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, May 17, 2025

The Lara Brothers Legacy

by

Chester Sambrano
1905 days ago
20200229

When it comes to cul­ture there is no short­age in San­ta Cruz.

It is the home of ar­guably the old­est, great­est and most well-known parang group to be cre­at­ed in this coun­try—the Lara Broth­ers.

While the Lara Broth­ers did not orig­i­nate in San­ta Cruz, the four boys and their par­ents moved to T&T from Venezuela and start­ed sign­ing with their fa­ther, Igna­cio. When he left the fam­i­ly, they as­sumed their moth­er's sur­name in­stead, and the Lara Broth­ers parang band was born.

Daphne Lara-Roberts, sit­ting in the liv­ing room of the home she lived in with her fa­ther, Tito, re­count­ed the lega­cy of Willie, Tito, An­to­nio and Vic­tor, the orig­i­nal Lara Broth­ers.

She said they start­ed go­ing from house to house per­form­ing in San­ta Cruz and even­tu­al­ly around the coun­try. Al­though Vic­tor made the oc­ca­sion­al ap­pear­ance with the group, his work sched­ule didn’t al­low him to be a full-time mem­ber.

"Grow­ing up, peo­ple would come from about ear­ly in the morn­ing time to come and meet my dad. His broth­er would come and they would start to parang from here and then they would go next door and they would keep go­ing from there," Lara-Roberts said.

The group be­gan to grow and moved from sev­en to ap­prox­i­mate­ly 20 mem­bers. It toured not just lo­cal­ly but in­ter­na­tion­al­ly as well.

Lara-Roberts ex­plained that her un­cle Wille was the writer and her fa­ther was the singer. But al­though Tito Lara wasn’t a writer, "he would sit down and now for now he would just take up his cu­a­tro and he would start to hum a song and then he would just put it to words, but he wouldn’t write, he would just re­mem­ber what he was singing."

Af­ter time, Tito be­came known as the fa­ther of parang.

"Every­body looked up to him. Every­body used to call him dad and un­cle or what­ev­er. He was such a per­son that you could go to. You want to find some­thing you could go to him and ask him," she said

Now all the broth­ers have passed away but the man­tle is be­ing car­ried on by Tito’s son Car­los Not one day goes by with­out Lara-Roberts feel­ing proud of her fam­i­ly name and lega­cy.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored