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Kes the Band, fans ecstatic after NPR Tiny Desk performance

08 May 2026
This content originally appeared on Trinidad Guardian.
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Naris­sa Fras­er

Kes the Band filled NPR Mu­sic’s Wash­ing­ton, DC head­quar­ters with the sounds of sweet so­ca mu­sic as they made their Tiny Desk Con­cert de­but with a med­ley of their clas­sic tunes. It’s a per­for­mance lead singer Kees “Kes” Di­ef­fen­thaller has de­scribed as a “full-cir­cle mo­ment of ful­fill­ment” as grac­ing the desk was one of the band’s long-time dreams. In fact, he feels like he just won a mil­lion dol­lars.

The pop­u­lar se­ries gives singers and mu­si­cians a plat­form to per­form stripped-back, in­ti­mate sets for a small au­di­ence, and boasts an av­er­age month­ly view­er­ship of 44 mil­lion across plat­forms.

Sev­er­al in­ter­na­tion­al en­ter­tain­ers have been fea­tured over the years, in­clud­ing Ne-Yo, Dua Li­pa, Dami­an "Jr Gong" Mar­ley, Jill Scott, Ush­er and BTS, among oth­ers. Kes the Band is now the sec­ond T&T so­ca act to join the list, as Machel Mon­tano made his de­but in 2025.

Kes’ smooth vo­cals were com­ple­ment­ed by his broth­er Jon Di­ef­fen­thaller on gui­tar, vet­er­an mu­si­cian Dane Gul­ston on the steel­pan, Ri­ad Boo­choon on bass, Mario Cal­len­der and Ge­iron Mang on keys, Dean James on drums, De­nil­ston Gul­ston on per­cus­sion, and Robert "Rob­by Styles" Per­saud on the cu­a­tro and shak­ers.

Reign­ing Ca­lyp­so Monarch Ter­ri Lyons, who proud­ly sport­ed a T&T flag tucked in her hair, and St Lu­cian so­ca star Ted­dyson John pro­vid­ed sweet har­monies as back­up vo­cal­ists as well.

They opened the groovy, 23-minute set with the 2017 hit Hel­lo from the Folk­lore Rid­dim, which im­me­di­ate­ly moved the au­di­ence. Very rarely do the con­certs show the live crowd, but, just like Mon­tano’s set, this was done and show­cased peo­ple hold­ing up or wav­ing sev­er­al Caribbean flags while clap­ping and danc­ing.

As the band wrapped up the first tune, Kes ad­dressed the cheer­ing crowd. “Thank you. Blessed love,” he be­gan as he beamed. “We are Kes the Band from Trinidad and To­ba­go rep­re­sent­ing so­ca mu­sic, hap­py mu­sic, love mu­sic.”

They then per­formed an­oth­er clas­sic, Fallin, and Kes urged the au­di­ence, “Move yuh body!” as the mu­sic played. Lat­er, in­tro­duc­ing their next tune, Rum and Co­ca-Co­la, the singer asked if there were any fans of ca­lyp­so mu­sic in the au­di­ence and a loud cheer erupt­ed. “Good vibes in here… Let we get some ca­lyp­so, let we go!”

They al­so per­formed Jo­lene, Co­coa Tea and Wot­less. And giv­en the hook of the for­mer be­ing, “Jo­lene, how yuh man­go sweet so?” the au­di­ence was asked a per­ti­nent ques­tion. “I see a lot of Caribbean is­lands in­side of here: An­tigua, St Kitts, Bar­ba­dos, Grena­da, Guyana… Big up to T&T for me please,” Kes said be­fore ask­ing, “Which is­land have the sweet­est man­go?” as his band­mates chuck­led.

As for Co­coa Tea, he told the au­di­ence the band was there to spread “sweet vibes on­ly,” adding, “And talk­ing ’bout sweet­ness, noth­ing like a good cup of co­coa tea.”

He tried to ex­plain that Wot­less was a clas­sic be­fore re­al­is­ing and ad­mit­ting that all the songs they had per­formed were clas­sics. “But this one…” he said, “This one is it. We need you to rep­re­sent.” As he sang the line, “And I feel like,” the au­di­ence re­turned the en­er­gy, belt­ing, “Ah just win ah mil­lion dol­lars!”

He pe­ri­od­i­cal­ly thanked the au­di­ence, es­pe­cial­ly as there were times the cheers were so loud that all he could do was smile and look on in awe.

Fi­nal­ly, they closed with Sa­van­nah Grass as Kes ex­pressed that it was an ho­n­our to per­form. He whipped out a ban­dana with the T&T flag and said he was thrilled to “rep­re­sent fuh d cul­ture… Trinidad and To­ba­go.”

The band en­sured the na­tion­al in­stru­ment got its mo­ment in the spot­light as Dane Gul­ston put his pan sticks to work dur­ing a so­lo.

In a state­ment shared with Guardian Me­dia, Kes ex­pressed pride and praised the Tiny Desk con­cert se­ries as a plat­form that val­ues au­then­tic­i­ty and mu­si­cal sto­ry­telling.

“Per­form­ing at Tiny Desk is an in­cred­i­ble ho­n­our that we’ve dreamed of for a very long time. This mo­ment is a pow­er­ful re­minder of how far Caribbean mu­sic can trav­el when it stays true to its roots. To strip it down, feel every note, and share that en­er­gy with the world in such an in­ti­mate space, it’s some­thing we’ll car­ry with us for the rest of this jour­ney,” he said. “We are ves­sels of sound and song, and this mo­ment is so much big­ger than us: it’s about our cul­ture, our peo­ple, and our joy­ful con­nec­tion we bring through mu­sic.”

The per­for­mance pre­miered at 7 am on Fri­day on NPR Mu­sic's YouTube chan­nel, and by 10 am it al­ready had 10,000 views along with a flood of com­ments from Caribbean peo­ple.

“Tears in my eyes and joy in my heart. So hap­py and proud,” one user wrote. “I was here from the time they up­loaded! My favourite lo­cal band on the world’s stage! Proud!” an­oth­er said.

In the video’s de­scrip­tion, NPR Mu­sic said Kes the Band has a cat­a­logue of “must-play mu­sic,” adding that they “in­spire you to whis­per their dou­ble en­ten­dres to your sweet­heart and shout them rau­cous­ly on the road, grab­bing on­to the night (or a waist) with both hands.”

The band al­so ho­n­oured Kes and Jon’s late fa­ther, George “Bun­ny” Di­ef­fen­thaller, and sis­ter, Danielle Di­ef­fen­thaller, whose pho­tos were fea­tured atop the desk.

“So­ca's unique gift is its abil­i­ty to si­mul­ta­ne­ous­ly hold space for the bit­ter and the sweet, for pain and pas­sion — a beau­ti­ful re­minder that joy has sea­son tick­ets to the Tiny Desk,” NPR wrote.

NPR Mu­sic al­so post­ed to In­sta­gram say­ing the band filled its of­fice with “is­land vibes.” The band’s of­fi­cial page replied, “It was a plea­sure! So­ca to the world!” The se­ries’ host Bob­by Carter fur­ther praised the per­for­mance, say­ing the band “brings some­thing tru­ly spe­cial… a sound that feels both deeply root­ed and glob­al­ly res­o­nant.”

The band just con­clud­ed the Eu­ro­pean/UK leg of its Roots, Rock, So­ca tour, which be­gan in France on April 30. The North Amer­i­can leg be­gins on May 28.