New Orleans Brass Bands S/D

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Some repeats from previous programs (Duke Ellington from the very first fest, good enough that I didn't mind rehearing it.) And some performers I'm not at all interested in, but that's Jazzfest.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 7 October 2021 19:06 (two years ago) link

For those in New Orleans between October 7 and 17th, I see a bunch of New Orleans clubs are hyping their shows at this specially created website

https://www.neworleans.com/nolaxnola/

curmudgeon, Friday, 8 October 2021 04:22 (two years ago) link

I'll be there 15th - 18th. Not much I want to see listed but will check with the brass bands, and going the second line for sure.

change display name (Jordan), Friday, 8 October 2021 15:33 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

How was your visit Jordan?

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 27 October 2021 16:10 (two years ago) link

So the March 2022 Big Ears Fest is gonna have an event of sort coordinated by Ben Jaffe of Preservation Hall Jazz with Sporty's Brass Band and Haitian bands

As the living embodiment of the acoustic New Orleans jazz tradition, the generations of Preservation Hall had learned as much as they could about the music from the city itself. In recent years, exploratory travels into Cuba and Haiti have led to acclaimed documentaries and albums where the band delves deeper than ever into its native soil. The glee of discovery is palpable as they find roots that lead all the way to West Africa, to France, to many diasporic places.

In 2018, they joined Regine Chassagne and Win Butler of Arcade Fire to inaugurate the annual Krewe Du Kanaval in New Orleans. A celebratory tribute to the parades, costumes, and music of Creole culture, it will be tailored to The Mill & Mine by Ben Jaffe, the creative director of Preservation Hall. Taking place in and around the venue, the immersive, episodic experience brings together Haitian music heavyweights from across the festival for an experience replete with unique sets and decorations; drumming, dancing, and chance encounters; and DJs deepening the NOLA-Haiti connection. In addition to Preservation Hall, the lineup includes 79rs Gang, who fuse Mardi Gras Indian music with hip-hop; Lakou Mizik, the leading acoustic Haitian roots-music revivalists; RAM, the globally renowned group that electrified vodou music; and Sporty’s Brass Band, one of the best second-line units in New Orleans.

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 27 October 2021 16:12 (two years ago) link

That Big Ears fest is in Knoxville, Tenn

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 27 October 2021 16:13 (two years ago) link

It was really good, thanks. Saw Sporty's Brass Band at Bullets (crushed it), 21st Century Brass Band at the Music Box Village for a brunch gig (a curious but well-intentioned outdoor art space), and TBC at the Treme Hideaway (Derrick Tabb's place) (crushed it). And Treme BB outside Vaughan's, that was nice and wholesome (Corey Henry on trombone). Caught up with Donna, who's writing about about Donna's and brass band history. Learned a lot as always. Never going to Verdi Mart again in my life (was never a fan anyways), but Quarter Grocery is standing strong.

change display name (Jordan), Wednesday, 27 October 2021 16:31 (two years ago) link

Oh man, I somehow misremembered that Donna had passed away. So glad that's not the case!

I had plane tix and a hotel reserved for beginning of October, but then Ida went through ands Sun Country cancelled my flight.

I'm working my way through Jazzfest sets on WWOZ's Festing in Place, and TBC is one of the best things I've heard so far. The way they weave rap and pop hits into their songs reminds me of DC gogo.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 27 October 2021 17:16 (two years ago) link

what does vaughan's smell like inside now that you can't smoke anymore?

adam, Thursday, 28 October 2021 15:46 (two years ago) link

Lol, I didn't go inside this time since there was a whole scene outside, although I did last time and it was pretty pleasant actually.

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 28 October 2021 17:06 (two years ago) link

Listening to a Trombone Shorty set on OZ and toward the end there was a a rapper throwing down some great hard James Brown style funk. Had to do some research, as I am unfamiliar with 99% of rap created since "Bust A Move." Turns out it was Mystikal doing "Shake It Fast" (sic) and it's on youtube. I like it way better than the original recording.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=petbyChApoI

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Friday, 29 October 2021 15:00 (two years ago) link

Playing with the inimitable Swamp Thing: https://www.instagram.com/p/CVngGl7FBJT/

change display name (Jordan), Friday, 29 October 2021 20:39 (two years ago) link

Nice .

curmudgeon, Monday, 1 November 2021 15:38 (two years ago) link

RSVP for next Saturday’s (11/20 2:30pm CT) virtual @WordsandMusicNO event feat. @khdpoetry, whose article, "Oh Casanova," is in @64parishes; @RebirthBB’s Keith Frazier; Michael Ferguson, former music dir of LeVert; and Marc Gordon of LeVert. I’ll moderate the conversation. Free

curmudgeon, Saturday, 13 November 2021 22:21 (two years ago) link

That’s a cut and paste of a Dj Soul Sister tweet. Panel will address how that r’n’b song became a brass band fave

curmudgeon, Saturday, 13 November 2021 22:23 (two years ago) link

More press emails to me. Rebirth and Davell Crawford and others are also part of this thing

NOLAxNOLA ‘21: Show Your Love! A Virtual Celebration of New Orleans is a landmark virtual fundraiser event showcasing never-before-seen performances and more by some of New Orleans’ most iconic artists and legends, all benefiting community-based nonprofits dedicated to fostering the music culture of New Orleans. Powered by the digital fundraising platform Fandiem, NOLAxNOLA ‘21: Show Your Love! A Virtual Celebration of New Orleans is set for November 19 and 20, beginning both nights at 9 PM (ET)/8 PM (CT), free to view exclusively via www.nolaxnola.com.

NOLAxNOLA ‘21: Show Your Love! A Virtual Celebration of New Orleans will feature electrifying live performances from an array of New Orleans artists, spanning up-and-coming talent, rising stars, and undisputed musical royalty including Irma Thomas, The Revivalists, Big Freedia, Galactic, Tank and the Banga

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 16 November 2021 16:20 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

OST SPOTTED: the hot 8 joy divison cover in venom: let there be carnage

adam, Monday, 20 December 2021 02:47 (two years ago) link

Nice.

I watched a Sporty's Brass Band IG Live recently that was great.

curmudgeon, Monday, 20 December 2021 03:11 (two years ago) link

RIP Sandra Jaffe who helped preserve jazz @ Preservation Hall (along with her husband who had died in 1987)

Preservation Hall was integrated at a time when there were still Jim Crow laws that banned the mixing of races. Mrs. Jaffe was once arrested there, along with Kid Thomas Valentine’s band, for flouting the ban on integration.

“The judge banged his gavel and said, ‘In New Orleans, we don’t like to mix our coffee and cream,’” Ben Jaffe said, recalling what his parents had told him. “She burst out laughing and said, ‘That’s funny — the most popular thing in New Orleans is café au lait.’”

more from article- In 1961, Sandra and Allan Jaffe stopped in New Orleans on their way home to Philadelphia from an extended honeymoon in Mexico. They heard music playing all around them in the French Quarter and stepped into an art gallery on St. Peter Street where a combo was playing traditional jazz.

The Jaffes, then in their 20s, were transformed by what they heard. They came back a few days later to hear the combo again. The gallery’s owner, Larry Borenstein, told them that he was moving his business next door and offered to rent the couple the modest space (31 by 20 feet) for $400 a month.

“We didn’t even think twice about it,” Mrs. Jaffe told the alumni magazine of Harcum College, from which she graduated, in 2011. “‘Of course,’ we said, and that was the beginning of Preservation Hall. We never left New Orleans.”

Preservation Hall — which serves no alcohol, seats 50 or so on six benches and had no air-conditioning until 2019 — has celebrated jazz for 60 years in a city widely regarded as its birthplace. It defied segregation laws in the early 1960s. It survived Mr. Jaffe’s death in 1987, and it survived Hurricane Katrina. The coronavirus pandemic shut it down, but it reopened triumphantly in June.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/31/arts/music/sandra-jaffe-who-helped-preserve-jazz-at-preservation-hall-dies-at-83.html

curmudgeon, Saturday, 1 January 2022 19:21 (two years ago) link

Backstreet Cultural Museum struggles and is displaced but is trying to raise funds for new Treme locale and/or in Treme a "yearlong lease on a back house on the African American Museum’s campus. While Ms. Francis-Dilling is still trying to raise funds to make the deal possible, she is hoping to reopen in the new space early next year."

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/25/us/backstreet-cultural-museum-new-orleans.html

In two small rooms, the Backstreet Cultural Museum chronicled life and death in Black New Orleans.

One was filled entirely with elaborate beaded and feathered suits that debuted on Mardi Gras mornings and were designed by makers known as “Mardi Gras Indians” or “Black Masking Indians.” The other featured solemn photographs of jazz funerals and memorial T-shirts, displayed in a handmade wooden case, that honored lives lost to gunfire. A rudimentary stand held a red tuba played by Anthony “Tuba Fats” Lacen, a jazz musician who traveled the world performing but played for tips in the French Quarter any time he was home.

But over the past 16 months, the museum has suffered cataclysmic losses. In late August 2020, Sylvester Francis, its founder, fix-it man and visionary, died of appendicitis at age 73. The following months saw a string of venerable artists and performers whose work was featured in the museum succumb to the coronavirus. And then, a year after Mr. Francis’ death, winds from Hurricane Ida uprooted three immense pecan trees that crushed the back roof of the museum’s rented home, the former Blandin Funeral Home in the city’s Tremé neighborhood.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 2 January 2022 19:25 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b395lZDbXdo

change display name (Jordan), Wednesday, 19 January 2022 22:11 (two years ago) link

I have only watched the first minute or so (so far) and it is great-- the music, the dancing, the costumed folks

curmudgeon, Thursday, 20 January 2022 05:21 (two years ago) link

I had missed that item about Backstreet Cultural Museum moving, and hadn't known that Sylvester Francis passed. I was there when it was a pretty new thing, early 2000s, and he was so warm and engaging. That place is amazing and certainly needs to find a new home.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 20 January 2022 14:29 (two years ago) link

Was just reading about an event that took place in New Orleans this weekend put together by Los Angeles professor Josh D Kun. In 1884 a 75 piece Mexican band that played Afro-Cuban danzones and European sounds came to New Orleans to play at a World's expo type event. Sheet music was made and circulated and their appearances according to Kun became another factor in the New Orleans music sound. With Project New Orleans , Kun set up an exhibit with photos and such re the above history plus he set up a gig that took place Friday night (he shared some clips in Instagram stories-More jazz than funky street brass band, but figured I would post it here rather than jazz thread ): Here's his description in an IG post.

The third component is what brings us here today. I shared all these histories with this brilliant group of local musicians whose own histories span migrations from Morocco, Ghana, and Honduras and connect to histories of Garifuna freedom struggles, African-American migration “up south” and drum legacies of musical liberation in Congo Square. I invited the great Nicholas Payton to imagine a musical response to these histories that the 8th Cavalry Mexican Military Band is a part of: migration, exile, and diaspora, but also indigeneity- there are arrivals, and there are those who were already here. The suite he created is Bulbancha ’84. Please welcome Nicholas Payton, with Oscar Rossignoli, Amina Scott, Mahmoud Chouki, Weedie Braimah, and Herlin Riley.”

curmudgeon, Sunday, 23 January 2022 00:15 (two years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZaQEIAy7dE

change display name (Jordan), Tuesday, 1 February 2022 20:06 (two years ago) link

another nice secondline

curmudgeon, Thursday, 3 February 2022 01:07 (two years ago) link

three weeks pass...

The Backstreet Cultural Museum has found a new home on the grounds of the New Orleans African American Museum in the Treme neighborhood. After Hurricane Ida wrought extensive damage upon the museum’s longtime location in the former Blandin Funeral Home, executive director Dominique Dilling-Francis was forced to find temporary storage to safeguard the extensive collection of artifacts that tell the story of Black traditions in New Orleans, including Mardi Gras Indian suits, Baby Doll outfits, second line attire from social aid and pleasure clubs, photographs and related ephemera.

The Backstreet Cultural Museum has signed a one-year lease for a small, blue house at 1114 North Villere Street while it continues to search for a larger, permanent location.

https://www.offbeat.com/news/backstreet-cultural-museum-secures-new-location-with-plans-to-host-mardi-gras-events/

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 February 2022 03:55 (two years ago) link

Historic Dew Drop Inn is reopening in March. Some traditional jazz bands announced but no brass groups yet.

https://www.offbeat.com/news/dew-drop-inn-announces-spring-concert-series-in-mandeville/

curmudgeon, Saturday, 26 February 2022 01:50 (two years ago) link

three weeks pass...

That tornado looked nasty

ALthough I did see in an email-

Feed The Second Line checked on culture bearers that we know live in the area (NO East, Lower 9, Chalmette) and luckily everyone is ok!

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 March 2022 16:47 (two years ago) link

https://www.offbeat.com/news/big-chief-black-hawk-debuts-at-american-black-film-fest/#:~:text=Jonathan%20Isaac%20Jackson%20is%20a,from%20a%20Black%20local%20perspective.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13021608/

An exploration into effects of gentrification, COVID -19, and other issues The Culture faces in New Orleans, through the eyes of the youngest Black Masking Mardi Gras Indian Big Chief in the city.

curmudgeon, Friday, 1 April 2022 16:56 (two years ago) link

I think Big Chief, Black Hawk movie doc just debuted last night

curmudgeon, Friday, 1 April 2022 16:57 (two years ago) link

Brooklyn Writer John Swenson who contributed to late 70s rock guidebooks and later got a 2nd home in 1999 in New Orleans and wrote about New Orleans music has died of cancer. His 2011 book “New Atlantis: Musicians Battle for the Survival of New Orleans” chronicled the role that some musicians played in the city’s recovery after Hurricane Katrina.

Some of us had some issues with his New Orleans and Louisiana music coverage ; but thee was plenty to praise as well

curmudgeon, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:45 (two years ago) link

Not gonna make it to Jazz Fest or French Quarter Fest, but at least (as I think I mentioned above) I follow Sporty's Brass Band on IG and see some good video clips there.

curmudgeon, Friday, 15 April 2022 13:23 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

It's Jazzfest, everybody. I'm not there this year either, but WWOZ is playing some highlights of past fests until they go live at the fairgrounds at 11:00. Great mix of mostly local jazz, brass band, blues, gospel and Latin so far. I sometimes bitch about what this fest has become over the years, but just hearing Snooks Eaglin's voice pop up made me happy.

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Friday, 29 April 2022 15:00 (one year ago) link

Those were the good ol days when I saw Snooks at Jazzfest.

curmudgeon, Saturday, 30 April 2022 03:21 (one year ago) link

The late music writer John Swenson, a former editor and frequent contributor to OffBeat, will be memorialized with a concert The Broadside on Saturday, May 14, as a benefit for The New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic.

The memorial will be held from 6-10 p.m. and features a stellar lineup of New Orleans musicians, including James Andrews & The Crescent City All-Stars, Ed Volker, Debbie Davis, Davis Rogan, Helen Gillet, 101 Runners featuring Big Chief Monk Boudreaux, Joe Cabral, Andy J. Forest, Michael Skinkus, Dayna Kurtz, Don Bartholomew and the Bartholomew Boyz and others.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:38 (one year ago) link

https://www.offbeat.com/articles/elvis-costello-talks-back/

Elvis Costello re New Orleans and Dave Bartholomew tribute with Dirty Dozen Brass Band that he's doing at Jazz Fest

curmudgeon, Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:40 (one year ago) link

Cool set going on right now with Stanton Moore, David Torkanowski, James Singleton, and Jason Marsalis (joined later by Skerik.) I'm trying to place their opening number, it sounded like maybe Vince Guaraldi (if anyone's inclined to check it out on the WWOZ archive.)

Three Rings for the Elven Bishop (Dan Peterson), Friday, 6 May 2022 19:02 (one year ago) link

two months pass...

https://www.nola.com/gambit/events/article_85bd8f68-fe37-11ec-8837-474605d5734c.html

Polo Silk Terrell the pictureman exhibit opens July 16 @ New Orleans Museum of Art. Plus he'll be part of another exhibit in September. He's on IG @ PolaNolaphotography

}For more than 30 years, Terrell has taken photos at night clubs, hip-hop and bounce shows, block parties, second lines and Super Sundays, capturing Black New Orleans life in an unparalleled way through countless Polaroids and film shots.

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 12 July 2022 16:38 (one year ago) link

Saw a nice video clip on IG of Big 6 Brass Band early Monday evening gig in DC with go-go bands, that I unfortunately missed.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 14 July 2022 19:48 (one year ago) link

I've been in a big summer brass band mode

I've been going deep into my NOLA second line youtube holes, to get in the mood for the La Fete de Marquette gigs this weekend. Here's a short thread of the fire I've been injecting directly into my veins:https://t.co/n4isgn8CHY

— CHANTS (@ChantsWI) July 14, 2022

change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 14 July 2022 20:30 (one year ago) link

nice 2011 footage there

curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 July 2022 03:26 (one year ago) link

“You fall into it” is how the choreographer and educator Michelle N. Gibson, who grew up in New Orleans, put it in a recent interview. “Nobody teaches second line.”

Except that Gibson does teach it, or her take on it. She teaches some of the history in her one-woman show, “Takin’ It to the Roots,” which she is bringing to the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in the Berkshires, on July 29-30. For the past few years, she has also been giving second line classes: workshops called New Orleans Original BuckShop in which she presents what she dubs her “second line aesthetic.”

Gibson is careful to specify that what she teaches is her own second line aesthetic, “based on my training and how I want to share it,” not second line as New Orleans natives like herself experience it. “You can’t expect to have that,” she said. “You have to live it.” She said that she sees herself as an intermediary between her New Orleans community and academia, inserting herself into conversations about New Orleans culture and insisting on “reverence to the origins and the people it actually belongs to.”

For the Jacob’s Pillow performances, Gibson is converting “Takin’ It to the Roots,” originally designed for theaters, into processional form: Audience members will follow her to sites around the campus that represent Congo Square and the Black church. The second line at the performance’s end is standard, though. “I always take people out of the theater into the streets,” she said. “There’s not going to be a show that you attend with Mz. G that we’re not going to eventually go outside.”

There will of course be a brass band with her, the NOJO 7, drawn from the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/21/arts/dance/michelle-gibson-second-line-jacobs-pillow.html?campaign_id=2&emc=edit_th_20220723&instance_id=67495&nl=todaysheadlines®i_id=37355772&segment_id=99428&user_id=062566bcd9872d3bfa0c4b1ac1e046b4

curmudgeon, Monday, 25 July 2022 04:25 (one year ago) link

three weeks pass...

https://www.nola.com/entertainment_life/keith_spera/article_4cceb0b6-1e3e-11ed-ba03-57a0d74e293c.html

Music industry vets buy Chickie Wah Wah, embark on extensive renovation of Canal St. venue
They hope to reopen the club by October. Say they will book roots music and jazz

Will they book New Orleans brass bands

curmudgeon, Thursday, 18 August 2022 13:03 (one year ago) link

https://www.offbeat.com/night-time-economy/

Offbeat editor on changes New Orleans should make to improve the city for bands and the public

curmudgeon, Monday, 22 August 2022 22:11 (one year ago) link

three weeks pass...

This was a solid Hot 8 lineup and set (with great sound, as far as filmed brass band sets go)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlpjRV4cwBk

change display name (Jordan), Tuesday, 13 September 2022 22:14 (one year ago) link

Really vibing on this Rebirth show from 2013 too, when Kabuki and Derrick Tabb were still in the lineup

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKx54uxFX-o

change display name (Jordan), Friday, 16 September 2022 17:24 (one year ago) link


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