importance, pride, and cultural value of the national instrument and the steelbands that helped shape the spirit of Carnival.

Today, the message of the song still lives on.

Listeners of WACK Visual Radio know it well. Every Sunday, right after the show we jokingly call “De Dotish Hour,” the steelband segment hosted by Vanessa Headley-Brewster begins. The signature tune that introduces that segment is none other than “Respect the Steelband.”

Though Black Stalin is no longer with us, his music and message continue to inspire generations. Kudos to WACK Visual Radio for keeping the flame burning. We applaud the use of this song, heard every Sunday on the radio station. 

We too are doing our part. Yes, this is a steelband music site, but we can and will always celebrate the music that made this instrument a must-see and must-hear for the Panorama competition. Today on Panyard Vibes, we celebrate the song and the man who brought it to life.

Respect the Steelband. Always.

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Song Title: Respect the Steelband 
Performed by: Leroy Caliste
Sobriquet: Black Stalin
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Year: 1998
Genre: Calypso 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard Lime, where rhythm lives. Steelbands and calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Panyard Vibes — What “Pan in Yuh Pwefen” Really Means


“Pan in yuh pwefen” or 'pweffen," is one of those Trinidadian expressions that only makes sense when you feel it. Calypsonian Crazy brought the phrase to life in his 2014 song, but the meaning goes deeper than the lyrics. It’s a way of describing steelpan music that hits you straight in your chest—music so sweet, so well‑played, that you feel it in your whole body.

In Trinidad and Tobago, people use the phrase when a steelband delivers a performance that is tight, melodic, and full of emotion. When the arrangement is clean, the groove is right, and the band is locked in, someone will say, "Dais pan in yuh pwefen!” 

That phrase is a favorite of Damion Melville, radio host on WACK Visual Radio. As a matter of fact, hearing Damion say these words so often kept the phrase stuck in my head and here we are today with this post. 

It’s one of the highest compliments you can give a steelband.

That’s why the phrase became even more meaningful in 2014, when Pandemonium Steel Orchestra performed Crazy’s “Pan in Yuh Pwefen” for the Small Conventional Bands Panorama Finals. Under the arrangement of Akua Leith, the band delivered a performance that truly lived up to the name—sweet lines, clever musical ideas, and a vibe that touched the audience.

Crazy gave the phrase its voice.
Pandemonium gave it its proof.

Together, the song and the performance show exactly what “pan in yuh pwefen” is all about: steelpan music that reaches your spirit, moves your soul, and reminds you why the instrument is the heartbeat of the culture.

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Song Title: Pan in Yuh Pweffen
Performed by: Edwin Ayoung
Sobriquet: Crazy
Composed by: Winston Maingot
Steelband Panorama Small Band Performance: Pandemonium 
Arranged by: Akua Leith
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Calypso/Steelband Music 🎶
Year: 2014

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard Lime, where rhythm lives. Steelbands and calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
Top: Crazy—Pan in Yuh Pwefen | Bottom: Pandemonium—Pan in Yuh Pwefen

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Dorothy, Pan & the Last Train: The 1950 Calypso Behind the Modern Hit


Ohhh no, folks—this isn’t Mical Teja’s “Last Train”!  
This post dives into the steelband rendition performed by the legendary Woodbrook Invaders, along with a few historical gems about the original “Last Train to San Fernando” and the musical spark that helped inspire Mical Teja’s modern hit.

Think of it as a little cultural sampler—a true potpourri of pan history, calypso lineage, and musical storytelling, all wrapped up in that unmistakable Panyard Vibes energy.

This tune actually dates all the way back to 1950, when it was the Road March of the year. And don’t get the title confused with the actual last train to San Fernando that ran in 1965.

What you’re hearing here is the ancestor—the spark, the musical seed that stirred Mical Teja’s genius and helped inspire the creation of “Last Train.”

This right here is Last Train to San Fernando, a classic Trini calypso written and first sung by Mighty Dictator. In this rendition, it’s brought to life on steelpan by the legendary Invaders Steel Orchestra of Woodbrook—one of the earliest pioneers of steelband music.

But here’s an important piece of history.

The title did not mean that the final train would ever run to San Fernando. In the calypso, the “last train” simply meant the last train of the night, not the end of the railway line.

Back when the song was written in 1950, trains were still operating normally on the Trinidad Government Railway system. One of the main routes ran between Port of Spain and San Fernando, which became the industrial capital of Trinidad and Tobago. Gosh, if we had the train system today, transportation would have been so much better!

Every evening there was a final scheduled departure—commonly called the “last train.”

The calypso tells a playful story.
The singer meets a woman named Dorothy. They’re enjoying themselves, but suddenly she realizes she must hurry—because she has to catch the last train home to San Fernando.

That’s where the urgency in the song comes from.

The confusion comes later. Passenger rail service in Trinidad was permanently discontinued in 1965, so some people assume the song refers to the final train ever. But in reality, the song was written 15 years earlier, when trains were still running every day.

Long before the modern soca rhythms and contemporary arrangements we vibe to today, Invaders was shaping the soundscape of Trinidad & Tobago—experimenting, innovating, and laying the foundation for generations of pan musicians to come.

Their rendition of “Last Train to San Fernando” is more than a melody. It’s a piece of cultural memory—a reminder of how deeply our music is rooted in creativity, rebellion, and joy.

So when you hear Mical Teja’s “Last Train,” you’re not just hearing a modern hit.
You’re hearing echoes of the pioneers—the panyard nights, the iron and pan, the spirit of Invaders, and the timeless pulse of Trinidad & Tobago’s musical evolution.

This is heritage.
This is legacy.
This is Panyard Vibes.

Addendum (Historical Note):
There remains some debate regarding the authorship of Last Train to San Fernando. While the song is widely attributed to Mighty Dictator, some sources contend that it may have been written earlier by Mighty Spitfire (Carlton Joseph Gumbs) during the 1940s.

At present, the historical record contains conflicting accounts. Further research and documentation from calypso archives, recordings, and contemporaneous sources would help clarify the song’s true origins and ensure that proper credit is preserved for the cultural record. 

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Song Title: Last Train to San Fernando 
Performed by: Woodbrook Invaders
Original song by: Mighty Dictator (real name Kenneth St. Bernard) 
Written by: Sylvester DeVere, Randolph Padmore, and Mighty Dictator
Original singer: Mighty Dictator
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Year of release: 1950
Genre: Calypso/Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard Lime, where rhythm lives. Steelbands and calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
Top: Woodbrook Invaders Bottom/Song: Last Train to San Fernando

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Mr. Desmond wants to Know: Would You Party All Night to a Steelband Again?


Last night on WACK Visual Radio, Mr. Desmond threw out an intriguing challenge to the listening public.

He challenged the listening audience to envision a time when steelbands played a pivotal role in carnival events, a time when individuals would don their finest party attire, cover the entrance fee, and spend the entire evening dancing to the captivating melodies of steelband music.

The question was simple:
If a steelband was hired to perform at a party today, would you support the event? Would you come out and fête to steelpan music?

To spark the conversation, Mr. Desmond played a steelband version of KC and the Sunshine Band’s classic, “How About a Little Love.” Then he challenged listeners to call in and identify which steelband orchestra was performing the tune.

Several callers tried… but no one could identify the band.

So today on Panyard Vibes, we’re featuring that very clip from WACK Visual Radio.

We considered challenging you similarly, but we had to upload the track to SoundCloud with the song name. So, we spilled the beans in that regard. But listen and enjoy. 

Production Notes/Music Credits:
A Test: Panyard Vibes Challenge
Hosted by Mr. Desmond on WACK Visual Radio 90.1FM
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard Lime, where rhythm lives. Steelbands and calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).

Monday, March 9, 2026

Primary School Pan, National‑Level Pride: St. Margaret’s Boys’ Anglican Take the Title


We can’t leave out the nursery pool of steelbands in this country. The young performers stepped up beautifully, delivering their best with heart and discipline. Although they may not yet possess the same level of enthusiasm as the older kids, their enthusiasm is evident. We salute the next generation—and the dedicated people guiding them toward excellence in steelpan music.

Drumroll… Congratulations to St. Margaret’s Boys’ Anglican Steel Orchestra on capturing first place at the National Primary Schools Panorama Finals, 2026. We applaud every band that took the stage and all those who continue to support, mentor, and represent our national instrument with pride.

The results were as follows: School/Name of Song/Singer/Points Scored
01. St. Margaret's Boys' Anglican School Steel Orchestra - Voice - Year for Love - 279 points
02. Febeau Government Primary Steel Orchestra—266 points
03. San Fernando Boys' RC Steel Orchestra - Explainer—Lorraine—265 points 
04. St Paul's Anglican Primary—262 points
05. Guaico Presbyterian School—257 points
06. Escallier Anglican Primary—254 points
07. Barataria Anglican Primary—242 (tie for 7th place) 
07. Nelson Street Boys' RC—242 (tie for 7th place) 
07. Success RC Primary—242 points (tie for 7th place) 
10. St. Patrick's Newtown Boys and Girls—236 points 
11. Bethlehem Boys’ and Girls’ RC Primary—235 points
12. Morvant Anglican Steel Orchestra—232 point

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Secondary Schools Panorama Finals
Date: 01/19/2026
Streaming Service: "I am living my life."
Competition Venue: Skinner Park, San Fernando
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard Lime, where rhythm lives. Steelbands and calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Secondary Schools Panorama 2026 – Young Talent Takes the Stage


School days are indeed happy days, and we can all relate to this fact.  Participation in events makes those school days memorable indeed, as they foster camaraderie and create lasting friendships among students. However, the Secondary Schools Panorama competition shapes those memories not only through joy but also through intense musical rivalry. Young pan players pour their hearts into every note, pushing themselves and their bands toward excellence.

A school from a so-called "country district" brings a unique sense of satisfaction when it excels and surpasses institutions from more urban, better-resourced areas. Victories like these remind us that talent, discipline, and passion can outshine reputation and funding any day.

We should applaud those responsible for the success of these impressionable minds.  The arrangers, tutors, teachers, and all who work quietly behind the scenes play an essential role in shaping these performances. Their dedication ensures that the next generation of pannists will not only perform with brilliance but will also be musically literate—able to read, interpret, and arrange music, carrying the artform forward with confidence and skill.

When the final notes faded and the judges’ scores were tallied, Holy Faith Convent of Penal emerged as the 2026 champions, earning 257 points and finishing 17 points ahead of Presentation College.

Below is the order of appearance and the results for the top four bands.

We’re also grateful that I Am Living My Life was on hand to capture these outstanding performances. Thanks to their work, we’re able to bring the music directly to Panyard Vibes for your listening pleasure.

So settle in, enjoy the performances, and join us in celebrating the well‑deserved victory of Holy Faith Convent of Penal, champions of the Secondary Schools Panorama 2026.

Secondary schools finalists (order of appearance): Band/Song Played
  • Georgian Knight Steel Orchestra—Mas Go Play.
  • Presentation College Steel Orchestra—Fallin’.
  • NAPS Combined (Naparima Girls’ & Naparima College)—Peace of Mind.
  • Speyside/Roxborough Secondary—Blessing.
  • La Romaine Secondary—Jamtown.
  • Waterloo Secondary – Cocoa Tea.
  • PVille Panjammers (Pleasantville Secondary)—Cheers to Life.
  • The Brazil Pan Warriors—Take Me Home.
  • Diego Martin North Steel Orchestra—Take Me Home.
  • Holy Faith Convent, Penal Steel Orchestra—Live Yuh Life (Like Yuh Playing Mas)—Kes ft. David Rudder.
Final Results/Scores:
  1. Holy Faith Convent, Penal—Live Yuh Life (Like Yuh Playing Mas)—274 points.
  2. Presentation College, San Fernando—257 points.
  3. NAPS Combined—former champions (2019, 2023) placed in the top three.
  4. Pleasantville (PVILLE Panjammers)—252 points.
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Secondary Schools Panorama Finals
Date: 01/19/2026
Streaming Service: "I am Living my Life."
Competition Venue: Skinner Park, San Fernando
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Panyard lime, where rhythm lives. Steelband and Calypsos provide the steelband pulse year-round, not just during Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
Kes feat. King David Rudder—Live Yuh Life (Like Yuh Playing Mas)—2012

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Youth Pan Excellence: Valley Stars Claim Under-19 Crown at Junior Panorama 2026


Something different unfolded this year in the Junior Panorama calendar. Instead of the usual staggered schedule, both the Under‑19 and Under‑21 categories held their finals together on Sunday, January 18, 2026, at the Queen’s Park Savannah in Port of Spain. The Schools' Panorama Finals are still scheduled for Monday, January 19, but the youth bands showcased their talents a day earlier.

This post highlights the Under‑19 Finals, where St. Francois Valley Stars delivered a winning performance that captured the judges’ attention and the audience’s hearts. Their musical execution and youthful energy earned them the top spot in a competitive field. You can explore the music and judge the performances for yourself, as we list the full results for the category below.

Youth Panorama continues to evolve, and this year’s shift in scheduling gave the Under‑19 (players aged 18 and younger) and Under‑21 (players aged 20 and younger) players their spotlight—a well‑deserved moment for the next generation of pan excellence, showcasing their talent and potential in front of a larger audience.

The recording presented here from WeCapture showcases the top three places for the competition. There was a tie for second place. The results are posted here.  

National Junior Panorama Under 19 Finals 2026 Results:
1stSt. Francois Valley Stars—Too Own Way—Aaron "Voice" St. Louis—277 Points
2ndBishop Anstey & Trinity College East Steel OrchAaron "Voice" St. Louis—274 Points
2ndSapphonic Steel Orchestra—Jamtown—Coutain x Tano—274 Points
4th—BARS of Steel—Jamtown—Coutain x Tano—273 
5th—Knights of Steel—The Bee's Melody—Aldwyn "Lord Kitchener" Roberts—270
6th—Legacy Steel Orchestra—Blessings—Blaka Dan—269
7th—Symphony of Saints—Jamtown—Coutain x Tano—265  
8th—East P.O.S. Stars Steel Orchestra—Jamtown—Coutain x Tano—263  

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Panorama 2026: National Junior Panorama Finals 
Recorded by WeCapture 
Posted to SoundCloud
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Calypso Dial, where rhythm lives. Steelband and Calypso music pulse year‑round, not only at Carnival. 🌴✨  Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
Voice - Too Own Way

Friday, March 6, 2026

Under 21 Junior Panorama Champions 2026: Planting the Seeds of Steelband Greatness


The Junior Steelband Panorama is more than a competition—it’s a nursery for the next generation of pan players. Today, we celebrate the bands and music that made the 2026 finals unforgettable. The champions will hold their crown until King Carnival returns in 2027, but this victory has already planted seeds of ambition, inspiring young musicians to strive for excellence in their craft.

This year’s event may not have matched the scale of previous editions—due to financial and logistical constraints—but the love for steelpan was unmistakable. You could see it in every participant's face, proud to be part of a moment that will echo through pan history.

We applaud the youth, the dedicated adults, and the financially responsible organizers who made this celebration possible. The support of established steelbands played a vital role, offering instruments, mentorship, and encouragement that deepened appreciation for the art form and welcomed more young people into the fold.

To all who participated: bravo. To the victorious band: hearty congratulations. More importantly, congratulations to Shell Invaders Youth Steel Orchestra for winning this year's competition. Keep the vibe alive, because as we love to say here at Panyard Vibes—It Iz We Ting!

Top four places are as follows:
1. Shell Invaders Youth Orchestra—Band From Space—Edwin Ayoung aka Crazy
2. bp Renegades Youth Orchestra—Jamtown—Dennzil Nigel Coutain  
3. T&TEC Tropical Angel Harps Youth Orchestra—This Melody Sweet—Timothy Watkins aka Baron
3. Supernovas Youth Orchestra—Ah Feel To Party—Dr. Leroy Caliste aka Black Stalin 

Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Junior Panorama Finals
Recorded by: WeCapture—SoundCloud Panorama Live Portal
Where: De Savannah, Port of Spain 
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband 🎶

Empowering Caribbean Creatives
🎧 Share. Amplify. This is your Calypso Dial, where rhythm lives. Steelband and Calypso music pulse year‑round, not only at Carnival. 🌴✨ Help elevate Caribbean music and culture—be a cultural ambassador and spread the word. 👉 Find us on Facebook and YouTube.

We present the music here for your listening pleasure and promotional purposes only, adhering to the "Fair Use" Musical Content Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Kaiso Dial/Calypso Music Blog © 1990 by Santiwah is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
♫Please press the music player button below to listen now (small triangle in the Music player/TV Frame).
Band from Space - Crazy