Local News

San Juan East Side Symphony wins ninth Panorama Single Pan title

30 November 2025
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
Promote your business with NAN

San Juan East Side Sym­pho­ny Steel Or­ches­tra ce­ment­ed its dom­i­nance in the Sin­gle Pan Band cat­e­go­ry of Panora­ma on Sat­ur­day night, cap­tur­ing its ninth na­tion­al ti­tle and sec­ond con­sec­u­tive crown at the Queen’s Park Sa­van­nah. Per­form­ing Jumbie by Machel Mon­tano, the band de­liv­ered a tight­ly ex­e­cut­ed arrange­ment by Du­vone Stew­art, earn­ing an im­pres­sive 285 points to top a field of 25 com­peti­tors.

The vic­to­ry reaf­firmed San Juan East Side Sym­pho­ny’s rep­u­ta­tion as one of the most dis­ci­plined and con­sis­tent out­fits on the na­tion­al cir­cuit. The band held off a spir­it­ed chal­lenge from La Cre­ole Pan Groove, which placed sec­ond with 282 points for Pan By Storm, while Chord Mas­ters Steel Or­ches­tra se­cured third with 280 points for Show­down (Band Meet Band).

For San Juan East Side Sym­pho­ny, the night marked more than an­oth­er ti­tle. It high­light­ed the strength of a sys­tem built on dis­ci­pline, loy­al­ty, and long-term plan­ning. Own­er and man­ag­er An­dre Fran­co said the for­mu­la be­hind the or­ches­tra’s sus­tained suc­cess is no se­cret.

“I am usu­al­ly a pan play­er, but my strat­e­gy is re­al­ly man­age­ment and pub­lic re­la­tions. My thing is con­sis­ten­cy,” Fran­co said af­ter the re­sults.

“You have to be con­sis­tent with your re­sources and you have to be very se­ri­ous. You can’t have peo­ple play­ing with X, Y and Z bands. A lot of play­ers play with mul­ti­ple bands. If you are play­ing with me, you can’t play with all the bands be­cause it is like the Bible: you can’t serve more than one mas­ter. That is my prin­ci­ple. It’s sim­ple, but you have to be con­sis­tent with it.”

Stew­art, whose arrange­ment de­liv­ered back-to-back cham­pi­onships for the band, praised the mu­si­cians for their com­mit­ment but urged the na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty to re­flect on de­clin­ing au­di­ence at­ten­dance at ma­jor steel­band events. De­spite the high stan­dard of per­for­mances on the night, emp­ty seats were no­tice­able in the Grand Stand.

“I just want to urge the pub­lic,” Stew­art said. “If this is your na­tion­al in­stru­ment, why can’t we fill the Queen’s Park Sa­van­nah Grand­stand for a Sin­gle Pan fi­nal?

“This is our na­tion­al in­stru­ment. We need to ask our­selves: what are we do­ing wrong? What are we not do­ing to en­gage the pub­lic to come out and sup­port steel­pan in this form? This is a gift that God has blessed this coun­try with, and we need to se­ri­ous­ly re­flect on where we are go­ing next.”

With the 2026 Panora­ma sea­son now un­der­way, San Juan East Side Sym­pho­ny’s em­phat­ic win sets a high bar for the up­com­ing Small, Medi­um, and Large Band cat­e­gories, re­mind­ing the na­tion that the Sin­gle Pan cat­e­go­ry re­mains a show­case of raw tal­ent, in­no­va­tion, and cul­tur­al pride.