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CELEBRATING OUR CREATIVE PERSONALITIES
The Muttoo (Mootoo) Brothers Calypso Orchestra
By Dr Vibert C. Cambridge
Superlatives have been used to describe the
contributions of George (1910-1978) and Charlie Muttoo (1915-1955) to
calypso music in Trinidad. For three decades, these Guyanese-born
musicians accompanied some of the most innovative calypsonians in the
history of the art form - Beginner, Destroyer, Lord Iere, Lord Zigfield,
The Commander, Small Island Pride, Dictator, Atilla the Hun, Terror and
The Roaring Lion.

The Muttoo Brothers with fellow Guyanese musician
Fitsie Bonsie in Trinidad with calypsonians Small Island Pride (
Grenada), Dictator, Atilla The Hun, Terror, and The Roaring Lion in a
1940 photo.
(Photo taken from
http://www.rootsofcalypso.com/mootoo.html)

The Muttoo Brothers as backup musicians to top
Trinidadian calypsonians Beginner, Destroyer, Lord Iere, Lord Zigfield,
and The Commander. Photo taken in 1943 in Trinidad before a tour. Female
backup singers are Peggy Daniels and Lady Iere.
(Photo taken from
http://www.rootsofcalypso.com/mootoo.html)
The Muttoo brothers were born in New Amsterdam,
Berbice, and were introduced to the world of music by their mother, Mary
Elizabeth Muttoo (nee Bowen), who was born in Essequibo. She taught them
and their five siblings to play the harmonium ("mouth organ"). Their
father, Joseph, who was born at Enmore Estate, Demerara, was a "real
businessman" who operated grocery stores and later served as a travelling sales representative for the Indian company Amritdara House
of Medicine. The correct spelling for the family name is Muttoo and not
Mootoo.
George expanded his musical skills, including reading
music, from serving as a member of the Militia Band in New Amsterdam for
about four years. In the band he played the clarinet. George taught
himself to play the saxophone and he taught his brother Charlie to play
the clarinet. Charlie, who could not read music, because of impaired
vision, has been described as a musician who was "sensitive to sounds"
and played anything that was given to him by George.
After moving to Georgetown, the family lived in
various locations in Cummingsburg. The brothers" decision to pursue
careers in jazz and calypso did not go down well with the family
initially. Their mother"s brother, Reverend Bowen, was the president
of the Lutheran Church. So there were expectations of more conservative
careers. No attempt was made to dissuade the career ambitions of George
and Charlie, however. By the late 1930s the brothers had established the Muttoo Brothers Orchestra as one of the leading jazz and dance bands in
BG. Among the members of the band were Randolph Proffit on piano, Jack
Mello on Bass, and "Bonus" on banjo. The Muttoo Brothers Orchestra
was part of the creative ferment that was taking place in BG in the mid
and late 1930s. Their contemporaries included Ted Roy, Sam Chase, The
Princess Band, the Washboards, and the Jack James Orchestra. Their
rendition of Destroyer"s A Mother"s Love is still remembered by
older Guyanese.
Their innovative musical style attracted the attention
of calypsonians and impresarios across the West Indies, including
Trinidad and Tobago's Johhny Khan. Johnny Khan connected the Muttoo
Brothers Orchestra with Hollywood, and the orchestra made a 20-minute
movie that was shown in cinemas across BG, Trinidad and Tobago, other
parts of the West Indies, and the United States.
In 1941, George and Charlie moved to Trinidad and
Tobago where they continued to be musical innovators. In the preface to
Raymond Quevedo"s (Atilla the Hun) book Atilla's Kaiso: A Short
History of Trinidad Calypso, published in 1983, Errol Hill credited
Geroge Muttoo for scoring 41 of the calypsos performed by Atilla the
Hun. Among them were West Indian Rhythm, Congo Bara, L'Annee Passee
(the melody used for Rum and Coca Cola), Brown Skin Gal, and Graf
Zepplin. The scores can be found in an appendix to the book.
The brothers also performed on recordings of the day.
Kim Johnson, the Trinidadian music critic, considered the clarinet,
"with
its mellow sound... integral to calypso in the first three decades of
[the 20th] century." In the Trinidad Express feature "Unbearable
beauty on a Bass Clarinet," he acknowledged that the "virtuoso" on
the clarinet"was Guyanese-born Charlie Mootoo of the great Mootoo
Brothers band."
The Muttoo Brothers were part of a tradition of
musical exchange that has been taking place between Guyana and Trinidad
and Tobago since the start of the 20th century, if not before. According
to The Roaring Lion in his book, Calypso from France to Trinidad: 800
Years of History, Guyanese musician Phil Madison was one of the early
participants in this exchange. Madison is reported to have visited
Trinidad initially in 1908. From 1912, he brought vaudeville shows from
British Guiana to the cinema stages of Trinidad and Tobago. The Roaring
Lion has argued that it was these Guyanese-organized vaudeville shows
that helped to make calypsos acceptable to cinema fans in Trinidad and
Tobago. In those early days of silent film, cinema owners provided
various forms of live entertainment on the stage as a way to augment
revenues. Efforts to promote calypsonians as separate acts in Trinidad
and Tobago were not successful until the acts were integrated into
vaudeville shows.
Phil Madison's successful vaudeville formula opened
up a space for other Guyanese performers and musicians such as Madame Olindie, Sam Dopee, and Lord Coffee. Guyanese calypso historian Dr
Gordon Rohlehr, has chronicled the movement of the Bhagee style of music
from British Guiana to Trinidad and Tobago. He described it as "very
infectious." One of the famous exponents of the Bhagee style was Bill
"Bhagee" Rogers (Augustus Hinds) who preferred to call the style "Shanto."
The Muttoo Brothers were also recognized as exponents of the Bhagee
style.
By the 1940s, the Muttoo Brothers Orchestra was the
top draw in Trinidad and Tobago. They even performed in calypso tents.
Their popularity continued into the 1950s. In a recent article, "Unity
of Dougla Music," Kim Johnson referred to the Muttoo Brothers
Orchestra as "one of the most important back-up bands for calypsonians
in the 1950s".
Clearly, the Muttoo Brothers have left a mark on music
in Trinidad and Tobago. Their story is part of the larger story about
the circulation of musical ideas in the Caribbean. It is also a story
about music transcending social constructions such as race, class, and
origins.
I am very thankful for the support I received from the
Rev Dr Francis Muttoo, a brother of George and Charlie Muttoo, and from
the distinguished Guyanese scholar and theatre professional Henry Muttoo
in preparing this feature. Dr Francis Muttoo resides in Ontario, Canada.
Henry Muttoo, who is the Artistic Director of the Cayman National
Cultural Foundation, is the nephew of George and Charlie Mootoo.
There is certainly much more to the story of the
Muttoo brothers. We hope that the symposium that will be part of Guyana
Folk Festival 2003 will provide more information on the Muttoo brothers
and on other aspects of Guyana"s musical heritage.
The Muttoo brothers' story, like those about our
other creative heroes, must be told as accurately as possible. We, the
members of the Folk Festival team, are committed to making a
contribution.
Your comments, ideas, and recommendations will be
appreciated. Please send them to cambridg@ohio.edu.
Sources:
(1) Gordon Rohlehr Calypso and Society in
Pre-Independence Trinidad. (Port of Spain, 1990).
(2) Rafael de Leon (The Roaring Lion) Calypso from
France to Tinidad: 800 Years of History. (San Juan, Trinidad, ca late
1980s).
(3) Raymond Quevedo (Atilla the Hun) Atilla's Kaiso:
A Short History of Trinidad Calypso (St Augustine: University of the
West Indies, 1983).
(4) Kim Johnson Unity of Dougla Music (Available
online at
http://www.triniview.com/douglamusic.htm).
(5) Kim Johnson Unbearable beauty on a Bass Clarinet.
(6) E-mail correspondence with Henry Muttoo, and
(7) Telephone interview with Rev Dr Francis Muttoo,
July 30, 2003.
First published
StabroekNews.com August 3, 2003
Related
link
Sing De Chorus - Calypsos of Trinidad & Tobago
http://ecaroh.com/calypso/sing_de_chorus.htm
from
www.eCaroh.com |