On Thursday, Mark Loquan and Maria Nunes, in association with Vanessa Headley-Brewster, premiered Panyard Universe —an insightful and inspiring 50-minute documentary on the trailblazing Siparia Deltones—in a special screening at MovieTowne attended by President Christine Kangaloo.
Panyard Universe comes as the latest instalment of A Better Tomorrow, a collection of films and series exploring the world of steelpan. Previous projects include Duvone Stewart: The Man Behind the Music, Women in Pan, Pan on the Move, a series on Kareem Brown, and the A Better Tomorrow and My Home music videos (the latter a collaboration with Etienne Charles), among others.
“The goal for A Better Tomorrow is to shine light on people’s journeys in the pan world—showing that the people we see are a culmination of challenges overcome, experience gained, and knowledge being transferred to benefit or inspire others,” says executive producer Loquan.
“Loquan was particularly concerned about the land ownership/tenure issues faced by a lot of steelbands,” explains Nunes with regard to what inspired Panyard Universe. “For this project, we teamed up with Vanessa Headley-Brewster to take a look at what is taken for granted about panyards, to discuss the challenges many face for sustainability, and through this to highlight all the good work that quietly happens in panyards.”
For Nunes—who has collaborated with Loquan to produce and direct most of the content under the A Better Tomorrow banner—the choice to begin with Siparia Deltones was an easy and obvious one.
“From the time I first met Akinola Sennon and George Caesar over ten years ago, I knew there was something really special about them,” she explained. “The series name came to me after spending many hours listening to the interviews ... It was so clear from all that happens at Deltones that a panyard is a universe of possibility.”
It’s a sentiment echoed by Headley-Brewster, who presents the Deltones documentary and serves as associate producer.
“I am quite familiar with the Deltones model and the people who make it happen,” Headley-Brewster said, “but what I was delighted to discover was their clarity of vision and how they intend to achieve it. The leaders of Deltones are all on the same page ... and at Deltones, the heart drives the mind and body to get it done, day after day.”
The Deltones documentary will also be screened at their panyard on August 25, following which it will premiere on YouTube and on local television. Notably, Panyard Universe is the first open-ended series Loquan and Nunes have undertaken, mixing longform documentaries, like the one on Deltones, with shortform videos and reels that will build through the rest of July and into Steelpan Month in August (inclusive of World Steelpan Day on August 11) across the Mark Loquan Music YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram channels.
Filmed primarily during the 2024 Panorama season, the Deltones documentary is a must-see not just for pan lovers, but for all those invested in music, in community, and in building “a better tomorrow” across Trinidad and Tobago.
Located at the historic Railway Road in Siparia, Deltones’ iconic panyard is known as “The Last Stop” or “The Railway”, as it marks the site where the last passenger train in Trinidad made its final stop in 1965. Since its inception in 1962 by Ellis Knights, Deltones has transcended the conventional bounds of music-making —weaving together a respect for history and legacy with innovative programmes like WhyFarm; upcycling of discarded materials (where pallets become furniture, and bass pans become pizza ovens); an academy that teaches music literacy to young and not-so-young members of the local community; and much more.
Through probing and illuminating interviews with the Deltones leadership team, the documentary explores what a panyard is and can be: a space not just for cultivating musical talent, but fostering individual growth and a real sense of community. These questions and more lie at the heart of both the Deltones documentary, and the Panyard Universe series as whole. They journey into what makes panyards so special—celebrating the panyard not just as a place of music-making during Panorama time, but as a universe of possibility, innovation, and transformation.
A Better Tomorrow was envisaged as a deep look at the whole steelpan ecosystem—how it all comes together in a panyard setting, how all of these things are connected together, how they work, and what creates not only music, but also a better community, and therefore a better tomorrow,” says Loquan.
“I was really happy to see the depth of purpose of the Deltones leadership. They are visionaries. They’re joined by a common idea, they’re executing that idea, and you can see the tangible results coming out of it.”
Following the premiere of the Deltones documentary, Panyard Universe will unveil a series of reels and YouTube shorts, featuring key figures from bands like Invaders, Power Stars, Golden Hands, and Supernovas, including interviews with Amrit Samaroo, Desiree Myers, and more. These shorts will give an insider’s look into the day to day life of panyard spaces, the wide range of activities that happens in them, and the challenges they face.
“The depth and power of all the things they said have truly inspired me,” said Nunes. “I hope audiences will think differently about panyards, and will want to take steps to get involved in supporting steelbands in their community. There is so much about steelpan that we take for granted.”
Panyard Universe kicked off on Friday across the Mark Loquan Music social media channels, with new shortform and longform content through July, August, and beyond. All previous A Better Tomorrow video projects are also streaming on Mark Loquan Music’s YouTube channel.