mintourism, Oct 13, 2009
Part One of Ole Time Carnival in Trinidad and Tobago in 1959
Edited by Azizi Powell
This pancocojams post presents five film clips that were published as YouTube videos of Trinidad & Tobago Carnival in the 1950s and 1960s. These YouTube videos are given according to the carnival
decade that they represent.
Selected comments from four of these videos' discussion threads are also included in this post. An article excerpt about carnival bandleader George Bailey is given after Video #4 instead of discussion thread comments.
The content of this post is presented for historical, cultural, and educational purposes.
All copyrights remain with their owners.
Thanks to all those who are associated with these film clips and thanks to all those who are quoted in this post.
-snip-
Click http://www.tntisland.com/carnivalcharacters.html "Traditional Carnival Characters" for a list of Traditional Trinidad and Tobago
characters. At least one entry in that list is incorrect it indicates
that the Baby Doll character has been retired. That character was revived by at
least 2008.
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2023/05/traditional-trinidad-and-tobago-baby.html
the pancocojams post entitled "Traditional Trinidad and Tobago "Baby
Doll" Carnival Character (information and videos)".
SELECTED COMMENTS FROM SHOWCASE VIDEO #1 (with numbers added for referencing purposes only)
"thank you so much for posting this. i wish I could get a copy. I am a Trinivalist- a person who love Trin-bago carnival."
2.
"You hear what I'm saying.... TRINIDAD DOES NOT WANT THEIR CARNIVAL THIS WAY ANYMORE... so those of us who are of Trini descent, we are going to bring it back, and help it evolve into an aesthetic that doesn't mock Brazil. Mark my words. Soon people will be leaving Trinidad to go to a Carnival that's better than theirs, if they don't go back to this kind of creativity. It's the mas makers fault. People will play what they have... so all they have to do is make something worth playing."
Domitilla, 2015
"
**
Reply
dale stuart, 2019
"unfortunately those days will never come back."
**
Savanah Smiles, 2019
"Wow love this.. They made face mask of the foreigners that
came to the island long ago Just like they did in mexico. Now such a mixed
culture. Its nice they incorporated the new people in their culture. They were
making egyptian crowns and harder and stuff"
****
visualhistoryaustria,
The Trinidad and Tobago Carnival is a massive annual event
held on the Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday in Trinidad and Tobago. The
event is known for participants' colorful costumes and exuberant celebrations.
There are cultural events such as band launch fetes running in the lead up to
the street parade on Carnival Monday and Tuesday. It is said that if the
islanders are not celebrating it, then they are preparing for it, while
reminiscing about the past year's festival.
Traditionally, the festival is associated with calypso music, with its origins formulated in the midst of hardship for enslaved West and Central Africans; recently Soca music has replaced calypso as the most celebrated type of music. Costumes, stick-fighting and limbo competitions are also important components of the festival. This film shows us the carnival in Port of Spain in the year 1953 or 1954.
The carnival groups we can see were called: Chinese
Mandorins, Golden Eagle Warriors, Dog Patch, Saigon, Greatest Show on Earth,
The Carnival Queen, Broken Teapot, Martinique, 40 Thieves of Baghdad,
Seminoles, Ivanhoe, Black Velvet, Conquerors of Kiska, British Monarchy and
Olympus. There was also a band called Harold Saldinah’s band, spotted by a viewer
of visualhistory.tv.
-snip-
Here are some comments from that video's discussion thread, with numbers added for referencing purposes only:
1. Jason Ramsingh, 2022
"Incredible....they had more clothes on back then! Sad to see
the degeneration into what is called Carnival today!"
**
2. Jason Phillips, 2022
"wondering when whining started in trinidad carnival?"
**
Reply
3. Sheldon Salazar, 2022
"Probably around 1974 during the advent of soca 😉"
**
Reply
4. G Y H D, 2022
""Whining" has always been part of the cultural
landscape of Trinidad and Tobago: these images here are but a slice of the
T&T carnival which encompassed then as now elements of African, European,
etc.. masquerade and cultural traditions."
**
Reply
5. islandgirl3330, 2022
" @G Y H D Not what they do today. That would have been considered vulgar and
classless. I know because I am not a
young spring chicken."
**
6. Monica Barrow, 2022
"Beautiful
footage would have loved to hear
the original music people jumping up lol"
7. wazeed ali, 2022
"
**
8. islandgirl3330, 2022
"In those days and until the early 70s there was a Carnival
Queen beauty contest, but only the white girls or the so-called Trinidad whites
were queens. Peter Minshall's adopted
sister, portraying Washer Woman, I think, was was the first black queen. A few years later, they stopped having it."
****
SHOWCASE #3 - Carnival Story Aka Trinidad Carnival (1957)
British Pathé, Apr 13, 2014
London Airport (Heathrow).
L/S of an air hostess walking towards the steps of a
plane. Passengers board the plane. Another air hostess stands at the door and
welcomes the passengers. The stairs are taken away. It is a B.O.A.C. aircraft.
Trinidad, West Indies. High angle shot of the island then M/S of a tropical beach. Various shots of costumes being prepared for the annual Carnival. Woman pin costumes onto a man, another woman stitches a brightly coloured costume. L/S of an ornate head-dress being tried on by a young boy. Various shots of steel drums being made and played.
L/S of passengers disembarking from a plane - they are
inhabitants of neighbouring islands and are all dressed up. Staff of the plane walk across the runway. Two stewardesses greet each other, they are
going to the carnival too. Trinidad
Airport exterior - the two air hostesses walk into the building.
High angle shot of a steel band moving through
the streets. Various shots of musicians and dancers parading in the
streets. Our two air hostesses Betty Lou
and Margaret dance along with them. Lots
of good costumes are seen including Roman Centurions, dragons, strange animals,
bull fighters etc. Shots of the crowd
are intercut with shots of the "bands" and their costumes….
-snip-
Here are some comments from that video's discussion thread, with numbers added for referencing purposes only:
1. Evelyn Applewhite, 2014
"So nostalgic. Too bad
carnival time in TnT and abroad has
become so vile. Shame. Please! let us go back to the past. Bring back the tourist."
**
Reply
2. Evans Parris, 2020
"Nope some things still remain in T&T carnival
,creativity come with change"
**
3. Dilalala, 2020
"
**
4. Dulala, 2015
"oh wow how carnival has changed..."
****
SHOWCASE #4 -Scenes from Trinidad Carnival 1962
Rawle Hernandez-Ramdwar films curated bySimone H-R, Jan 2, 2023
Trinidad Carnival 1962 part 2 filmed in 8mm by Rawle
Hernandez-Ramdwar
-George Bailey's -"Somewhere in New Guinea" was
band of the year
-snip-
George Bailey was a very popular, award wining Trinidad & Tobago carnival band leader. Quoting from an article* about Caribbean carnival terms "Bands are run by section leaders who every year come up with new themes and then design and create elaborate costumes for people to purchase" * This article is excerpted in this pancocojams post's comment section below.
Here's an excerpt about George Bailey from https://www.caribbean-beat.com/issue-65/monarch#axzz80kcYq0Sw "George Bailey, 1935–1970"
He was certainly a prodigy — he produced his first independent band in 1956, a few months shy of his 21st birthday. In only his second year as a bandleader and designer, he presented Back to Africa, perhaps the most celebrated band in the history of modern Carnival, winning the 1957 band of the year award. With this single presentation, Bailey changed popular perceptions of Africa, history, and Carnival itself.
Traditional African masquerade, dating back to the era
before emancipation, used rags, paint, and spears to portray an image of a
miserable, uncivilised past. Bailey flaunted this stereotype by drawing on the
elaborate pomp usually associated with bands depicting the history of Europe.
His magnificent, meticulously researched African costumes asked masqueraders to
think instead of a regal heritage. Before Bailey, the crowds did not believe
any African mas could match the grandeur of Roman or Greek themes. He proved
them wrong. It was a watershed moment, both for Carnival and for Trinidad
society.
[...]
George Bailey: Band of the Year Titles
1957 Back to Africa
1959 Relics of
Egypt
1960 Ye Saga of
Merrie England
1961 Byzantine
Glory
1962 Somewhere in
New Guinea
1969 Bright Africa"
****
Gregory Bryan, Oct 12, 2011
Some 50mm film of Carnival in Trinidad sometime around 1967
shot by my father, Adrian Bryan.
Here are some comments from that video's discussion thread, with numbers added for referencing purposes only:
1. Domitilla, 2018
"This is carnival. You cannot sit still while Kitch is singing. Costumes back then made sense."
**
2. Domitilla, 2019
"Costumes with themes. Band leaders back then were brimming with ideas."
**
3. Trini Soca, 2020
"Papa o look at mas.... this was mas for soooo made in Trinidad and not in China"
**
4. Angela Lum Wai, 2021
"Thank you so much for sharing this video. I am so grateful to see Trinidad of old, when
carnival was at its best . Nowadays, it is a spectacle to show skin and (to be
absolutely outspoken) mastibate in
public.
I feel sad for our young children growing up, to see their
parents, teachers, politicians and all those who should be positive role
models, act without shame, social or moral
responsibility towards the young and impressionable."
**
5. Cuthbert Jolly, 2021
"Throw a little waist and everybody think you rude."
6. Andrew Hovell, 2021
"DAYS TO REMEMBER THAT YEAR 1967 I PLAYED FLOURBAG SAILOR
WITH A NEW SUNLAND STELLBAND FORM.IN 1965 WAS THE END OF THE ORIGINAL SUNLAND
WITH EDDIE BOM(MR.EDDIE)THE LEADER.BELMONT DAYS.KITCHENER WON ROAD MARCH THAT
YEAR WITH 67 IS THE SEASON."
**
Reply
7. Patrick Enoe, 2023
"Those were the days, Play mas! play mas!"
**
8. Andrew Hovell, 2022
"KITCHNER WON ROAD MARCH WITH THIS KAISO IN 1967.67 IS THE
SEASON.I PLAYED FLOUR BAG SAILOR WITH SUNLAND STEELBAND.(FLOUR USE TO BE IN A
COTTON CLOTH BAG.)IN THEM TIME.RIBBET.WRIGHT."
Reply
9. Gregory Bryan, 2022
"
**
Reply
10. Sheldon Salazar, 2022
"@Gregory Bryan The year was 1969…It said so on one of the
banners;you have to look very carefully at the 2:26 mark"
****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.
Visitor comments are welcome.
Here's an excerpt from the online article "Caribbean -Carnival Terms" https://www.carnivaland.net/caribbean-carnival-terms/ [ no publishing date or author given]
ReplyDeleteWhat is mas?
"Mas is actually just short for masquerade. Masquerade in reference to Caribbean Carnival is the big parades that occur where the participants, who are known as masquerades, dress up in costumes, masks and other disguises and dance or perform in the parade.
What is playing mas?
When it comes to celebrating Caribbean Carnival, you can either be a spectator and watch the parades, or you can join in! When you choose to join in it is called playing mas! If you want to play mas you have to join a masquerade band. If you want to have the ultimate Caribbean Carnival experience we suggest that you play mas!
What is a Mas Band?
Mas Bands are organizations that are the heart and soul of carnival parades. They consist of a group of parade-goers, who all pay and wear a joint group costume and march in the parade together. Mas Bands are run by section leaders who every year come up with new themes and then design and create elaborate costumes for people to purchase.
If you want to be part of the parade you can’t just show up in a beautiful costume of your choosing. You must select the mas band you want to join, then purchase their costume, and on parade day you must wear their costume and dance through the streets with your chosen band.
What is mas players?
Mas Players are the parade participants who purchase a costume and march in the parade. The mas players are representing the band by wearing their costumes, dancing, singing as they march along the carnival route."...
very interesting, thanks a lot
ReplyDelete