Talk:Crop Over

Crop Over is Barbados' biggest festival, having had  it’s early beginnings on the sugar cane plantations during the colonial period .Originally a  celebration signaling  the end of the yearly sugar cane harvest, it has since evolved into a National Festival rivaling New Orleans Mardis Gras and Carnival in Trinidad. Beginning in June it runs until the first Monday in August when  it culminates in the  finale,  The Grand Kadooment.

For the entire two months life for many islanders is one big party with a major feature of Crop Over being the Calypso Competition. Calypso music with it’s syncopated rhythm and topical lyrics  gives it’s exponents the ideal medium in which to satirise local politics and comment on the  issues of the day, while taking nothing away  from  the general bacchanal. Every week sees one fete after another as the island  follows  the fortunes of the  calypso crown  contenders. Night after night calypso tents feature their cadre of calypsonians and patrons are treated to biting social commentaries on the happenings of the past year, political exposé’s or rousing exhortations   to ‘wuk dah waistline’ and  ,roll dat bumper’. Every form of media is devoted to the holy grail of the road to the stadium and the Party Monarch or Calypso Crown. There are craft markets, food tents and stalls , street parties and cavalcades every week supplemented by daily events at Tim’s on the Highway the new home of the Barbados Cropover Festival.

This annual event provides visitors and locals alike an excellent opportunity to experience the best the island has to offer in food, music , craft and culture.

To be worked in later.
Bureau to manage Crop-Over (Quote)THE CROP-OVER FESTIVAL has outgrown the National Cultural Foundation (NCF). ... At a media briefing recently at the Savannah Hotel, NCF chairman Ken Knight revealed that there was a plan to establish a Festival And Events Bureau - an entity distinct from the foundation - which would plan and manage the Crop-Over Festival and other Government-organised events year-round. ... He explained the foundation had spent most of its time financing and promoting Crop-Over rather than being a strict guardian of Barbadian heritage.

"While Crop-Over has flourished, development of cultural awareness on the whole in Barbados has declined," he said. (end quote) Published on: 8/9/2009.(WG) CaribDigita (talk) 02:04, 10 August 2009 (UTC)


 * Change in the route. CaribDigita (talk) 19:11, 31 December 2010 (UTC)