- Ellie Mannette
Elliot "Ellie" Mannette (*05.11. 1926 in Sans Souci,
Trinidad ) is a musical instrument maker andSteel Pan musician, also known as "father of the modern steel pan instrument".Life
Very early, Mannette developed a passion for metal and tools for metalworking. He engaged himself in the evolution of the phenomenon of sounding steel. From the middle of the 1930s, percussion bands of different quarters of
Port-of-Spain were in competition with each other. Legend says that Mannette was the first person to use a discarded oil barrel to build a steel pan.In 1951, TASPO (Trinidad All Steel Orchestra) travelled to
Great Britain to present the new musical instrument at theFestival of Britain . Mannette was a member and tuner for this orchestra, which consisted of leader figures of different Trinidadian steel bands.In 1952, Mannette was formally offered a scholarship to study music in
London , which he turned down in order to be able to build more steel pans.After having visited the
United States in the beginning of the 1960s to build up theU.S. Navy Steel Band , he was invited toNew York City to build instruments for an inner city youth program. This invitation had been carried out by Murray Narell, a New York social worker and father of Jeff andAndy Narell . At this time, Mannette tuned his instruments by ear. Eventually he learned about the necessity ofconcert pitch A440 Hz and the use of strobe tuners.Since 1967 Mannette has been building up several hundred steel bands all over the United States, mainly in colleges and universities, but also for private institutions. 1991, he was invited by
West Virginia University to show interested students how to build and play steel pans. What was meant to be a guest-semester eventually turned into a long time relationship called the University Tuning Project and later on the company Mannette Steel Drums.Quote of Elliot Mannette:"Looking back more than half a century during my humble beginnings in this unique art form, no one during that period could have envisioned the rapid growth of this instrument. Through the years as I developed my skills, my entire mindset was sharing my knowledge with others for the betterment of this instrument."
Merits
Mannette is credited with several innovations which have proven to be essential for the evolution of steel pan. He’s been the first to use a 55-gallon oil barrel instead of biscuit tins or soap boxes. Furthermore, Mannette was the person to sink the top of the drum into a concave shape, thus having more space to place notes as well as achieving a better isolation between the different pitches. Ellie Mannette has developed many instruments of the steel pan family. His use of the
whole tone scale on two resonance bodies has become a widely common standard.Mannette has developed his own unique skills and style over many years. Within the University Tuning Project at West Virginia University in
Morgantown, West Virginia , USA, he passes on his knowledge of pan building and tuning to many students and therefore ensures that his experience is passed on to future generations of pan makers. His creations can be admired in many museums and galleries including theSmithsonian Institute , theMetropolitan Museum of Art , and theContemporary art gallery in New York.In 1969, Ellie Mannette was awarded the Hummingbird Medal Silver of
Trinidad and Tobago for his innovations in pan making. For more than 30 years, Mannette has been at the forefront of the steel band movement in the United States. In recognition of his significant contribution to this thriving art form, Mannette received the 1999 NEANational Heritage Fellowship Award, the highest honor for the traditional arts given in the United States. Also in November 2000, Mannette received anHonorary Doctorate from theUniversity of the West Indies and returned home to Trinidad, after a 33 year absence, to receive it. Furthermore, the same year he received theChaconia Medal Silver from his home country, for his outstanding cultural achievement.In 2003, Ellie Mannette was admitted to the Hall of Fame of thePercussive Arts Society of the United States.Further reading
* Felix I. R. Blake: "The Trinidad and Tobago Steel Pan. History and Evolution". ISBN 0-952-55280-9
* Nurse, A. Myrna: "Unheard Voices: The Rise of Steelband and Calypso in the Caribbean and North America". iUniverse, Inc. ISBN-13: 978-.-595-40153-6 (pbk)
References
* http://www.pas.org/About/HofDetails.cfm?IFile=mannette Percussive Arts Society
* http://www.rhythmicalsteel.com/history/history1.html History of Pan by Rhythmicalsteel
* http://www.nea.gov/honors/heritage/fellows/fellow.php?id=1999_10 National Endowment for the Arts
*Tiffe, Janine. "The Arrival of Steel Pan in the United States" in "Percussive Notes, the journal of the Percussive Arts Society" (45 n3 Jun 2007 pp.10–16)ee also
*
Steelpan
*Electronic tuner External links
* http://www.mannettesteeldrums.com/
* http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccLkpFVoQ5o
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