New Orleans Brass Bands S/D

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (1927 of them)
Sorry, that was Lionel's son, Lionel Jr. who passed.

Daniel Peterson (polkaholic), Thursday, 4 January 2007 17:44 (seventeen years ago) link

They arrested the kid who shot Dinerral (snare drummer for the Hot 8 Brass Band) and the story behind it makes it even more sad and pointless.

http://www.nola.com/search/index.ssf?/base/news-6/1167461915258450.xml?NZNENO&coll=1

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 4 January 2007 17:45 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't think there's ever been a band that's had worse luck then the H8.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 4 January 2007 17:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Dinerral's funeral yesterday was beautiful. There were at least 25 musicians waiting when they brought Dinerral out of the church - the Hot 8 plus New Brith plus Glen David and James Andrews, Erion and Edward from Soul Rebels, and many more - 5 tubas alone! Then Rebirth was holding up the back of the second line. I haven't seen a two band funeral in a while.

I wound up doing a story about Dinerral on NPR. You can check it out here:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6735417

Jordan, I heard you came down - call me anytime.

Matt.

Matt Sakakeeny (mattsak), Sunday, 7 January 2007 18:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Maybe that march on City Hall will help. All these murders (Dinneral, Helen Hill and others) are heartbreaking (not that this hasn't been a problem there for years)

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 13:38 (seventeen years ago) link

The Ponderosa Stomp and the Essence Festival are returning to New Orleans this year. In May and July 2007 respectively.

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 14:13 (seventeen years ago) link

Marching against violence is stupid. Who the fuck are they demonstrating to? The pro-murder crowd? What will stop the violence in this city is poverty reduction and the provision of alternatives to Katrina-scarred victims of New Orleans public "education." The working class here, just like everywhere else in America, is fucked--no unions, no job security, no training, nothing. I don't see people marching against the low-wage service-based economy that is crippling the economic development of New Orleans and her citizens. Fix that and people will stop mindlessly and needlessly killing each other.

On a lighter note, has the Ponderosa Stomp lineup been announced? I might actually be able to afford to go this year--unless Kathleen fucking Blanco's moronic smoking ban means I can't smoke at Rock n Bowl.

adam (adam), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 15:16 (seventeen years ago) link

What will stop the violence in this city is poverty reduction and the provision of alternatives to Katrina-scarred victims of New Orleans public "education."

OTM.

Jordan (Jordan), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 15:19 (seventeen years ago) link

Not to mention the idiocy of bringing Lee Brown or whoever in as a consultant. Didn't he institute the "zero-tolerance" broken-windows thing in New York? And now New York sucks? And New Orleans is anything but a zero-tolerance kind of town? ARGH THERE ARE SO MANY THINGS WRONG AND SO MANY STUPID FUCKING PEOPLE DOING EVEN MORE WRONG THINGS.

adam (adam), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 15:22 (seventeen years ago) link

The march was supposed to wake up the mayor and the police chief, but I see that the Police Chief responded with moronic blame game comments instead. And yea you're right about poverty reduction and the working class...

Roky Erikson's gonna be at the Ponderosa Stomp, with only one night announced so far--at the House of Blues (for some reason)
http://www.knights-maumau.com/news.php?PHPSESSID=b7857518bfe1836beecad5e05f4cf21f

"At the Ponderosa Stomp, Roky Erickson will be surrounded by legendary performers, including master arranger Wardell Quezergue and the New Orleans Rhythm & Blues Revue, soul songwriter supreme Dan Penn, rockabilly wild man Dale Hawkins, R&B soprano Little Jimmy Scott, Texas Tornado co-founder Augie Meyers, Stax sessions guitarist Skip Pitts, Gulf Coast guitar empress Barbara Lynn, Mardi Gras king Al "Carnival Time" Johnson, Excello harp master Lazy Lester, keyboardist extraordinaire Willie Tee, President of soul Rockie Charles, hillbilly bopper Jay Chevalier, tough Texas shouter Roy Head, and rockabilly wailer Joe Clay, with more to come."

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 17 January 2007 15:37 (seventeen years ago) link

http://offbeat.com/artman/publish/article_2034.shtml

2007 JazzFest lineup. I haven't looked at it closely but am assuming it is similar to prior years, i.e., some good local artists, too many big name out-of-towners, few Ponderosa Stomp obscure types, and maybe 1 or 2 token rappers or contemporary r'n'b artists.

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Thursday, 25 January 2007 18:30 (seventeen years ago) link

Next weekend, Mama Digdown's Brass Band @ Donna's (Feb. 2nd) and Krewe du Vieux parade (Feb. 3rd)

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 25 January 2007 18:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Sounds like fun. There's a nice poster of Rebirth for this year's fest (and one of Jerry Lee Lewis also)


http://www.nojazzfest.com/

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Thursday, 25 January 2007 18:58 (seventeen years ago) link

That Phil F. poster is pretty sweet.

Looks like all the cool brass bands are on the first weekend.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 25 January 2007 19:00 (seventeen years ago) link

Thanks Curmudgeon, that's a, erm, curmudgeonly way to sum up the JF schedule. For the most part I concur, although post-Katrina just the fact that "some good local artists" (actually a ton of 'em) are still alive and well and showing up from wherever they're dispersed makes me very happy. Yeah you rite, Rod Stewart and Counting Crows didn't exactly raise my eyebrows, although Steely Dan and ZZ Top did, a little, and Jerry Lee Lewis, Pharoah Sanders... okay, I have to spend some time with this!

Daniel Peterson (polkaholic), Thursday, 25 January 2007 19:12 (seventeen years ago) link

Yea you rite. There are lots and lots of good locals there, I just want perfection! And while everyone else is watching ZZ Top, that means it will be that much easier for New Orleans afficionados to see the locals. The second weekend does have Irma Thomas' Tribute to Mahalia Jackson which sounds wonderful (although most of the young brass bands are the 1st weekend).

Jordan, do you know anything about Smitty Dee's Brass Band who are there on the second weekend? A google seach tells me Dimitri Smith of the band used to be in the Olympia Brass Band, so that makes them more traditional, right?

I don't think Aaron Neville is gonna be there again (last year he said his breathing problems get compounded in post-Katrina New Orleans) and I just read that his wife died of cancer. He's living in Nashville now. http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070106/OBITS/701060330/1090/NEWS

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Thursday, 25 January 2007 20:39 (seventeen years ago) link

Nope, I don't know any of the musicians but they definitely look more trad.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 25 January 2007 20:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Over the holidays I saw Aaron on the Trinity Broadcasting Network, which is headquartered in the Nashville 'burbs, doing a very Lawrence Welk-ish Christmas special. Surreal....

novamax (novamax), Thursday, 25 January 2007 22:35 (seventeen years ago) link

three weeks pass...
http://ilx.thehold.net/thread.php?msgid=34078#unread

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 21 February 2007 22:34 (seventeen years ago) link

http://ilx.thehold.net/thread.php?msgid=34078#unread

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 21 February 2007 23:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Maybe you can't link to ILX sandbox threads even if you follow the proper procedure for placing a hyperlink.

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 21 February 2007 23:29 (seventeen years ago) link

NYTimes
February 20, 2007
In New Orleans, Bands Struggle to Regain Footing By JON PARELES

NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 19 — When the first Mardi Gras after Hurricane Katrina took place last year, New Orleanians felt something vital was missing:
the strutting steps and triumphal horns of the city’s proud, immensely competitive high school bands marching between the floats.


The reason was obvious: Nearly all the city’s schools were still shut, and most of the students had been evacuated. This year fewer than a third of the public schools in New Orleans have reopened — many more are due this fall — and much of the city’s old population remains dispersed.
But some of the top high school bands are back: a rare, heartening sign not only for the parades but also for the long-term vitality of New Orleans culture. “Music is New Orleans, and marching bands are part of every phase of our city’s life,” said Allen T. Woods, the principal of Frederick A.
Douglass High School in the hard-hit Ninth Ward. His school’s band was booked for two parades in this Mardi Gras season, which began on Feb.
10. The members are wearing matching warm-up suits, since band uniforms are still on order. But they are marching.


New Orleans has always been a city of parades, from Mardi Gras to jazz funerals. When jazz began, it commandeered the trumpets and drums of military bands, and the swagger and swing of brass bands have been among the city’s great musical resources ever since.


The high school bands have long been the incubator for New Orleans music, and the training ground for generations of musicians. In this city’s wonderfully insular culture, band instruments like trombone and sousaphone are as ubiquitous as guitars and synthesizers elsewhere.
Before Katrina, it wasn’t unusual to hear young brass players jamming on New Orleans street corners, and those musicians’ first instruments might well have come from high school stockpiles. Through the years, school music programs have put horns, clarinets and drums into the hands of students who would never have played them otherwise, and high school connections have jumpstarted important New Orleans groups like the Rebirth Brass Band.


Brass bands repay the help. Dinerral Shavers, the snare drummer of the Hot 8 Brass Band, was hired to organize a marching band at L. E. Rabouin High School, and his fellow Hot 8 members dropped in to help teach. But Mr. Shavers was shot dead on Dec. 28 in one of a series of murders that led to a large anticrime rally at City Hall on Jan. 11. The Rabouin High School Band marched in this year’s Mardi Gras parades.

“These bands play as important a role in the perpetuation of New Orleans music culture as anything,” said Bill Taylor, executive director of the Tipitina’s Foundation, which has turned the long-running uptown club Tipitina’s into a nonprofit organization that provides instruments and other help for musicians. Since New Orleans schools had long since cut back on music education, the foundation started donating instruments to them in 2002. In 2006 it gave away $500,000 worth of instruments. “This is about keeping New Orleans New Orleans,” Mr. Taylor said.

And in New Orleans, unlike many other places, band membership means prestige in high school. “High school bands in New Orleans are as important as football is in Texas,” said Virgil Tiller, the band director at St. Augustine High School, whose Purple Knights, better known as the Marching 100, have been the city’s most celebrated high school band.


St. Augustine is a historically black school, and its band integrated 20th-century Mardi Gras parades when they were invited in 1967 to appear with the Rex Organization, the top Mardi Gras krewe. Spectators spat on them and threw bricks and urine-filled condoms, Edward Hampton, the band’s founding director, recalled, but the students refused to brawl and just kept marching. Since then, bands from black high schools have become mainstays of Mardi Gras. Band programs are paid about $1,500 a parade.


Montreal A. Givens, 17, a trombonist who is a drum major in the Marching 100, lives alone in a trailer provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency so that he can finish out his senior year with the band. He’s also an honors student. His father, Lumar LeBlanc, leads a brass band, the Soul Rebels, that was formed by New Orleans high school bandmates; Mr. LeBlanc still resides in Houston.


“I came back here for the music,” Mr. Givens said in the school’s band room as the Marching 100 assembled for a parade. “I took a hard hit, but I couldn’t stop my life because of the hurricane.”


Before Katrina, the Marching 100 actually had 150 to 170 members, including baton twirlers and a color guard. Now it has about 90. The flood completely destroyed what had been a newly built band room and all the school’s instruments and uniforms. At last year’s Mardi Gras parade, some members of St. Augustine’s Marching 100 were part of a small but determined high school band, the MAX band, that merged the returned students from three private schools: St. Augustine, St. Mary’s Academy and Xavier University Preparatory School.


“We proved we could do something positive in such devastated surroundings,” said Lester Wilson of Xavier, who led the MAX band.


This year, as St. Augustine marched in the Krewe d’Etat parade, there were shouts and applause as its purple and gold uniforms came into view.
“This band is the city’s band,” Mr. Tiller said. “When we march, it’s amazing to me how many people say: ‘Thank you for coming back. If St.
Aug’s is back, the city is coming back.’ ”


Educators say that band membership, like other extracurricular activities, helps to keep students from dropping out. Practicing an instrument, particularly for the chance at the status of leading a section in a beloved high school band, builds discipline. So do regular rehearsals — the St. Augustine band works five days a week, summers included — and memorizing the formations and instrument-swinging choreography used by New Orleans high school bands.


But music has not been a priority for New Orleans schools struggling to reconstruct buildings and entire academic programs. Paul Batiste, the band director of the Sophie B. Wright Charter School, had his band practicing on what he could afford from his own pocket — just the mouthpieces for trumpets and clarinets — until instruments were provided by private groups, including the Tipitina’s Foundation and Mr. Holland’s Opus. FEMA has also supplied instruments to some schools, among them Douglass High School in the Ninth Ward.

Like other New Orleans institutions....
“It doesn’t sound like it did before,” said Shantell Franklin, 17, who plays baritone horn in the band from Sarah T. Reed High School in New Orleans East. Instruments to replace those ruined by rust and mold arrived at her school only a month ago. “We’ve got a lot of beginners in the band,” Ms. Franklin said. “They’re dedicated and they want to play, but they just can’t get the notes out right.”


Yet even at less than full strength, New Orleans high school bands are still producing musicians to continue the city’s musical legacy. Joshua Phipps, who plays F horn in the marching band of McDonogh 35 High School and saxophone in the concert band, was a beginner two years ago. His English teacher suggested he join the band at Walter L. Cohen High School, now closed; after Katrina, he enrolled in McDonogh 35, whose band has a citywide reputation.

Mr. Phipps had been thinking about basketball, but the band changed his life, he said. “At my first band practice, I just fell in love with the sound,” he said. “I practiced a whole lot, every day, and it was like a hidden talent I didn’t know I had.”

Like many a high school band member before him, he also has gigs of his own. Mr. Phipps is in a brass band called the Truth, which plays for parties and processions, along with a weekly downtown club date. He plans to study music in college.

“I want to be a band teacher,” he said. Then he picked up his horn and joined McDonogh 35’s ranks for a Mardi Gras parade.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 February 2007 04:26 (seventeen years ago) link

Scott S. mentioned this on the American Routes thread--a thread about that Nick Spitzer hosted syndicated public radio show(and on XM). The American Routes website lists radio stations and websites where you can hear the program :

February 28 - March 6, 2007
Routes March On: Brass Bands & Cajun Youths
Visit with two groups of musicians taking Louisiana roots music forward into the 21st century. The Hot 8 Brass Band can be found everywhere in the streets and clubs of the Crescent City, mixing rap and funk with older traditional numbers. While over in Cajun country, the Pine Leaf Boys swap accordions and fiddles for guitars moving back and forth between Cajun and zydeco tunes and new originals.

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 February 2007 16:41 (seventeen years ago) link

So that's going to air on March 6th? I'd like to hear it.

I've played with some of those dudes from the Truth, haven't heard their full band though.

Jordan, Friday, 23 February 2007 17:01 (seventeen years ago) link

It will aire on some stations sooner than March 6th I think.

curmudgeon, Friday, 23 February 2007 18:39 (seventeen years ago) link

Let me know what you think of that American Routes story - I wound up getting interviews w/Tuba Phil, Benny Pete, and Lumar and Marcus from Soul Rebels. It was murder choosing little snippets of all of their songs to represent them. Later this week you should be able to stream the segment from their website.

mattsak, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 06:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I also want to to hear the below. But I'd have to make it to Seattle on April 20th at the Experience Music Project emplive.com pop conference to hear it. Some more details on each presentation are at the EMP website.

>> Resurrecting New Orleans
Venue: Level 3
Featuring:
Ned Sublette, “Rock the City With Their Congo Dances: The African Layers Of Colonial New Orleans”

Reginald Jackson, ““My eyes were not believin’, what I seen there but I could not turn away”: Siting the Voyeur in Sonny Landreth’s “Congo Square””

Alex Rawls, “The Silhouette of a Trumpet Player”

Larry Blumenfeld, “Will the Second Line Survive? Jazz and the Struggle for Survival by Social Aid & Pleasure Clubs, Mardi Gras Indian tribes, and Brass-Band Communities”

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 14:01 (seventeen years ago) link

This looks great out there also:

>> Made It Funky: New Orleans, James Brown, and the Foundations and Futures of U.S. Pop Music
This multi-media conversation between Jeff Chang, author of the award winning Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation and Total Chaos: The Art And Aesthetics of Hip-hop, and Gaye T. Johnson, faculty in the Black Studies Department at UC Santa Barbara, centers New Orleans' shaping influence on pop music's past, present, and future through a revelatory discussion of music, history, and memory in the wake of Katrina. Johnson draws upon her research project, "The Mexican Genius of Borderlands Jazz," awarded the 2006 prize for best writing on Comparative Ethnic Studies from the American Studies Association to set the ground for Chang's historical exploration of the connection between breakbeat, the clave, the blues 4/4, James Brown, and what has come to be known as the New Orleans meter. Facilitators: Michelle Habell-Pallan, Associate Professor of American Ethnic Studies and Women Studies and Music adjunct at the University of Washington. Judy Tsou, Head Music Librarian, School of Music, University of Washington. Note: A reception at 7:30 will be followed by the conversation from 8 to 9

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 27 February 2007 14:24 (seventeen years ago) link

There are a couple more New Orleans related presentations. Here's one of them:

Katherine Doss

Before joining the Curriculum in Folklore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Katherine Doss worked at The Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Panel(s):
Trickster Treks and the Southern Vernacular
Saturday, April 21, 2007, 9:00 - 10:45
Abstract:

"Lord I Want To Be In That Number: The Influence of Music on the Culture of New Orleans after the Flood"
It is broadly accepted that culture shapes music and nowhere is this more apparent than in New Orleans, with its particular sound. New Orleans remains anchored in the rhythms and lyrics of that sound while serving as a muse, a protagonist, and a playground for emerging music. The city itself has been the centerpiece and shaper of music that continually develops from amalgamated traditions. With the momentary absence of an abiding community after Hurricane Katrina, the question presents itself as to what extent music can turn around and influence the culture. The answer seems to point to music as a critical element, perhaps the most pervasive, in re-forming the culture of New Orleans.
.... ....
Some musical traditions are so intricately wed to New Orleans-founded rituals that they cannot fulfill their purposes outside of the city. The brass band tradition, especially its inimitable community role in parades and processions, rises to this standard. As a New Orleans native and an ethnographer, I will explore the symbiotic relationship between culture and music in New Orleans, emphasizing my work with the Treme Brass Band and in particular its founder, Benny Jones, Sr."

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 15:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Sorry to be late with this--my Katrina documentaries roundup:

http://citypages.com/databank/28/1367/article15139.asp

Pete Scholtes, Thursday, 1 March 2007 03:39 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, from the New York Times:

February 23, 2007

In New Orleans, Progress at Last in the Lower Ninth Ward

By ADAM NOSSITER

NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 22 — The first new houses built in the Lower Ninth Ward since Hurricane Katrina were turned over to their owners on Thursday, creating a small island of hope in a sea of ruin.

Side by side, sparkling and bright on Delery Street at the neighborhood’s eastern edge, the two houses unveiled at a ceremony on Thursday stand out in a landscape grimly frozen since the storm. The twin pastel variants on traditional New Orleans architecture sit incongruously whole amid block after block of ruined shells with doors swinging open and windows gaping wide.

Empty during the day and dark at night, this area is a long way from being a neighborhood again, even though it has been the focus of intensive volunteer efforts and organizing since the storm. The destruction of the Lower Ninth Ward, which was working-class and black before the hurricane, and its subsequent failure to begin recovering, have become symbols for what some see as inequities in this city’s halting revival.

That symbolism was much in evidence at the ceremony, a gathering of the homeowners and the varied volunteer forces that built the $125,000 solid pine houses, which officials said are elevated five feet and designed to resist hurricane-force winds. It was an occasion to look past the catastrophe that sent a wall of water rushing into the Lower Ninth Ward 18 months ago, at least for the moment. If the levees fail again and a similar volume of water comes through, the new houses will take only two feet of water, the contractor said.

There were promises on Thursday to bring the neighborhood back, particularly from Acorn, the nonprofit neighborhood group that organized the construction and helped finance the two houses. There was cheering, there were plaques for the volunteers, and there were speeches by politicians and preachers.

And there were the two sturdy women who had been next-door neighbors for 25 years until Hurricane Katrina blew their houses away, the owners Gwendolyn Guice and Josephine Butler, who received the keys to the new houses on Thursday.

Acorn and the volunteers built the houses on the same spot as the women’s original ones, and both women seemed overcome at being back.

“I’m all over hoops,” Ms. Guice said, switching between tears and smiles as she happily showed off her trim little green house, a subtle modification of the classic New Orleans front-to-back-hall style.

Looking out the back at a nearby school building with a collapsed roof and a muddy vacant lot where there was once a house, Ms. Guice was adamant that Thursday represented a hopeful beginning on a street that once sheltered many solid homeowners.

“A lot of people are just sitting back, waiting and seeing,” Ms. Guice said.

Her re-installment and Ms. Butler’s, she insisted, would help draw people back. And given the privations of her long exile, much of it spent in Houston, she would not be fazed by living in the ward’s darkness and isolation, she suggested.

She showed no regrets about the fate of her old house.

“I never did find the den,” Ms. Guice said. “It just shoved straight off. It might be floating in the gulf.”

Still, the complications of the demonstration project on Delery Street raise questions about its usefulness as a prototype. The two houses were financed by Acorn and a California bank, and the two women are planning to repay their loans using their insurance proceeds and money they hope will be forthcoming from Louisiana’s Road Home housing aid program. Louisiana State University’s School of Architecture helped design the houses, students from the school helped build them, young people from Covenant House did odd jobs, a church provided landscaping, and even the novelist Richard Ford, who recently moved back to the city, pitched in.

How often this process could be replicated is unclear, though Acorn has money for more loans. Some believe that a neighborhood as destitute as this one cannot come back without large-scale intervention.

“I think we have a problem of quantity, and anything that can’t be delivered in quantity is not a suitable prototype, regardless of the fantastic intentions,” said Andrés Duany, the Miami architect and planner who has played a leading role in this city’s efforts at rebuilding. “The verification is not aesthetics, not the degree of good will; it’s quantity.”

But under Thursday’s bright sun, the focus was not on the hurdles.

“If you try not to focus on how bad everything is, you can focus on what is good,” Allan Jones, an electrician who worked on the two houses, said as he surveyed the bleak landscape. “There is potential.”

Mr. Ford spoke at the ceremony of the “valiant and hopeful house-raising,” and those words captured the spirit of an enterprise that seemed as much a challenge to the future as a foundation for something new.

When Ms. Butler moved to the area nearly 60 years ago, it was still a semi-wilderness, recalled Tanya Harris, her granddaughter and an Acorn official.

“This was a shot in the dark,” Ms. Harris said. “This was a leap of faith.”

Pete Scholtes, Thursday, 1 March 2007 03:42 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/23/us/23ninth.html

Oh, and I taped the American Experience doc but haven't watched it yet.

Pete Scholtes, Thursday, 1 March 2007 03:44 (seventeen years ago) link

President Bush is in New Orleans today. I doubt he will hear any brass bands (but who knows).

curmudgeon, Thursday, 1 March 2007 16:06 (seventeen years ago) link

http://images.washtimes.com/photos/full/20060829-111652-6087.jpg

Jordan, Thursday, 1 March 2007 17:27 (seventeen years ago) link

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

pj, Thursday, 1 March 2007 17:33 (seventeen years ago) link

I gotta find time to track down and listen to that American Routes episode online...

curmudgeon, Saturday, 3 March 2007 19:44 (seventeen years ago) link

American Routes Archives

Listened last night to the 19 minutes or so brass band segment on the 2-28 to 3-6 episode. There's also an 11 minute or so segment on the Pine Leaf Boys. I also started a separate thread called "Cajun and Zydeco Music is not just for old people"

curmudgeon, Thursday, 8 March 2007 16:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Hey Jordan how can i get a copy of that mix you've passed around?

deej, Thursday, 8 March 2007 16:53 (seventeen years ago) link

Deej e-mail me, jordan1 at gmail

Jordan, Thursday, 8 March 2007 16:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Any of you New Orleans folk-my band (The Mighty Sound of Maryland) was recently in New Orleans, helping out building Musician's Village and playing in some parades and such. Did anyone see them? The band is trying to collect quotes and such about the project and if anyone wanted to email me that'd be awesome.

On a non-self aggrandizing note,
Is there a brass band tradition in Chicago? The last time I was there I saw a great brass band playing on the street and I heard tales of numerous others. Anyone have suggestions on how to track down some Chicago brass music?

catblender, Thursday, 8 March 2007 17:01 (seventeen years ago) link

There's a band called Hypnotic who are cool but not really New Orleans-influenced at all, they're probably who you saw on the street. I don't think they improvise.

My band plays at the Green M1ll a few times year.

Jordan, Thursday, 8 March 2007 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Yeah, it was Hypnotic. I'm actually going to be in Chicago from March 20th-25th or so, will you guys be in town?

catblender, Thursday, 8 March 2007 18:10 (seventeen years ago) link

Unfortunately not, we just played there a few weeks ago so the next time may not be until Fall.

Jordan, Thursday, 8 March 2007 18:38 (seventeen years ago) link

That American Routes piece was pretty good, esp. the parts where Benny Pete is talking about the backline (poignant) and where the Rebels dudes are going on about the band kids being the most popular ones in school (lol). Nice track selection.

Jordan, Friday, 9 March 2007 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link

"Atlanta based writer David Fulmer authored three acclaimed historical mysteries involving the Creole of Color detective Valentin St. Cyr set in New Orleans at the beginning of the 20th Century, and among the characters were such legendary jazz pioneers as Buddy Bolden and
Jelly Roll Morton. Fulmer’s writing was atmospheric as well as thrilling as he skillfully weaved together the actual mystery against a background of Storyville and its musicians, madams,
streetwalkers and associated characters." http://inabluemood.blogspot.com/index.html

Has anybody read these books that I saw highlight ed on this blues blog?

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 March 2007 04:10 (seventeen years ago) link

More reading--

I had donated money to the New Orleans Musicians' Clinic (NOMC) and their latest newsletter has Armand Sheik Richardson, a trumpet player with the Gentille Brass Band and a photographer telling about all the red ink and struggles he went through to have eye surgery to restore his vision (cataracts) after Katrina. He's also a participant in the Arabi Wrecking Krewe who help New Orleans musicians patch their roofs and fix up their homes.

The newsletter also reports that the majority of older musicians who used to go to the NOMC before Katrina have not returned to New orleans after Katrina.

New OrleansMusiciansClinic.org


"For 2007, we are once again expanding and refocusing our mission to sustain our beloved New Orleans musicians. In response to the death of Dinerral Shavers, we are quickly moving to establish our Musicians Mentorship Initiative, a program designed to allow musicians to serve as mentors in the public schools. Dinerral was one of the first jazz musicians slated to work in the program and he was dedicated to rebuild and revitalize New Orleans by passing our culture to young people. The NOMC has set up a Fund to help sustain his family and his band during this very sad time. "

curmudgeon, Thursday, 22 March 2007 04:26 (seventeen years ago) link

Alvin- Curran-"Oh Brass On The Grass Alas" (2006), for 300-500 brass band musicians. Duration 40 min. First performance Donaueschingen festival, October 2006.

It's not New Orleans style, but apparently avante musician/composer Alvin Curran is doing his piece for 300 plus brass musicians again. I saw a reference to a NY Times article, but the article is accessible only to NY Times Select (paid subscribers) members.

That's a big band. Seems almost like a Flaming Lips style experiment.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 29 March 2007 13:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Will this planned National Jazz Center and park in NO actually be built

curmudgeon, Thursday, 29 March 2007 14:32 (seventeen years ago) link

Rising permit fees for second-lines

Jordan, Thursday, 29 March 2007 17:16 (seventeen years ago) link

jordan your mix is awesome btw

deej, Thursday, 29 March 2007 17:35 (seventeen years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.