JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Montano pushing for a soca industry

by

20120519

Even in the ab­sence of a well con­sti­tut­ed body to rep­re­sent lo­cal en­ter­tain­ers and their in­ter­est, reign­ing In­ter­na­tion­al Pow­er and Groovy So­ca Monarch Machel Mon­tano is awash with op­ti­mism about T&T's abil­i­ty to ef­fect long await­ed sys­tems and poli­cies to achieve an en­ter­tain­ment in­dus­try.

And de­spite the glar­ing lack of co­he­sion among the prin­ci­pals, who trade their tal­ent to cre­ate a liveli­hood for them­selves and their fam­i­lies, he be­lieves that this coun­try's so­ca mu­sic genre will ul­ti­mate­ly rush past reg­gae and dance­hall to be­come the sound of the Caribbean.

Mon­tano said, "We have been dis­tract­ed by the oil and the gas and we are pri­mar­i­ly an en­er­gy coun­try. Look in the mir­ror. Let us con­stant­ly be our great­est crit­ics. Let us con­stant­ly analyse where we are at and be hon­est. "This is some­thing I want­ed to say be­cause I am a per­son who is al­ways pos­i­tive­ly dis­sat­is­fied, mean­ing that I am con­stant­ly im­prov­ing my prod­uct and I want to do that un­til the day I die, be­cause it is who I am-to be­come a high­er ex­pres­sion of who I am."

Mon­tano was speak­ing dur­ing a pan­el dis­cus­sion at Tues­day's Caribbean In­vest­ment Fo­rum 2012 held at the ball­room of the Hilton Trinidad and Con­fer­ence Cen­tre lo­cat­ed at La­dy Young Road, St Ann's on the top­ic Cre­ative In­dus­tries: The En­ter­tain­ment In­dus­try.

Sharon Burke, a tal­ent agent from Ja­maica and Tam­sen Reed, chief ex­ec­u­tive of­fi­cer at Celebri­ty Head­lin­ers and CMG in the Unit­ed States joined Mon­tano on the pan­el. He said the peo­ple of T&T, liked to boast about hav­ing the best Car­ni­val and the best mu­sic.

"But have we re­al­ly sat up and won­dered if our mu­sic is the best? If it is the best Car­ni­val? Have we re­al­ly watched the world and sat down as a unit to re­al­ly crit­i­cise our­selves and see where we are at and know where we want to be? "First of all, we don't have a unit. We don't have an artiste body. We don't have a body that could lob­by the Gov­ern­ment. So we have to work to­geth­er.

"I al­so want you all to be mind­ful that this is a young in­dus­try. We are get­ting there. We have many suc­cess­es." He was con­vinced that his ef­forts at mu­sic and on­stage per­for­mance per­fec­tion were be­ing used as an in­cu­ba­tor for many emerg­ing and es­tab­lished en­ter­tain­ers lo­cal­ly.

Mon­tano said present and emerg­ing mu­sic ri­vals had im­proved their man­age­ment struc­tures, strength­ened pro­duc­tion ca­pac­i­ties, en­vis­aged them­selves as a brand and even added mer­chan­dis­ing to fur­ther the brand, while tak­ing a fan­cy to the so­cial net­work­ing medi­um be­cause of his ad­vances and achieve­ments.

'Record com­pa­nies can't re­strain us'

"So there has been some in­cre­men­tal move­ment, but we need now to em­brace tech­nol­o­gy. We have a plus. We don't need the big record com­pa­nies any­more, be­cause the big record com­pa­nies are a thing of the past. "That works in our favour be­cause the big record com­pa­nies are nowhere near us, so let's use the (cel­lu­lar) phone, let's use the In­ter­net, let's use the apps and em­brace tech­nol­o­gy...so­cial me­dia.

"I think we need to come to­geth­er as a unit. I am push­ing for so­ca to be the Sound of the Caribbean (So­ca)." But ahead of hit­ting the So­ca mark, he said, wran­gling be­tween el­ders in so­ci­ety and younger per­form­ers, which oc­curred when­ev­er (young) artistes made ef­forts to re-work an ex­ist­ing mu­si­cal work, had to stop.

"We have to stop this cul­ture of every time some­body tries some­thing and they change it, the old­er peo­ple say they (are) spoil­ing it. They (are) not spoil­ing it. "They (are) tak­ing it in­to their hands and they adding to it, which is what sprouts growth and we have to em­brace that as a cul­ture."

No hand­outs, please!

"We al­so need to build in­dus­tries around the artistes. Now I'm not say­ing it's all go­ing to be about funds and grants be­cause this is a com­pet­i­tive busi­ness, so we can't wait for the hand­outs. "I think if the artistes im­prove and we make some­thing that is worth sell­ing, some­body will come here look­ing for it, to sell it. So we have to con­stant­ly im­prove that.

"It's not the funds that are go­ing to help us be­come more pop­u­lar. It's go­ing to help us. We need, more than ever-more than funds-qual­i­fied peo­ple will­ing to sit down around us and em­brace us and teach us the right things." In his as­sess­ment of the chron­ic cul­tur­al short­falls that has T&T with­out the req­ui­site struc­tures for nur­tur­ing per­fec­tion and lever­ag­ing suc­cess, Mon­tano said, ed­u­ca­tors and ad­min­is­tra­tors were key stake­hold­ers to­wards achiev­ing in­dus­try sta­tus. "Help us and teach us what works out there in the world. It is a work in progress.

"We have to have a body and we have to have greater fre­quen­cy of con­ver­sa­tions like this and every time we have a con­ver­sa­tion, we must hold our­selves ac­count­able. "We must have some de­liv­er­ables, we must have a time­line. We must set a plan for us to achieve these things. That's how we will make progress."


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored