It struck me that what Scrunter and "Smooth" Edwards did was to bring the spice of Indo-Trinidad to chunkay steelband music; whatever Sat may think. When the turn of the hosts came and they played SuperBlue's and Bradley's Rebecca, I drank in the sweetness, hearing live (I have a recorded version played at the Panorama finals, which I swear is my favourite Panorama piece ever) those bewitching runs on the tenors and seeing in the mind's eye the vitality and energy of Rebecca "swinging she ting." The experience persuaded me to believe again that God gave this music to the deprived and despised of those from Behind de Bridge and, before they kill me, men from the West, as a special dispensation to make up for their social deprivation. Nonetheless, I was shocked out of my revere wondering whether or not someone, somewhere had scored these and other Panorama classics for the generations to come. We chipped down the Hill in the dark, but the light of the music of the pan-round-de-neck sides provided the glow. "When ah dead bury meh clothes ... ah don't want no sweetman to wear meh clothes...." The lyrics and sentiments of the old bois men rang through the air; the hope is for peace to reign on the Hill for Carnival 2011 and beyond.