Árdís - 01.01.1956, Side 17

Árdís - 01.01.1956, Side 17
Ársrit Bandalags lúterskra kvenna 15 When the clock chimes 6:00 a.m., the crowds, as if unleashed, run and dance into the streets. For two days and nights the marchers and musicians strut the streets, each band beating out its favorite road march in Calypso tempo. This year there were 139 steel bands performing. Trinidad has no concert halls and no symphony or- chestras but Trinidadians want music so badly that they have gone on making it over the years despite organized restrictions. Skin drums were long ago banned by the British in order to suppress African tribal traditions, but Trinidad musicians discoved that they could make a kind of music with the tubes of bamboo. But by the early ’30s, bamboo was on its way out—the police had discovered that the sticks were too likely to be used as weapons. Then Port of Spain musicians turned to garbage-can tops and biscuit tins. The establishment of U.S. bases brought the latest refinement: oil drums, and so the steel band was born. The drums are cut down to different sizes. By denting and tempering sections on the tops of these oil drums, as many as 32 notes can be produced when beaten with rubber-tipped sticks. These bands travel around the Caribean Islands, and have been in Eng- land, the U.S. and were in Manitoba last year. Our first long trip, over 35 miles, took us through the heart of the agricultural and industrial areas of Trinidad. Huge rice fields were being worked by East Indians, men and women, wading knee deep in water. Bullocks are most frequently used in cultivation of the rice fields. We also passed through thousands of acres of sugar cane fields. The colony’s greatest agricultural wealth comes from sugar cane. Although there are many East Indian and negro cane farmers, most of the cultivation is carried on by large companies. There are many sugar refineries on the Island. The workers tend their rice farms in the off season during the period of heavy rains. Natives are terrified of snakes, though rarely bitten, and for this reason fields are burned off just before cutting to reduce snakes, trash and vermin. The flames can be seen for miles. And strange as it may seem the cane is not impaired by this method. Oil plays a very important part in the economy of the island. One-third of the Island’s revenue comes from oil. Trinidad was the largest oil-producing country in the British Commonwealth at the outbreak of World War II, but since then Canada has forged ahead.
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