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Judges Treating Me Unfairly -- Holman
Sunday Guardian- February 18, 2001
Ray Holman, the person who has the distinction of writing the first
own-composition for the steelband in the National Steelband Panorama
competition, is displeased with the judges decision at last weekend’s
preliminaries.
Holman composed and arranged “Heroes of the Nation”,
which his band Humming Bird Odyssey played in the Panorama preliminaries
last Saturday. The selection was vocalised by 98 Road March winner
Wayne Rodriquez. Holman described “Heroes of the Nation”
as “the most beautiful piece I have ever written for a steelband”.
“But, he said, “judging from the results, the judges
have equated the quality of my work to that of a 10-year-old (Atiba
Williams) who arranged for Panasonic Connection. The bands tied
with 406 on the judges score sheets. He made it clear he was not
complaining about the judging. “I am just noting their evaluation.”
he stressed.
“Maybe I shouldn’t be there at all”. In 72 Holman
produced “Pan On the Move”-significant and symbolic
as the first tune to be written by a musical arranger specifically
for a steelband. At the time, Holman was working with the Starlift
Steel Orchestra of Woodbrook.
The “original” selection won the North Steelband Panorama
contest in that year and was third in the national finals. Under
Holman’s musical directorship, Starlift also had two national
Steelbands Panorama victories –in 69 and with Kitchener’s
“The Bull” and in 71 playing Sparrow’s “Queen
of the Bands”.
“But” Holman declares, “since those days, I always
seem to be treated quite unfairly by the judges. People from all
over the world ask me how it happened. I am no longer trying to
understand what they are doing, I don’t worry about it”.
Nineteen years after initiating the own-composition trend in the
steelband movement, Holman is not so happy with the way things have
gone. “I am a little disappointed that more arrangers are
not composing music of their band,” he whined. He says only
Len “Boogsie” Sharpe, Pelham Goddard, Brian “Bean”
Griffith have been maintaining the trend, “but this is too
few.”
He pointed to California based musician/arranger Robert Greenidge
who has done a few compositions over the past decade. While he understands
that for varying reasons some people get disenchanted, he didn’t
have any advice for budding composers.
“You see, it is difficult to advise on something like this
because some people are gifted with the ability to compose, but
most are not,” he said.
Holman’s Panorama history includes a 10-year stint from 1973
to 1983, during which he composed and arranged for Pandemonium Steel
Orchestra.
He later arranged for Exodus, Carib, Tokyo, Phase II Pan Groove,
Starlift and Humming Bird Odessey.
About his musical history, Holman admits he never attended a music
class in his life.
“But I got a good education on how to play the plan from good
panmen back in the good old days, like Cobo Jack and Emmanuel Riley,
Ellie Mannette, and Gerald Forsythe amongst others,” he added.
At age 13 he was playing both tenor and double-tenor in the Invaders
Steelband. From 1957 to 1962, while still attending Queens Royal
College, Holman became the arranger for Invaders. He was just 17
and remembers what a special honour it was back then, to be musically
directing many of the great pioneers of the steelband movement.
“That responsibility was thrust upon me to arrange for all
these big men,” he recalled fondly.
He arranged his first tune with Invaders in 1960, and fondly recalls
it was titled “Ray Saga.” Since that time he has written
“about 300 pieces of music.” |
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