Trinidad All-Steel Pan Percussion Orchestra

Steel band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Trinidad All-Steel Pan Percussion Orchestra (TASPO) was formed to participate in the 1951 Festival of Britain, having its first performance on 26 July at London's Southbank Centre.[1] The group was the first steelband to travel abroad from Trinidad and Tobago, presenting the newly invented steelpan to an international audience.[2]

Members

Lieutenant Joseph Nathaniel Griffith (born in Barbados)[1] was the conductor of the band. Griffith was originally part of the Trinidad Police Band.[3]

More information Player, Band ...
PlayerBand DOB DOD
Cecil “Coye” Forde Invaders 1928/09/14 2012/12/25
Orman "Patsy" HaynesCasablanca 1930/02/22 1985/10/29
Elliot "Ellie" MannetteInvaders 1927/11/05 2018/08/29
Belgrave BonaparteSouthern Symphony 1932
Anthony "Tony" WilliamsNorth Stars 1931/06/24 2021/12/21
Carlton "Sonny" RoachSun Valley 1924/08/06 1986
Philmore "Boots" DavidsonCity Syncopators 1928 1993
Sterling BetancourtCrossfire 1924/03/01
Andrew "Pan" de la BastideChicago 1927/12/01 2002/11/17
Dudley SmithRising Sun
Winston "Spree" SimonFascinators (Tokyo) 1930 1976/11/18
Theophilus "Black James" StephensFree French 1933/11/04 2001/11/06
Close

On 6 July 1951, TASPO left Trinidad for England on the SS San Mateo.[4] Carlton "Sonny" Roach fell ill and was left behind in Martinique.[5] The steelband performed at the Southbank Centre, London, on 26 July 1951, as well as elsewhere in Britain and in Paris, France.[6] TASPO returned to Trinidad on 12 December 1951, the only exception being Sterling Betancourt, who stayed in London. Betancourt had been vitally involved in building up Notting Hill Carnival.[7]

On 26 July 2022, the anniversary of TASPO's 1951 "introduction of Steelpan to the world" during the Festival of Britain was celebrated with a Google Doodle.[8][9]

Further reading

  • Blake, Felix I. R. The Trinidad and Tobago Steel Pan. History and Evolution. ISBN 9780952552802.
  • Goddard, George (1991). Forty Years in the Steelbands: 1939-1979. London: Karia Press. ISBN 1-85465-034-3.
  • Stuempfle, Stephen (1995). The Steelband Movement: The Forging of a National Art in Trinidad and Tobago. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812233292.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI