Art Music by Caribbean Composers: St. Kitts and Nevis

Steel pans, arriving from Trinidad in the 1940s, quickly became popular and a wealth of steel bands proliferated (Cramer-Armony & Robinson, 2008). Steel bands became “the musical ensemble of choice for public dances and private parties, concerts and street jamming, displacing the pre-eminence o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christine Gangelhoff, Cathleen LeGrand
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Bahamas 2013-11-01
Series:International Journal of Bahamian Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/193
Description
Summary:Steel pans, arriving from Trinidad in the 1940s, quickly became popular and a wealth of steel bands proliferated (Cramer-Armony & Robinson, 2008). Steel bands became “the musical ensemble of choice for public dances and private parties, concerts and street jamming, displacing the pre-eminence of the horn-based orchestra, the String Band which had always been few in numbers, and the Big Drum” (Armony, n.d., para. 20). The annual St. Kitts Music Festival, held during the summer, brings international popular and jazz musical artists to Basseterre. On Nevis, a new Performing Arts Center (opened in 2012) provides performance and rehearsal space for a variety of performing artists and, it is hoped, will help “to raise the bar of excellence in the arts” (Washington, 2012, para. 6).
ISSN:2220-5772