Senior Reporter
soyini.grey@cnc3.co.tt
Newly minted 2026 Road March champion Machel Montano yesterday defended himself against claims on social media that he was moving from truck to truck on Carnival Monday and Tuesday to unfairly push his Encore for the title race.
Montano refuted this assertion as unnecessary and a violation of his very ethos.
“I am not a rule breaker! I have eleven Road Marches! I know the rules; I am not a rule-breaker!” he said during a media conference in TSTT’s Executive Box at the Queen’s Park Oval, Port-of-Spain.
Rather, he said it was his hard work on both days that gave him the edge over Aaron “Voice” St Louis and Ian “Bunji Garlin” Alvarez, saying his many appearances on Carnival stages made the difference.
He said his campaign began Carnival Monday night with Tribe, with whom he has had a four-year long business arrangement that includes his having several branded trucks within the band. Yet, he said he actually performed on the truck assigned to DJ and music producer Travis “Travis World” Hosein because it was better suited to performances.
“You could sing on any truck. We went to Travis World’s truck because it had the fire and the flames, it had the nice top. It had more speakers on my truck, my truck is for people, his truck is for music. So I went on there and stayed on it just like I did in 2025, and then I came off of that truck and sat on my truck, and purposely zip my mouth, and did not take any microphone, because I know the rules, you do not appear on one stage multiple times,” Montano explained.
He said his performances on Tuesday included scheduling his appearances to make sure he maximised visibility in his Encore branded T-shirts and rags without violating any rules. He said this meant some of his performances did not count towards Road March plays. He said this is why he crossed the Queen’s Park Savannah stage with Harts and no one else. Montano said while he did perform with the A-Team band, it was on the Savannah track and did not count towards his Road March plays. Similarly, his performance at Downtown Carnival, in fulfilment of a request from Port-of-Spain Mayor Chinua Alleyne, did not count because the first song the band crossed to was Voice’s Cyah Behave, so his performance on the second truck was appreciated by fans, but not registered by the tabulators.
Ultimately, of the seven trucks he sang on from Monday night into Tuesday, he said only three of those performances were counted. Machel’s Encore was played 171 times while Voice’s Cyah Behave was played 127 times across the judging points on both days. Bunji Garlin’s Still a Road Man was played 91 times.
According to Section 37.0 of TUCO’s Road March rules, the winner is determined by the song registered for the competition that is played the highest total number of times, without repetition, during the agreed period at all designated venues. The first song played when a band appears at a judging point is what is counted.
Montano also addressed the conversation about his retirement, saying he was not doing so anytime soon. Rather, he said he will be shifting his focus to carving pathways to position soca before global audiences. He said breaking Aldwyn “Lord Kitchener” Roberts’ 50-year-old record isn’t something that should be taken lightly and should be recognised.
“This is a moment in history. Should be marked like Hasley Crawford winning a gold medal, or Keshorn Walcott winning a gold medal, or Brian Lara’s 375, Sobers,” he said. Before joking, “I hope I get a little house. A diplomatic passport like Skinny (Fabulous). At least give me back my bus route pass.”
While he made his requests tongue-in-cheek, he did say artistes feel unappreciated and their achievements often go unnoticed, but still they persist because they have their eyes on the prize.
“One day all yuh will see me with a Grammy in our hands.”
Montano also confirmed that while his concert at the Flava Village on Carnival Friday was free to patrons, he was paid for his performance. However, he said the Government was given a cost that was less than a third of his normal rate.
He also dismissed allegations that he purposefully scheduled his concert to compete with Bunji Garlin’s Hard Fete, which was also held in the Savannah on Carnival Friday. Montano said the Flava date happened because he was originally scheduled to fly to India for a Sadhguru concert. But a team decision to remain in Trinidad to chase greatness and a twelfth Road March meant his schedule opened, and that was the only reason he performed at Flava on Carnival Friday.
Montano also announced that he is partnering with TSTT to host an incubator programme for soca producers. He said the local industry needs development, training and education about the history of the artform, adding his Soca Bridge programme is to address that. No date was given for the launch, but it is expected to be in a few weeks.
