From local acts to Ada Ehi and Tye Tribbett, Kingdom Night delivered

Kingdom Night continues to carve out its own distinct space within the Saint Lucia Jazz and Arts Festival. While the festival’s other mainstage concerts at Pigeon Island see patrons typically abandon their chairs by nightfall, Kingdom Night 2026 unfolded differently. It felt, more than anything else, like a place of pause and reflection. From beginning […] The article From local acts to Ada Ehi and Tye Tribbett, Kingdom Night delivered is from St. Lucia Times.

From local acts to Ada Ehi and Tye Tribbett, Kingdom Night delivered

Kingdom Night continues to carve out its own distinct space within the Saint Lucia Jazz and Arts Festival. While the festival’s other mainstage concerts at Pigeon Island see patrons typically abandon their chairs by nightfall, Kingdom Night 2026 unfolded differently. It felt, more than anything else, like a place of pause and reflection.

From beginning to end, some remained seated. In another setting, that might have suggested a crowd struggling to connect. Here, it meant the opposite, as songs were sung, hummed and softly echoed back through the audience between moments of preaching. Hands were lifted skyward and faces tilted upward or bowed with eyes shut tight, as patrons basked in a more intimate concert experience.

Early performances from the James Sisters, Dr Selma St. Prix, ShirleyAnn Cyril-Mayers, Nigela St. Clair-Daniel, Steffi-Ann St Clair, Dwayne Brown and supporting vocalists reverberated across the park with the kind of chorus-driven worship songs familiar across Christian communities. Their sets were well received by a diverse audience of men, women and children spanning generations.

Arnold AJ Jules injected infectious, electrifying energy with his distinctive, fervent style of gospel rap. His set became one of the night’s liveliest moments, drawing strong engagement from the crowd.

When gospel star Ada Ehi took the stage, the atmosphere shifted once again. Her catalogue of praise and worship favourites created an immersive atmosphere, luring those on their feet to dance, and even jump as they sang along.

Headliner Tye Tribbett closed the night in commanding fashion. Bursting with energy, his set blended rapid movement, dance, exuberant worship and preaching. Like the performers before him, Tribbett moved fluidly across musical moods, satisfying a wide range of tastes throughout the night. From high-energy praise songs to the sobering classic “Yeshua”, which reduced the crowd to a hushed yet resonant singalong. His performance offered a memorable close to this year’s Kingdom Night.

The article From local acts to Ada Ehi and Tye Tribbett, Kingdom Night delivered is from St. Lucia Times.