Trinidad’s culture is alive, breathing, and constantly moving, and this share is another reminder of how deeply it lives in the everyday spaces of the people. Thanks to my friend Izah Trini Lenny, this livestream from vlogger I Am Living My Life reaches Panyard Vibes with all the authenticity and warmth of home. This is Pan on the Parkway!
Republic Bank hosts/sponsors Pan on the Parkway! So as not to confuse anyone, the event is not on "The Parkway in Brooklyn" but "De Parkway" in Point Fortin, Trinidad. Come on... I had to say it!
As part of the Point Fortin Borough Day 2026 celebrations, it captures the kind of grassroots cultural richness that, if you follow her long enough, will show you more of Trinidad than even our national Carnival. That’s not an exaggeration — her broadcasts take you straight into the heart of the island. So settle in, enjoy the evening, and help carry our culture across the world.
Pan on the Parkway came alive through the livestream, blending steelpan music, community, and Borough pride into one seamless celebration. With the link shared by 'Izah Trini Lenny' for 'I am living my life,' the energy of the Mahaica Sports Complex felt close even from afar.
Featuring a strong lineup of steelbands:
Holy Faith Convent Penal Steel Orchestra
LA47 Steel Orchestra
Southern Stars Steel Orchestra
Pan Elders Steel Orchestra
Skiffle Bunch Steel Orchestra
Republic Bank Exodus Steelband
And more!
From sweet melodic runs to full‑force Parkway power, the music reminded viewers why steelpan remains the heartbeat of Trinidad & Tobago’s identity. Families, pan lovers, and longtime supporters filled the venue from 5 PM to 11 PM, creating the warmth and pride that define Point Fortin. Through the livestream, the diaspora stayed connected to home, experiencing the rhythm, joy, and cultural unity that make Borough Day unforgettable.
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Pan on the Parkway - Steelpan Vibes All Night - Point Fortin Borough Day 2026
Live YouTube broadcast via "I am living my life."
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.
Tonight we join “I Am Living My Life” to witness what can only be described as an experimental panorama. They call it “Panorama” simply because a handful of bands—mostly unknown outside their districts—are competing for a feature prize.
This is a College Steelpan event— not a national competition. So be kind with your comments. Just enjoy the evening of local talent on display.
To be clear, this is UTT Panorama 2026 Live, an event sponsored by the University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT) for a select group of steelbands. But let’s be honest — we don’t mind the details. We tune in for this live coverage solely for the sake of more steelpan music.
From "I am living my life" YouTube post:
Experience the energy, the music, and the competition as these talented university steel orchestras bring their best to the stage.
Whether you’re a steelpan lover, a supporter, or just curious about the next generation of talent, this event is one you don’t want to miss.
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: UTT Panorama 2026 Live
Origin: Trinidad, Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.
Genre: Steelband Music 🎶
The Bands:
Psycho Tonz
Pentatonic
Heavy Hitters
Fuzion
Drum roll for the winning band... Psycho Tonz!
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.
This post was taken from Sokah2Soca and redone for Panyard Vibes. The expanded post celebrates the talent and movement that is Renegades Steel Orchestra.
The 2025 large conventional band season closed with a reminder of why steelband culture remains one of the most emotionally charged and artistically rich traditions in Trinidad and Tobago. The margin between first and second place was a mere three points—close enough to spark debate, but wide enough to affirm the excellence on display. What unfolded at Carnival Lagniappe, however, was something different from the spectacle of Panorama finals. Gone were the theatrics, the dramatic stage entrances, and the showmanship designed to dazzle. Instead, there was something more authentic: music that stood alone, unadorned and unfiltered, speaking directly to the hearts of those gathered at the Queen's Park Savannah.
Renegades, the 2025 runner‑up and co‑champion from the previous year, approached the stage with the confidence of a band that knows its worth. Their performance was not a rebuttal delivered in anger but a statement delivered in sound—measured, elegant, and unmistakably theirs. While some in the South may have argued that Skiffle deserved the second‑place finish, Renegades used the Lagniappe stage to reaffirm their position with grace and authority. Under the steady guidance of arranger Duvone Stewart, they reminded the audience why their name carries such weight in the steelband world. Every phrase was shaped with intention, every dynamic shift executed with care, and every moment infused with the unmistakable sweetness that has become their signature.
Carnival Lagniappe itself lived up to its promise. As a gathering of champions and top contenders, it offered a final opportunity to savor the season’s best music without the tension of competition. Bands played for the joy of it, and the audience—both in Savannah and online—responded with the kind of appreciation that only comes when music is allowed to breathe. It was a night that celebrated not just winners but the entire ecosystem of artistry that makes Panorama what it is.
For Renegades’ supporters, the evening was especially satisfying. Stewart’s arrangements have long been admired for their emotional clarity and technical brilliance, and hearing the band deliver his work outside the pressure cooker of finals allowed fans to appreciate the nuances even more deeply. The competition may have ended weeks earlier, but the music still carried the glow of triumph. When the final notes faded and the racks were wheeled away, there was a collective sense that something meaningful had been shared—something that transcended rankings and rivalries.
In the end, Carnival Lagniappe 2025 succeeded because it honored the essence of steelband culture: community, craftsmanship, and the unbreakable bond between players and listeners. Renegades’ presence was essential to that success. As co-champions from the previous year (2024) and one of the country's most beloved bands, they brought musical excellence and emotional continuity to the event. Their performance helped shape the night into an unforgettable celebration of Carnival’s finest.
One truth remains clear: Renegades continue to stand as a pillar of the art form. Their contribution to Carnival Lagniappe was not just another appearance—it was a reminder of why steelband music endures, evolves, and remains motivating.
Let us spread awareness of the Caribbean diaspora's culture.
🎧Listen. Share. Amplify. Our artists embody culture not only during Carnival but also on a daily basis. Sokah2Soca—Where Rhythm Lives and Calypso, Steelband Music, and Soca are thriving!. You can find all of our posts online on social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Spotify, andSoundCloud. We recommend that you explore your favorite content on FeedSpot/RSS Feed, Threads, Bluesky, and Twitter/X, including email subscriptions. Thank you in advance.
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Carnival Lagniappe 2025
Achievement: Second Place Large Conventional Steelbands Panorama Competition
We celebrate the recently concluded Panorama competitions for Carnival 2026, from the days of Lord Blakie singing about steelband clashes to the glamorous days of sweet steelpan music at the Queen's Park Savannah. This post brings you a recap of Panorama 2026 and the joy that steelpan music brings to carnival season.
While the image presented with this post is a clip from the Exodus victory celebrations in the large conventional band category, we believe it goes beyond that; it celebrates steelband music and its role in bringing joy to the carnival season.
We tweaked and reformatted, just a little, the Pan Trinbago YouTube post:
From the heartbeat of the Panyard to the grandeur of the stage, the Large Conventional Band Finals remain the sacred meeting ground where generations of mastery converge. Here, the most seasoned Steelband musicians carry not just instruments but the weight of legacy—history, passion, and pride forged in every note.
Because this is more than music…
this is identity.
Born in struggle.
Forged in resilience.
Rising in glory.
The soul of the Steelpan belongs to Trinidad and Tobago—the land that birthed its fire—but its voice, its music, and its magic have become a gift we’ve shared with the world. A gift shaped in the Panyard, sharpened in competition, and lifted by the hands of people who love this instrument with their whole spirit.
And with every roll, every strike, every rhythm that echoes through the night,
we proclaim it boldly and without apology:
I Love Pan. ❤️🇹🇹
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: National Panorama Finals for Carnival 2026
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.
There are performances that entertain, and then there are performances that reaffirm music’s role as one of the most profound cultural forces we share. On August 21st, 2021, at Opera Holland Park, accomplished pannist and Panorama-winning arranger Andre White delivered the latter—a musical interlude that unfolded like a living dialogue between Caribbean heritage, jazz improvisation, and the collective spirit of an audience eager to reconnect after a time of global uncertainty.
Backed by the Engine Room Collective, Andre stepped onto the stage with the quiet confidence of a musician who understands both his instrument and his lineage. His presence alone signaled that the performance would be more than a routine set; it would be a journey through memory, rhythm, and the emotional landscape of the Caribbean diaspora.
The evening opened with “Caribbean Connection,” a Merchant classic reimagined through the lens of jazz phrasing and steelpan brilliance. The arrangement pulsed with warmth—a deliberate invitation for the audience to lean in, loosen up, and allow the music to transport them. Andre’s touch on the pan was crisp yet fluid, weaving melodies that felt both familiar and newly alive. In that moment, the distance between London and the Caribbean seemed to collapse.
As the performance unfolded, Andre’s rapport with the crowd became a defining feature of the night. He coaxed them into a sing‑along, transforming the venue into a communal space where voices blended with the timbre of the steelpan. This served as a reminder that Caribbean music is not merely a spectator activity; it flourishes through active participation, the collective joy of call-and-response, and the simple act of people singing together.
But the evening was not without its moments of solemnity. In a deeply moving shift, Andre paused to read a verse from Sparrow’s “Memories,” grounding the performance in reflection. The pandemic had taken so much—lives, time, certainty—and this tribute acknowledged that loss with grace. The steelpan, with its unique ability to sound both bright and mournful, carried the weight of the moment. The notes lingered in the air like a prayer. "Thinking Out Loud," by Ed Sheeran, played on the steelpan, feels so good and is one of the best performances in the set.
The mood lifted again with the closing number, a samba‑infused rendition of Lord Kitchener’s “Margie.” It was a brilliant fusion—Brazilian rhythm meeting Trinbagonian melody—and it brought the audience back to their feet. The performance ended not with a fade, but with a flourish, as if to say that even after sorrow, joy remains possible, vibrant, and necessary.
What Andre White offered that night was more than technical mastery. It was storytelling. It was cultural affirmation. It was the steelpan speaking in multiple dialects—jazz, calypso, samba—yet always returning to its Caribbean heart. In the hands of a musician like Andre, the instrument becomes a vessel for memory, celebration, and connection.
At Opera Holland Park, the music did not simply fill the space.
It transformed it.
And for those who were there, the echoes of that evening still resonate.
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Pan Jazz in the Park
Steelpan: Andre White
Tim Cansfield—Guitar
Greg Assing—Keyboards
Curtis Ruiz—Double Bass
Tony Maroni—Congas
Matthew Phillip—Drums
Where: Opera Holland Park
When: August 21st, 2021
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.
Now that Panyard Vibes stands as the dedicated home of steelpan music, it’s only fitting that the Large Band results from Panorama 2026 are recorded here. These results were previously shared on Sokah2Soca and Kaiso Dial, but this venue is where they truly belong—a clean, permanent record for the steelpan community.
The finals took place on Saturday, February 14, 2026, at the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port of Spain. Eleven bands competed for the title, delivering powerful performances that showcased the full range of steelpan artistry.
🏆 Champion—Republic Bank Exodus Steel Orchestra
Selection: “Cyah Behave”
Arranger: Terrence “BJ” Marcelle
Score: 289 points
Full Placings—Large Conventional Bands
Republic Bank Exodus Steel Orchestra—1st Place
bp Renegades Steel Orchestra—2nd Place
Nutrien Silver Stars Steel Orchestra—3rd Place
Desperadoes Steel Orchestra—4th Place
Massy Trinidad All Stars Steel Orchestra—5th Place
Skiffle Steel Orchestra—6th Place
Katzenjammers Steel Orchestra—7th Place
Phase II Pan Groove—8th Place
T&TEC Tropical Angel Harps Steel Orchestra—9th Place
Proman Starlift Steel Orchestra—10th Place
First Citizens Supernovas Steel Orchestra—11th Place
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Large Conventional Steelbands Panorama Finals 2026
Venue: De Savannah, Port of Spain
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.
It’s better to arrive late than not show up at all. Now that Panyard Vibes stands as the dedicated home of steelpan culture, it’s only right that the 2026 Panorama Medium Band results live here as part of our growing historical record. These results were previously shared on Sokah2Soca and Kaiso Dial, but this platform is where they truly belong.
Below, you’ll find the WeCapture SoundCloud player, featuring all performances in the order of the official judging results.
We extend congratulations to Pan Elders Steel Orchestra, the champions of the 2026 Medium Conventional category—a well‑earned victory in a fiercely competitive field.
Their performance stood out for musical clarity, arrangement strength, and execution—securing the top spot and adding another proud chapter to their Panorama legacy.
Official Results
Below are the full placings for the 2026 Medium Conventional category, listed exactly as judged. Pan Elders claimed the top spot with a commanding performance, followed by a strong field of competitive bands.
🏆 Final Placings
Pan Elders Steel Orchestra—1st Place
Katzenjammers Steel Orchestra—2nd Place
Courts Sound Specialists of Laventille—3rd Place
Pandemonium Steel Orchestra—4th Place
Sforzata Steel Orchestra—5th Place
NLCB Buccooneers—6th Place
Curepe Scherzando—7th Place
Our Boys—8th Place
Pan Jammers—9th Place
T&TEC Tropical Angel Harps—10th Place
Valley Harps—11th Place
West Side Symphony—12th Place
Production Notes/Music Credits:
Event: Medium 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.
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.
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.
♫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.
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.