Carnival.........................11
Music/Film.....................
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Travel ..........................
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Food/Digital Music...........
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Publications/Calendar .....
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looking at our hemisphere from all directions
In the Caribbean, there’s a popular saying: “When the people of Trinidad and Tobago aren’t celebrating Car- nival, they’re preparing for it.” It’s easy to believe when you see just how much planning goes into the month-long holiday, which climaxes with three days of festivities in
Port of Spain just before Ash Wednesday (March 6–8 in 2011).
The party starts Monday morning with the J’ouvert (“day’s
opening” in West Indies slang) parade. J’ouvert lasts from
4 a.m. to 8 a.m. Partygoers cover themselves in oil, mud or
body paint and don costumes with roots in indigenous
African and Indian traditions. Some dancers are adorned
with spices and birds; others evoke darker themes through
incarnations of Satan. Trinidad-based photographer Razor
Acosta describes J’ouvert as “the embodiment of freedom
and release of the Id.” “In J’ouvert,” Acosta says, “the street
is yours. You go where you want, when you want. Every
man is equal and allowed to be whatever his heart desires.”
The National Carnival Commission’s (NCC) official events
take place on Monday and Tuesday during the day. Carnival “bands”—groups of people dressed in thematic, customized costumes—parade through the streets “playing
mas,” the term used to describe dancing in costume to the
accompaniment of soca, calypso and steel pan, a native
Trinidadian instrument made by hammering down used
oil drums. Participants pay about $500 for a costume and
the right to “play mas” with their favorite band. Led by a
King and Queen, whose costumes are constructed with
wire or metal frames and covered in feathers, sequins and
papier mâché, the bands converge on the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port of Spain’s largest open space, where they compete for band of the year.
With all the effort put into costume design,
it’s no surprise that the spectacle of mas is Carnival’s biggest draw. “Just being a part of the
experience is almost a requirement for Trinidadians,” says Trinidad native Levi Jordan.
ANDREA DE SILVA/REU TERS ( 2)
Although some complain that high costs prohibit people from participating, money won’t
be a barrier this year. The Ministry of Arts and
Multiculturalism announced in November
that it will bring out a “People’s Band” that anyone can join. “Carnival is about people enjoying themselves,” Minister Winston Peters said.
President George Maxwell Richards at a precarnival 2011 event for bandleader
“Make a mas face and come.”
Brian Mac Farlane (inset). One of Mac Farlane’s designs for carnival (above).
Carnival
in Trinidad