It's been said that you can find a Trini everywhere, and where a carnival is, a Trinbagonian is known to be behind it. This is the case with the new carnival being born in South East Asia, Indonesia, on the island of Bali. Caribbean Vybez founder Ethan Auguste who first went to Bali in 2019, is organising this first Trinidad and Tobago-themed Carnival in the S.E.A. region. Auguste is no stranger to promoting his culture. He is also known as the pioneer who brought Caribbean culture to the United Arab Emirates back in 2009 and now in Bali. Although Reggae is no stranger to these parts, Trinidad and Tobago's Soca and Carnival is, and this was the mission of Caribbean Vybez when deciding to make Bali its new home three years ago. Bali Carnival planned from September 23 to 28, is already making waves. The event, which takes place at the new Renaissance Bali Hotel, Nusa Dua, will start with a welcome event and continue to the hotel's Atomic 13 pool venue for Glow, the all-white affair on day one. Carnival goers will then don their costumes designed by Trinidadian Aaron Schneider and produced in Bali. Revellers will take to the road for the first Carnival inspired by The Greatest Show on Earth - Trinidad and Tobago Carnival, which leads into a las lap celebration scheduled to go till late in true Trini style.
Bali Colour Festival which will run on the following day will host a special J'ouvert on the beach, followed by a Caribbean Soul Concert with a lineup of top Caribbean talents on the last day of the main activities. "It's been one of my dreams over the years to produce a carnival, and coming to Bali, I saw the potential to create not just a carnival event but an experience many other carnivals don't have in a destination people have on their bucket list. Bali Carnival would hugely boost Bali's tourism during their slower period," Auguste said via a press release. With destination events becoming popular, Auguste is confident that Bali Carnival will secure its place in the carnival calendar, one that all carnival fans would not want to miss. From steelpan to the cuisine of T&T and the Caribbean, this carnival experience promises to be a diverse and captivating affair. To join the inaugural Carnival, visit their website www.balicarnival.com and follow their Instagram @balicarnvial for updates and packages. (Source: The Loop, July 12, 2022)
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If SHURVONE BRATHWAITE could speak to his teenage self, he’d simply say, “Chill dude. It’s going to be okay.” As a music teacher and performer, this Tobagonian made the “journey of self-discovery” while convincing his mother he wouldn’t be a “starving artist.” Now, close to 12 years later, he believes that he is doing what he is placed on earth to do at this stage in his life. According to Shurvone, “music has been one of the few things that remained constant in my life. There is a song or piece for every emotion I am feeling. Music has taught me the importance of being diligent and focused.” Here is Shurvone’s MENtions story:
—- I had what may be considered a normal childhood. When I wasn’t inside studying or helping with chores, you can find me most times in front of the television watching my favourite shows or outside riding my bike or playing. Up to age of 18, I would either be at my family home or spending time at my great grandmother’s house, which was my second home. My great-grandmother was the rock of our family. She left a financially stable but stressful marriage in Toco to build a new life for herself in Tobago. She worked diligently to raise her children alone. Then when conflict presented itself later in her life, she took some of her grandchildren and raised them as her own. She took care of me by babysitting my sister and I when my mother took night classes to pursue tertiary studies. She left this earth in 2010 knowing she did everything she could to improve our family name and our lives. Those of us who listened to her life lessons are grateful to her and to this day, we still make reference to her in conversations. While my great-grandmother had a great impact on my life, as most Tobagonian matriarchs do on the lives of their children and grandchildren, my mother has been an amazing force. She instilled the value of education from as early as I can remember. I saw first-hand how having an education benefited her and my household, so I knew that I had to follow closely in her footsteps. Looking back on how things played out over time, it isn’t strange that I found myself working in education, instilling the same values my mother instilled in me, to my students. My journey to music education My teachers and friends knew where I was heading before I even considered it. My mother, herself an educator, needed some convincing about my journey into music. I don’t blame her for being sceptical. I’m sure it wasn’t easy for her to hear that I wanted to study music after being a science student in secondary school. We have all heard the “starving artist” story. Yet, she supported me along the way and takes the time to learn about what I do as a musician. I am thankful for her continued support and love. My music teacher at Bishop’s High School Tobago, Mr. Anthony Moore planted the idea of being an educator in my head. After completing CAPE (Sixth Form), I was looking at options for my “gap year” and he suggested that I apply to the Division of Education to be a music teacher. I was already seriously considering studying music and I wanted to experience the school environment from the teacher’s perspective. In September 2010, I walked onto the compound of Roxborough Secondary School and now, almost 12 years later, I know the school environment is one of the places I enjoy spending my time. I am often asked how do I add value to my students’ lives. My response is “by first being human”. I enter my first class with the intention to show them full respect and my aim is to teach music as well as how to be a good human being. “A song for every emotion” Music has been one of the few things that remained constant in my life. There is a song or piece for every emotion I am feeling. Music has taught me the importance of being diligent and focused. As a child, I would constantly get in trouble for humming while people were talking to me. The reason for this is I would be humming the melody of a piece or song that reflected my emotion. Just imagine being scolded for something you did and then as you walked away, your Caribbean Mother heard you humming a “chune”. Lol! I eventually learned that the humming can be viewed as disrespectful, so I started to run my “chunes” in my head. My motivations I’m motivated by my ability to convey the thoughts and emotions of composers through sound. The subtleties of aiming to communicate what a composer was feeling thousands of years ago motivates me in the rehearsal space and is the driving force behind every performance. On an individual level, I’ve also been motivated by Yevgeny Dokshansky, Anthony Woodruffe and Rodrick Urquhart (RIP) who all played a role in my development as a performer. In terms of music educators, I look up to Patrice Cox-Neaves, Dr. Leah Brown, Dr. Roger Henry, Deborah Moore – Kushmaul and Caitlyn Kamminga. As a performer, I have a long list of musicians I love listening to and have found myself adopting certain elements of their performance style. I am inspired by my students as well, the good and the misguided. To my students or anyone thinking of a career in music or as a music educator, I say, if it makes you happy and you can’t see yourself doing anything else, do it. It’s a labour-intensive journey so buckle up for the ride. Be prepared to give it your all. – Shurvone attended St. Andrew’s Anglican, St. Nicholas Primary Schools and Bishop’s High School, Tobago. Between 2011 and 2021, he pursued studies at The University of Trinidad and Tobago, Framingham State University, and UWI – ROYTEC and holds an undergraduate degree in Music (Performance and Ethnomusicology Track), a Master’s degree in Education (Teaching), and a Certificate in The Business of Entertainment. (Source: MENtions,May1, 2022) In addition to his unique name, Amilcar Sanatan is also a man with a unique perspective. He doesn’t confine himself to the “boundaries of the world” he was born into nor the ones given to him. He continues to push against these boundaries through his work with East PoS communities, art, writing and activism. For him, it is about seeking love and justice in all things and contributing to institutions to develop long-term investments and structures that transform environments and lives. This is his MENtions story:
– I loved my younger years. They were full of adventure. I took part in cricket, football, Taekwondo and badminton. I played the piano and, for a short time, the tenor saxophone. I wrote poetry, sang and chanted in school competitions and organised open mic competitions. I enjoyed eating “fat pork” from trees and doubles in Curepe. I spent hours observing the world of taxi drivers, casino workers, Chinese food restaurants, thieves and school children living their freedom without responsibility in the streets. I can’t count the number of times I had to run away from robbers and gun men. In the vacation before Form 3, I was diagnosed with meningitis. I did not understand why all my family members and the parish priest had visited me. I just thought I had a fever and I would be home soon. I did not understand the potential damage and disability that could happen without urgent and effective treatment. After I fully recovered, I lived every day with a sense of joy and gratitude. People die from meningitis. In fact, I have met youth who lost their hearing because of it. I was lucky in terms of health recovery and lucky to have the financial support and network that paid for my health expenses. I understand what it feels like to be a survivor and the privilege of economic class. I never accepted the boundaries of the world I was born into or the ones given to me. I push against these boundaries to this day. “Demanding fairness at a young age” In Form 5, I did English A, Mathematics, French, History, Geography, Principles of Accounts, Principles of Business, Economics and Art. I dropped Physics in Form 4. I achieved one- Grade 1, five- Grade 2s, one – Grade 3, one ‘B’ and one ‘E’. I told my parents that the ‘E’ was for excellence. In Form 6, I did French, History and Management of Business. Again, I was a student with an average academic performance. My first protest was in secondary school, demanding fairness regarding the right to grow my hair naturally at any length. I really think this is where I came into my own. Since then, the school has changed their position and young men whose hair grow in diverse textures and directions continue to contribute to the school’s success. They chose collective freedom and individual creative expression rather than tradition and control. Bishop Anstey Trinity College East (BATCE) is the school of collective freedom and individual creative expression in Trinidad and Tobago. These values are essential to the development of the leaders in our society. I also served as President of The UWI Guild of Students, national representative for the Commonwealth Students’ Association and in the leadership of the Global Student Forum. My early university student years involved poetry, student organisation in U.WE SPEAK, public advocacy in the media, on campus and in Port-of-Spain, commissioning graffiti art on the “whisper wall,” organising with the Socialist Student Conference, winning the lobby for improved watercooler facilities on campus, and networking the Caribbean youth and student movement into the global student movement. “I have a calling, not a career” At University, I completed a B.Sc. degree in Psychology and an M.Phil. degree in Interdisciplinary Gender Studies. I made the decision to set standards for my academic performance in my current Ph.D. in Cultural Studies programme. I’ve received A’s in all my courses and I was the recipient of the Elsa Goveia Scholarship for Caribbean Studies at The UWI. As you can see, my areas of study do not show a clear career path. In fact, they show that I have the capacity to serve in multiple sectors and areas of development. This is why I believe that I have a calling, not a career. I also lectured in Gender and Development and Geography. In both disciplines, I brought the work of the classroom into public space. When I teach, I exchange knowledge and affirm the spirit of students committed to a more fair, equal and just nation, Caribbean and world. “Connect the work to ordinary people” I seek to understand, describe and transform my world. My art, academic writing and activism are all essential to that process. Combined, they advance leadership. My mother and father were my first advisors. They both emerged from contexts of poverty and rose to the ranks of community-based, regional and international academic and civil society leadership. For leadership, you need to develop confidence and you need to be properly trained. To be a transformational leader, you need to connect the work you do to ordinary people. I am neither a man of providence nor certainties. I do not know what my purpose is in life, if there is one. I seek love and justice in all things. I want to contribute to institutions, to develop long-term investments and structures that transform environments and lives. I do not seek fame or riches on this earth. I want to be useful to others in this brief life while loving people and places along the way. “I serve the people of East Port-of-Spain with my heart, mind and hands.” Currently, I am the Project Coordinator for Socio-Economic Projects at East Port of Spain Development Company. I work full time in Laventille with a mandate for social and economic transformation of communities. My everyday reality moves from Latrine Eradication Programmes to empowering women in sewing classes to reflections on inclusion in urban planning and governance. Now that I am here, I am more committed to deepening the democratic process and participation in development. What is the ladder for women and men, young and old, who may not have completed secondary school? When we provide educational opportunities, how do we match them with economic opportunities? This is hard work. Deep relationships with the people, not public relations, change lives. Mrs. Nadia Figaro-Adams first introduced me to trainees and residents at SERVOL Beetham Campus where I organised youth-led workshops on gender-based violence, student governance and spoken word open mics. My father was raised in Laventille. Commitment brought me to this place. There is something special about workers who can do desk research, coordinate programmes, engage communities and communicate professionally in the street, over a drain, in the track and by email. Ah special? Growth has little to do with CVs and a public profile I am inspired by movements. At my desk, I have portraits of María Elena Moyano of Peru, Marielle Franco of Brazil, Amílcar Cabral of Guinea-Bissau and Father Michael Makhan of Trinidad and Tobago. These are leaders of movements who worked among the poor. I also have photos of my grandparents and parents on my desk. I come from a family of cocoa labourers on one side. My family is a movement. I am committed to the work of the poor and my family. I have learnt from many professional and public leaders – close up and at a distance. Policy-makers, professors and priests influenced my vision and work in some way. However, the professional part is easiest. I think character is the hard part to build. Growth has little to do with CVs and public profile, it has to do more with attitude, care, humility and commitment. Mentors are not people to help me make the next professional step, that is on me. Mentors get my mind right. My sixth form principal, Mrs. Joan Mason provided a model of leadership for me at a young age. She showed me how to elevate the standards of institutions while providing care for people on a one-on-one basis. Different models of leadership There are many examples of black male leadership in Trinidad and Tobago. What I would like to see more of are models of leadership that embrace young men and work through their vulnerabilities; a model of leadership that is accountable to women’s rights and the livelihoods of women and girls; a model of leadership that is democratic, believes in the equality of all people; a model of leadership that builds boys and men up with love for themselves, for women and girls and their communities. If I could speak to my teenage self, I would say “You win with love” and don’t worry about losing your virginity, worry about losing your metabolism. But, to the teenager who may be confused about their career or next steps after leaving secondary school or degree programme, I want you to serve well and serve selflessly. Make every day count in your personal and professional development. Excellent work and service, create opportunity for more work and service. (Source: MENtions,May 22, 2022) – Amilcar is a former student of The University School, St Augustine; Combermere School, Barbados; Trinity College East, BATCE Sixth Form School and The UWI, St Augustine. Stoicism, Catholic social teaching, RastafarI livity, the ideal of moksha and the writing of Kahlil Gibran keep him centred. He walks daily for two hours to clear his mind and meditates. Watching sport, episodes of 90 day Fiancé, Catfish or Samurai X and Judge Judy with his mother, are how he spends his free time. One of the best known names in Caribbean literature, Sam Selvon, was born on May 20th in 1923!
As an author, Selvon is celebrated for his vivid depictions of Caribbean life and stories of West Indian migration. Many of his later writings drew from his experiences as a member of the Windrush generation of Caribbean immigrants to Britain in the 1950s. His book, “The Lonely Londoners” (1956) is still recognized as one of the first novels to incorporate Caribbean dialects in its telling of working-class migrant life in the UK. Over the years, Selvon authored a number of books, including “Ways of Sunlight” (1957), “Those Who Eat the Cascadura” (1972) and “Moses Ascending” (1975). In 1976, he co-wrote the screenplay for British film “Pressure” with Horace Ové, celebrated as the UK's first Black dramatic feature-length film. He was a two-time winner of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship, a recipient of the Hummingbird Medal (Gold, 1969) and the Chaconia Medal (posthumously, 1994). In the 1980s, Selvon was honoured with degrees from the University of the West Indies (1985) and Warwick University (1989). Born in San Fernando, Selvon attended Naparima College before serving 5 years in the West Indian Royal Navy (R.N.V.R) during WWII, on ships in the Caribbean. After the War, Selvon worked as a reporter at the Trinidad Guardian Newspaper (1945-1950). He also wrote stories under pseudonyms and had some of his work broadcast by the BBC. Encouraged by this success, he migrated to the UK in 1950 with the manuscript of his first book “A Brighter Sun” (1952). In London, Selvon worked several jobs, while his short stories were published by various British magazines. He also produced two television scripts for the BBC: “Anansi the Spider Man” and “Home Sweet India.” Selvon later moved to Canada, where he became a fellow at the University of Dundee, and a professor in creative writing at the University of Victoria. He passed away on April 16th 1994 in Trinidad. In 2018, on what would have been his 95th birthday, Selvon was honoured by Google with a “Google Doodle”. This photo of Sam Selvon is courtesy of the book “Insight Guide to Trinidad and Tobago”, published by Insight Guides, London. This book is part of the National Archives of Trinidad and Tobago Reference Collection. (Source: Trinbago Golden Memories, May 26, 2022) Born in Trinidad on June 21, 1928, Mona Baptiste became a popular singer and actress in London and Germany.
She migrated to England in 1948, one of the few women on the Empire Windrush which docked at Tilbury the day after her 20th birthday. Within six weeks she was already appearing on the BBC’s Light programme. Baptiste was largely popular for songs like 'Calypso Blues' and 'There’s Something in the Air'. In Germany, she gained recognition for songs such as 'There’s Something in the Air' and movie appearances in films like 'Tanz in der Sonne' and 'An jedem Finger zehn' in 1954. After suffering a stroke, Baptiste died on June 25, 1993, in Dublin, Ireland. Video via German Music Channel (I don’t not own the copyright) (Source: Dominic Kalipersad, June 23, 2022) IKEA in Tottenham might seem an improbable favourite haunt for an icon of British design, but before her death in 2020, aged 96, that is where you would often find Althea McNish. She would peruse the showrooms, dressed head to toe in the bright, bold and sensuous fabrics she designed. “She would point out things and say they needed more colour – she always had a glint in her eye,” remembers Rose Sinclair, curator of the first major exhibition on McNish at the William Morris Gallery, Colour Is Mine. Born in a middle-class family in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, in 1924, McNish was already a successful painter when she arrived in the UK in November 1950. She attended the London College of Printing, and evening classes at Central St Martins, where she met the likes of Eduardo Paolozzi. In 1954, she enrolled at the Royal College of Art, where she studied textile design – and was one of few women of colour at the prestigious art school. “My designing is functional but free, you can wear it, sit on it, lie on it, stand on it,” McNish said of her work, which she described as a “statement of my being”. She quickly became known as much for her technical acuity and understanding of the commercial side of design as for her painterly approach – applying brushes directly to silkscreen, and using monoprinting to create the sketches and experiment with colourways for her inimitable, intricately layered style. “She was confident and competent – and that was projected into her work,” says Sinclair. The day after her graduation from the RCA in 1958, McNish presented her portfolio at Liberty’s – and was commissioned on the spot to create a collection. One of those designs, Marina, is on show at William Morris Gallery, and Liberty is reissuing a capsule collection of 12 of McNish’s fabrics as limited editions – the first time they have been available to buy in decades. Althea McNish working on murals for the ocean liner SS Oriana in 1959. Courtesy N15 Archive Playing on a projector at the exhibition is rare video footage following an immaculately dressed McNish at work, and in discussion with fashion designers. One of her significant contributions to the industry was her decision to collaborate closely with designers from the beginning of the creative process, so that she could adapt her textiles to suit their purpose. Though McNish considered Britain her second home, Trinidad was never far from her mind. In two rare early paintings made soon after she arrived in the UK, figures appear in lush, rural landscapes on the island; a third painting on display, made from memory, captures the vibrant energy of the hosay festival, an annual Indo-Muslim celebration that all Trinidadians took part in. Flora, fauna and Carnival would continue to inspire McNish throughout her career. The paintings are the only surviving works in the medium by McNish, whose archive and legacy have been hampered by a lack of care and attention until recently. McNish’s most popular fabric designs were inspired by her early life in Trinidad, but they also showcase the way she scaled up and transformed English flowers “into Caribbean flamboyance” (as McNish herself put it), reinventing British landscapes. In the Essex wheat fields she portrays in the spectacular Golden Harvest (a bestselling furnishing fabric produced for Hull Traders in the 1960s which stayed in production for two decades), McNish was reminded of the verdant glow of the sugarcane fields in her birthplace. She drew inspiration from everywhere – as she stated, “I don’t have to look very far, it’s usually objects right at hand that come to my aid. I see an idea in an onion, cabbage or any other item lying around the studio.” Golden Harvest by Althea McNish, now on display at William Morris Gallery.Paul Tucker But there was also a strong social and political current in McNish’s interest in nature and in the decorative arts, too. “Many of these designs were produced in an era when Enoch Powell was making his 1968 Rivers of Blood speech,” says Sinclair, “suggesting migrants in this country should be sent ‘back home’ – and here’s Althea decorating British spaces with her homeland.” This was underscored by McNish’s involvement with the Caribbean Artists Movement, an influential group of artists, writers, and musicians from the Caribbean active from 1966 to 1972, advocating for the importance of contributions of artists of colour in Britain.
“She knew what it meant to champion this new aesthetic, to keep challenging and changing the canon,” Sinclair notes. “She was a quiet activist – she showed her agency, her heritage, and herself through her work – and she didn’t let anything hold her back.” McNish was also emphatic about who she had in mind when she was designing. In 1966, she created a “Bachelor Girls Room” at the Ideal Home Show. The room is reconstructed in all its splendour at William Morris Gallery, demonstrating McNish’s vision of “how a young girl about town would use the space – she wanted it to be flexible, inexpensive, and comfortable for friends”. The same year, the Queen wore dresses made with fabrics designed by McNish on her Royal Tour of the Caribbean. McNish herself declared “women should always have the opportunity of showing off themselves, their talents and their achievements”. Many of McNish’s contributions to the shape of British design and culture have been overlooked. Sinclair hopes this exhibition will begin to “set the record straight” and address the absence of information on McNish’s life and work. Sinclair herself, an MA graduate of Central St Martins who teaches design at Goldsmiths, was astounded she hadn’t come across McNish until 2005, some years after she graduated. Colour Is Mine will open new audiences’ eyes and minds to her dazzling, prismatic achievements and blazing passion: “Designing, for me, is part of me. It’s not just something that I acquired as a means to an end. I breathe and sleep and dream it.” Colour Is Mine is at the William Morris Gallery until 11 September (Source: Vogue, Charlotte Jansen, 5 April 2022) Check it out here
A tribute to an enormously talented Trinibagonian who passed away in South Africa. Rest in peace Gillian. Musician and composer Gillian Nathaniel-Balintulo is remembered as someone who brought the gift of joy to those around her throughout her life. Music was an integral part of that life, which she shared with her students in Trinidad and Tobago and South Africa, where she died on September 11, 2021. She was born at the Port of Spain General Hospital on December 18, 1948, the youngest child of Naomi Phyllis Duprey and Raleigh Trevor Nathaniel, and grew up on Norfolk Street, Belmont, with her parents and siblings Gordon, June, Ainsley and Amery. The household was a musical one, and Nathaniel-Balintulo began taking music lessons from her mother at five. Family friend Sonya Moze said, “As close neighbours in Belmont I was a more than frequent visitor to their incredibly musical household, Gordon on bass, June’s exceptionally beautiful soprano voice, Ainsley, strumming guitar and the altogether gifted Amery (esquires). Who in Norfolk Street did not know of Naomi’s exceptional brood of talent. Music emanated from that house like a constant melodic waterfall. It was this that not only inspired me to become a performing artist but to recognise through their example, the discipline and commitment needed to hone one’s gifts. Thank you DiTi and to all those Nathaniels. Life is indeed short but memories are forever.” Trinidad All Stars' musical director, Dr Mia Gormandy-Benjamin conducts the orchestra during the band's Classical Jewels concert in 2019. Gormandy-Benjamin's predecessor Gillian Nathaniel-Balintulo was the band's first female conductor and one of the few female arranges in the 1980s. - Family friend Vindra, giving the eulogy at the funeral in South Africa, where Nathaniel-Balintulo was buried, said her siblings have fond memories of lying in bed listening to her practice scales. “As the years passed those scales turned into test pieces for all the music festivals for which her mother entered her which by the way she always won, eventually coming number one in the Open Championships at the tender age of 13. This was an extraordinary accomplishment as she competed against musicians twice her age.” Nathaniel-Balintulo attended St Rose’s Girls' RC, and then St Joseph’s Convent Port of Spain. She began winning the piano classes in her age groups at Music Festival as early as 1956 and represented SJC at Music Festival from the age of 12. She topped the piano solo classes for her age group in 1960, 1962, 1964, and 1966, also winning the Junior Instrumental Solo championship trophy in 1964 and 1966 against competitors in various instruments. She also competed in the vocal category in duets and trios. In 1966, she won both the Mezzo Soprano Solo and Girls’ Vocal Duet classes, the latter with Gylla Gatcliffe (née Reid). SJC’s Past Pupils Association said she is among the most decorated of SJC’s music prodigies over the years. In a post on its Facebook page, it said, “Those of us who knew Gillian as a classmate and friend and in the decades post-1965 send our deepest condolences to her family. Memories of Gillian abound: watching and listening to her play the piano at SJC in the 1960s era, on stage in the grand hall, from time to time when she filled in for Ms Jocelyn Pierre, or as we strolled past the music rooms where she practised. She was unbeaten in her categories at Music Festivals in those years. “We fondly remember her soulful body movements as she felt and lived the music she made; her elegant legs activating the piano pedals and those unique, long fingers flying up and down the entire length of the piano keyboard, seemingly at the speed of light. All of this was assembled in perfect unison; bars of written notes interpreted and rendered just as the composers had dreamed they would be, but better! Gillian’s music was as beautiful as the person herself, inside and out!” Nathaniel-Balintulo attended the Royal College of Music in London, England and completed the Associate of the Royal of College of Music (ARCM) in piano teaching. On her return to TT, she accepted a job at Queen’s Royal College, Vindra said. “In her spare time, she taught music privately at her home, to many students, who would testify to the positive influence she had in nurturing their musical ability. Many of her students went on to become celebrated and accomplished musicians in their own right. “It was during this time that Gillian met her husband to be, South African sociology lecturer Marcus Balintulo, at a recital at the UWI, where he was a faculty member. After a brief courtship they married and subsequently moved to Botswana in 1974, where the couple focused on raising a family while navigating new geographical and cultural terrain. They had three children together, daughter Liziwe, and sons Liyanda and Siyavuya.” The couple left TT in 1974 as Marcus pursued work opportunities in Botswana, Nigeria, and the United States, and returned to TT in 1980. On their return, Nathaniel-Balintulo resumed teaching and worked as a concert pianist and accompanist with several local organisations. Student and friend Caroline Taylor said, in a tribute on her blog, that in 1988, Nathaniel-Balintulo was among a group of women whose roles in a handful of prominent bands marked a significant moment in steelband history. She said this was recorded in Judith Laird’s documentary Prelude to Finale: Three Women Arrangers/Conductors, and in texts like Stephen Stuempfle’s The Steelband Movement: The Forging of a National Art in TT. Nathaniel-Balintulo's groundbreaking appointment as musical director of Trinidad All Stars Steel Orchestra (TASSO) came the year after she performed with them as a concert pianist in Classical Jewels VI, playing Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue. Nathaniel-Balintulo was appointed musical director and conductor after the retirement of Jerry Jemmott. She led the band in its performances of Capriccio Italien, for Pan is Beautiful, at the World Steelband Festival in 1988 for Classical Jewels VII in 1989; and on the band’s tours of Jamaica in 1989 and the UK in 1990. She was the band’s first female conductor, and one of the few female arrangers at that time. Taylor said she also reportedly earned the nickname “Steroids” from the band. In a release from All Stars, the band’s PRO Stacy Ann Patrick said Nathaniel-Balintulo’s entry brought an advanced understanding of respect to the band. “The practice space had a renewed energy reflective of a spirit that understood and appreciated the depth at which flair and joy were married. Her ability to bridge the gap that sometimes separated the formally trained from those who learned and performed music intuitively was a blessing upon us. The bond between her and the players ensured that her vision of combining the voices of children from three primary schools with steel voices came to life. Her many gifts allowed the impossible to become possible. Her experience and appreciation for diversity supported the orchestra in standard-setting tours to Jamaica and the United Kingdom in 1989 and 1990.” Longstanding band member Denise Riley said Nathaniel-Balintulo was meticulous to a fault not because she was the first female musical director of the band but because she was simply Gillian: a relentless visionary and implementor in all aspects of performance. The release said Nathaniel-Balintulo, through her power, opened the door for the members of Trinidad All Stars to continue having conversations on what role-modelling, professionalism and perfection should look and feel like in the turbulence of the late 1980s. “Impeccably dressed, with head held high, she navigated the mazes that the country had built around pannists so as to keep them at the milepost reached since the 1940s. Under her reign members continued to explore and succeed at learning how to read and arrange music; competencies that Jerry 'Uncle Jem' Jemmott nurtured in the band during his tenure. Under her rhythm members continued to hone their skills in bringing classical music to many. Under her smile, fear melted and confidence on and off the stage flourished.” Reflecting on the significance that Nathaniel-Balintulo had in their lives, founder and leader of the legendary group Panazz Barry Bartholomew says, "She was special – her attention to detail positively impacted me and so many other players that we too strived for perfection." Ace panman Dane Gulston added, "Gillian understood our rhythm – she worked with it so that each of us became a part of the music. Gillian was elegant. She made a difference in our lives." Members today may also say that her unreserved energy when it came to her approach to rehearsals is alive and well in the band's manager and drillmaster Nigel Williams. Nathaniel-Balintulo moved to the birthplace of her husband, South Africa, in the late 1990s, once her children finished secondary education. Vindra said she continued teaching music while overseeing the children’s tertiary education. “The family initially lived in Durban and then settled in Cape Town in the late 90s. During this era Gillian continued pursuing her love for music and always shared this passion for teaching. In Cape Town, she worked in the music department at Herschel Girls School in Claremont and in 2006 she joined the music department of the German international School Cape Town, where she taught until 2020. With her deep West Indian roots, Gillian always managed to connect with people who straddled TT and South Africa.” Nathaniel-Balintulo joined the Cape Town Steelband’s advisory board in 2011 and became chairperson in 2015. “The core focus of the steelband project is to provide quality music education to young people in the western cape with particular focus on youth-at-risk, and under-resourced communities.” Vindra said Nathaniel-Balintulo was proud of her grandchildren and relished the role of grandmother. She returned to TT frequently, with her last visit being in late 2018. Not long after Marcus Balintulo’s death in December 2020, she was diagnosed with cancer. Despite her illness and the pandemic, she continued her work and teaching until about a month before her passing. Vindra said Nathaniel-Balintulo had a strong and positive outlook especially in the last few months. “Whenever I asked how she was in my daily phone calls, she would always respond by saying, 'I’m doing fine,' or, 'I’m doing well today.' She fought her illness with such inner strength, poise, dignity and grace to the very end. My family and I will always remember her as a flamboyant, colourful, vibrant, exciting, knowledgeable human being who oozed...joie de vivre. You will be sorely missed by all of us, Gillian, but you will always live in our hearts.” Nathaniel-Balintulo died at home in her sleep on September 11. She is mourned by her three children, six grandchildren, surviving siblings Amery, Ainsley, and June Nathaniel, her family and friends, students, and the music communities on both sides of the Atlantic. Information used in the writing of this article was collected by Marcia La Borde, Terri Roxborough, and Caroline Taylor. Source: Newsday, October 2, 2021 Trinidad All Stars conducted by Gillian.
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While most other 16-year-old girls are spending their time chatting with friends on social media, going shopping and all those other fun things teenagers usually do, Camryn Champion is preparing to wow the judges at the next round of the 20th season of American Idol, a reality television series in which aspiring singers compete for a recording contract and a shot at making it big in the music industry.
Champion put new meaning to her name when, from among the thousands of people who auditioned for the show, she earned herself a golden ticket to Hollywood on February 27, which secures her advancement to the next round in the competition. Champion's maternal grandparents Quinn and Vidya Jogie are originally from Chaguanas, Trinidad and now live in Long Island, New York. She said her grandmother is a big Idol fan and always encouraged her to audition, believing she could make it all the way to the top. Champion agreed to do it when she was old enough, but said although her life revolved around music, deep down she never believed she would get the opportunity to do so. But then the unimaginable happened and she found herself on a stage in Nashville auditioning for singers Katy Perry, Lionel Richie and Luke Bryan, just like her grandmother predicted. "I was super interested in music since I was about four and I started writing my own music when I was 12. In 2018, I entered a singing competition in New York called Coast 2 Coast Live and I won first place," the New Jersey resident told Sunday Newsday in a phone interview. This win drew attention to what the then 13-year-old was capable of and paved the way for her grandmother's dream come true. "After I won that competition, they (talent scouts) asked my parents if I wanted to audition for Idol." Because of the covid19 pandemic, Champion said the initial part of the process was virtual. "I just had to send in videos, did interviews on Zoom calls and I had to sing online. When I made it through that round, I went to Nashville to audition live before the judges." There, Champion put her heart and soul into her performance of Sam Smith's I'm Not the Only One. She said she chose that song because, apart from liking Smith's music, she felt the tone was good for her range. "It was nerve wracking," she said about her turn in the spotlight and under heavy musical scrutiny. "I was really nervous because I was the third person to audition out of the day one auditions and I was one of the younger contestants. The first girl who auditioned came out crying, making me even more nervous." But as skittish as she was, the judges made her feel hopeful that she would get through to the next round when, after her performance, they encouraged her to delve deeper, relax and just embrace the song. She said she never expected them to be so "cool" and didn't think that she'd get to talk to them, even off camera. "It was really a super cool opportunity. I was so close to the judges and they were all so nice. The entire experience was great. I had never been to Nashville, so I got to see a new place. In Nashville there is music everywhere, so I loved that so much." And as excited as she is about the next round, Champion has had to hold her tongue about it because of her contractual obligation to American Idol. "I’m not allowed to talk about what happens in the future with the show...But I can say that the winner gets a cash prize and they're signed to an American Idol contract to help promote their music." Champion said she doesn't have a specific preference as it regards listening to music. But for singing, she leans toward R&B. "I just like music on a whole. Each artiste is so different and it’s cool to have role models in different genres." With no formal training, her talent is all natural and something she's "just always done it," even going so far as teaching herself to play the piano. But, she told WMN, because music has always been "the dream" it may be time to start formalising it. "When I go to college I'd like to study performing arts, but also business to deal with that aspect of it." The junior at Rancocas Valley Regional High School said the only other thing she loves as much as music is volleyball and is on her school's team. And although she has never been to TT, she is familiar with the beauty and tastes of the islands because her relatives frequently visit. "My sister dances a lot and is always dancing to soca. I too love the music, and we all love the food because my family cooks Trini food all the time. I always hear about the beaches, food and the music and I'm just so jealous of everyone. I'd really love to visit some time." For now, though, the focus is on the goal of becoming the next American Idol. (Source: Newday, March 12, 2022) |
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