[Dixielandjazz] Carl Barriteau

Stephen G Barbone barbonestreet at earthlink.net
Wed Jan 20 18:30:41 PST 2010


Dear Marek: (who asked about Carl Barriteau)

Here is Carl Barriteau's obit, by Steve Voce

Cheers,
Steve Barbone

August 31, 1998
Obituary: Carl Barriteau
By Steve Voce
DURING THE years of the Swing Era, most European clarinet players  
tried to model their playing on that of Benny Goodman. Carl Barriteau,  
who had come to Britain from Trinidad in 1937, based his style instead  
on that of Goodman's perceived rival Artie Shaw. With hindsight it is  
obvious that Shaw's playing was more sophisticated and harmonically  
more adventurous than Goodman's.
It's a fair reflection of Barriteau's outstanding ability that he was  
able to cope convincingly with his idol's style. Barriteau led the  
band of stars that recorded the famous First English Public Jam  
Session in London in November 1941. Sure enough, the Shaw influence is  
very obvious, but close listening reveals that where Shaw was precise  
and immaculate in some of his uniquely complex runs on the instrument,  
Barriteau cleverly skidded over the points where such ambitious work  
was required.

None the less it was he and the newly emerged trumpet star Kenny Baker  
who dominated the concert and, like the trombonist George Chisholm,  
each easily dominated the English scene on his instrument.

Barriteau spent his early years in Maracaibo, Venezuela, before being  
taught to play the tenor horn at the Belmont Orphanage in Trinidad. He  
played in the Trinidad Constabulary Band for some years and during  
this time switched to clarinet, showing his outstanding skills on the  
instrument when he worked with Bert McLean's Jazz Hounds and with  
another of the island's leading jazz groups, the Williams Brothers'  
Blue Rhythm Band.

In 1937 Barriteau moved to Britain and joined the West Indian Swing  
Band band led by Ken "Snake Hips" Johnson, a jazz trumpeter with whom  
he toured variety halls and played night club bookings. They made  
several recordings including a successful version of "Tuxedo  
Junction" (1940). Late 1939 the band began a residency at the Cafe de  
Paris in London. The band was playing there when the building was  
bombed during an air raid in March 1941. Johnson was killed and  
Barriteau was badly injured.

He made a good recovery and went on to work as a featured soloist with  
a series of wartime bands including those led by Lew Stone, Ambrose,  
Chappie D'Amato, Eric Winstone and Joe Loss. From 1942 he played  
regularly at the weekly Sunday jam sessions held in London at the  
Feldman Club at 100 Oxford Street. Barriteau formed his own West  
Indian Dance Orchestra which worked and broadcast from London. He made  
a double-sided recording of Artie Shaw's Concerto for Clarinet that  
displayed his great agility on the instrument. His playing here came  
closer to Shaw's than anyone else's had.

Barriteau spent the rest of the war years touring with the band and  
recording for the Decca label. As the war ended took the band on a  
tour to play for British forces in Europe. He took the band into the  
Embassy Club in London. He was the star of the Melody Maker's 1947  
"Jazz Rally" and the 78rpm records of the concerts outsold any other  
British jazz records of the time.

In 1949 he began a two-year residency at the Eldorado Ballroom in  
Leith, Scotland. This may not have been financially rewarding: a  
visitor to Barriteau's flat in the town remembers that he was loathe  
to leave it as he benefited from a free gas supply. He had modified  
the gas meter so that he could put a shilling in the slot and then,  
when it had been credited, could persuade the meter to regurgitate the  
coin.

Returning south in 1951 he joined Cyril Stapleton's band for a year.  
He worked as a soloist and with his own band, which he re-formed as  
needed, and again toured Europe, North Africa and South East Asia,  
entertaining American troops there between 1958 and 1966. During this  
time he worked as a double act with the singer Mae Cooper and also led  
his band for a tour with the Platters vocal group.

He emigrated to Australia in 1970, became an Australian citizen and  
settled in Sydney, using this as a base for widespread touring  
throughout Australasia and the Orient.

Steve Voce

Carl Barriteau, clarinet and saxophone player and bandleader: born  
Trinidad 7 February 1914; died Sydney, Australia 24 August 1998.


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