Senior Reporter
shane.superville@guardian.co.tt
It was the outcome many soca lovers predicted, as Mical Williams— better known as Mical Teja—shot past the competition in taking the 2024 Road March title with his smash 2024 Carnival hit DNA.
During a media briefing at the VIP Lounge in the Paddock of the Queen’s Park Savannah, Port-of-Spain, yesterday, Trinbago Unified Calypsonians Organisation (TUCO) president Ainsley King announced that DNA was played a total of 341 times between Carnival Monday and Tuesday.
Last year’s Road March winner Ian “Bunji Garlin” Alvarez fell to a distant second place with Carnival Contract being played 225 times and Patrice Roberts’ Anxiety was third after being played 48 times.
The Belmont-born Williams took to social media after the announcement and thanked the fans for their support and encouraged other young people to pursue their dreams.
“These wins aren’t about me, these wins are for every young person in Trinidad and Tobago with a passion.
“Please, please, please follow your passion and do it with love.”
Garlin also posted on Twitter shortly after the results were announced and thanked his fans for their support and congratulated Teja on his first Road March win.
“Thanks to all that loved Carnival Contract from day one and those after. Let us also congratulate Mical Teja on his Road March win and title and continued blessings and love on this journey through soca.”
The music video for DNA, which was posted to YouTube late last year, has amassed 2.8 million views.
Speaking with Guardian Media at the Hasely Crawford Stadium’s Socadrome on Carnival Tuesday, Teja, who also won the Young King title this year, said he wanted to write a song that embodied the spirit and attitudes of T&T and it’s people.
“It’s a celebratory type energy, there are so much different things just coming in and I think that in itself also describes our DNA, it’s mixed up with all different things,” he said.
“Happiness, we really fiery, we love a picong and I wanted to capture that as best as I can in one song.”
Teja, who has also earned a reputation as a songwriter for artistes like Destra Garcia, Wadicks and Farmer Nappy, said the transition from writing songs to performing them was not difficult, referring to it as another form of expression.
“It’s a form of expressing myself and expressing things I see in my environment. Being an artiste is just a different form of expressing that.”
At a separate media briefing yesterday, the T&T Carnival Bands’ Association (TTCBA) announced that the Lost Tribe won the Band of the Year title for the second consecutive year, earning 858 points with their portrayal of Fly.
Ronnie and Caro slipped to second place with their portrayal of Bushfire: The Rising of New Life, picking up 848 points, while Paparazzi came third with Ihoko: The Forgotten Trail, earning 811 points.
In the Medium Bands category, Kinetic Mas earned the top spot with their portrayal of Yokos (894 points), while K2K Alliance and Partners’s The Salt Crossing was next with 876 points and Image Nation in third was with Jouvay (761 points).