Carnaval(카니발) ~에서 🇹🇹 트리니다드 토바고
공휴일
예
국경일
아니요
유형
Cultural Celebration
Carnaval(카니발) ~에서 트리니다드 토바고
현지 인사말: Happy Carnival
Trinidad and Tobago Carnival is one of the Caribbean's greatest cultural events and the birthplace of steelpan music, calypso, soca, and the modern Caribbean Carnival tradition that has spread worldwide. Held on the Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday, the festival is the culmination of months of preparation involving music competitions, costume design, and community organizing.
The Carnival begins in the pre-dawn hours of Monday morning with J'ouvert, a raucous celebration where revelers cover themselves in mud, oil, chocolate, and paint, dancing through the streets to the rhythm of steel bands and soca music. J'ouvert's origins lie in the post-emancipation celebrations of formerly enslaved Africans, and the tradition of deliberately getting dirty represents a rejection of colonial respectability and an embrace of freedom.
The main parade on Tuesday, known as the Pretty Mas, showcases the extraordinary artistry of Trinidadian costume design. Mas bands, organized by bandleaders and designers, create themed collections of costumes that can number in the thousands. Revelers purchase costumes from their chosen band and parade through the streets of Port of Spain, crossing stages where judges evaluate the designs. The costumes range from bikini-and-beads designs to enormous wire-frame structures and historical recreations.
The musical competition is equally important, with the Calypso Monarch, International Soca Monarch, and Panorama steelpan competition drawing massive audiences. Panorama, in which steelbands of up to 100 members perform complex arrangements on pans crafted from oil drums, is a uniquely Trinidadian art form. The Dimanche Gras show on Sunday night before Carnival features the crowning of the Calypso Monarch, King and Queen of Carnival, and other competitions that set the stage for the street celebrations.
소개 Carnaval(카니발)
Pre-Lenten festival celebrated with parades, masquerades, music, and dancing in the days before Ash Wednesday, most famously in Rio de Janeiro, Venice, and New Orleans.