Six schools advance to finals of Sagicor Schools’ Choir Competition

Four primary schools and two secondary institutions have secured their places in the upcoming finals of St. Lucia’s annual Sagicor Schools’ Choir Competition following rigorous auditions held from January 12-16. The primary division finalists include Augier Combined, Babonneau Primary, Canon Laurie Anglican Primary—the defending champions from last year’s competition—and Ave Maria Primary. In the secondary category, Sir Ira Simmons Secondary and Jon Odlum School of Arts, Media and Design will compete for top honors.

Event organizer Jason ‘Bachelor’ Joseph, who transformed the traditional music festival into a competitive choir format four years ago, reported mixed developments in this year’s proceedings. While the number of participating schools declined from 16 to 12, Joseph observed significant qualitative improvements in musical arrangements and vocal techniques. ‘Teachers are arranging well now, the students are singing in parts compared to a lot of unison singing before,’ Joseph told St. Lucia Times, acknowledging the competition’s positive impact on choral education standards.

However, Joseph identified persistent challenges, particularly regarding adherence to musical scores. ‘Some schools are not paying enough attention to the test piece. There is a score that goes with it, and they don’t study the music sheet,’ he noted, indicating room for growth in musical literacy.

The competition format has adapted to this year’s participation patterns, with four primary schools and two secondary schools set to perform at the National Cultural Centre on February 4—a deviation from the traditional three-school-per-category structure due to one secondary school’s failure to qualify.

Joseph attributed the overall participation decline to systemic challenges facing school music programs across the island. Transportation limitations and scheduling conflicts have particularly affected choir rehearsals, as larger groups struggle with after-school commitments that individual instrumentalists can more easily navigate. ‘To work with the larger groups, the teachers have been unable to rehearse after school,’ Joseph explained.

In response to these challenges, Joseph is considering a return to the music festival format for future January events, which would accommodate both solo and group performances while providing broader representation of school music programs. This potential shift remains contingent on sponsor support, with Sagicor continuing as primary sponsor alongside the Nobel Laureate Festival Committee and the Ministry of Education.