NPR: Shannon Powell: New Orleans Rhythm, Straight From The Source
It is said of Shannon Powell that he's part of New Orleans' musical DNA — that he knows things only local drummers know.
Powell,
49, is the A-list drummer in town. He's played with Dr. John, Harry
Connick Jr., Nicholas Payton, R&B guitarist Earl King and Wynton
Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.
He
got his start as a teenager with the legendary banjo player and
guitarist, Danny Barker. Powell has also toured with jazz vocalist Diana
Krall and jazz musicians John Scofield and Marcus Roberts. Currently,
he fronts a contemporary jazz band called Powell's Place, with Jason
Marsalis, of the Marsalis dynasty, on vibes.
Sitting
at the drums in his shotgun house in the Treme neighborhood, Powell
demonstrates the basic New Orleans beat: "New Orleans drummers accent on
the four. One-two-three-four." He's playing what he's saying: "one-two-three-four."
He switches to a seductive samba beat. "African rhythms, Brazilian rhythm, calypso," he says. "It's all related."
Perhaps that's the genius of Shannon Powell: It's all related.
Source Material
They
say drumming is an essential part of the language of New Orleans. The
beat resides at the core of all New Orleans music — the jazz, the funk,
the R&B, the funeral parades. Even beyond that, kids walk home from
school with drumsticks beating on the sides of buildings or pounding on
cardboard boxes during parades.
Powell
does that, too. Like the early New Orleans drummers, he spends a lot
of time off the skins, throwing in rimshots and hitting woodblocks and
cowbells.
Like most New Orleans
drummers, Powell is upstaged by trumpeters, clarinetists and
trombonists. But he is one of the greatest drummers this musical city
has ever produced.
Powell lives in the
heart of one of the most famous musical precincts in America: the Treme,
which gave its name to the HBO series. His house faces what's now
called Louis Armstrong Park, where two centuries ago African slaves
gathered every Sunday in Congo Square to drum and dance.
Around
the corner was the Caldonia bar, where the great blues pianist and
songwriter Professor Longhair lived in an apartment upstairs.
"I
used to pass by there on my way going to school," Powell says from his
front porch, where he is hanging out with his uncles. "I could hear
Professor Longhair upstairs on the piano playing. And then, right in
this block here before you get to the corner, there was a building — it
was a house where Allan Toussaint had a studio and The Meters was in
there recording."
Gospel music wafted
out the door of the church next to Powell's house. Jazz funeral
processions passed by on the street, on their way from the burial ground
to the bar.
"See, I was surrounded by
all this music," Powell says. "Like my uncle says, I'm part of the
source." He indicates his uncle, Charlie Gabriel, a well-known clarinet
and saxophone player, who agrees with his nephew: "He [is] the source.
That's what he is."
Traditions
In terms of style, Shannon Powell would place himself staunchly among the traditionalists — in food as well as music.
He's
having lunch at Willie Mae's Scotch House in the Treme; its succulent,
cayenne-battered fried chicken is considered some of the best on earth.
He orders red beans, white-meat chicken and unsweetened tea. He seems to
know everyone in the dining room.
The
drummer is known as something of a curmudgeon when it comes to new New
Orleans music. He complains about everybody from Trombone Shorty to the
Rebirth Brass Band. The latter just won its first Grammy, for Best
Regional Roots Album.
"They playin' one
style of music and callin' it something else," Powell says. "Don't say
we playin' traditional New Orleans music if you playin' rock 'n' roll,
that's what I'm sayin.'"
"He's not the
only person in the history of New Orleans jazz that has said there needs
to be the continuity of the tradition," says Nick Spitzer, a
folklorist, New Orleans resident and host of the public radio program American Routes. "Continuity is wonderful, but to keep a tradition alive you have to create new songs, sounds, styles.
"I
would say Shannon is right there, at the center of the rear guard,
kicking the bass, playing the snare and pushing everybody forward,"
Spitzer adds. "That's a good role for Shannon to play. He's good at it.
He does it with a smile on his face."
The Sound Of Humidity
The
house is packed at Preservation Hall in the French Quarterhttp://www.npr.org/blogs/ablogsupreme/2012/02/25/147369865/shannon-powell-new-orleans-rhythm-straight-from-the-source, the
cathedral of traditional jazz in New Orleans. Tourists have filled
every square inch on the creaky old wooden floor.
Powell
sits at his drum kit, a great beneficent presence with his black beret
and gap-tooth grin. He leads the band here every Tuesday night.
Though
Powell plays every style of New Orleans music, this is where he says
he feels most at home. He's an old-fashioned showman on the drums, like
Louie Bellson or Buddy Rich. Powell calls the tunes, cracks the jokes,
picks the soloists and mesmerizes the crowd — especially when he picks
up a tambourine and testifies on it the way he learned from the
sanctified church ladies.
"Shannon
Powell, what can I say, man, he is the embodiment of every great drummer
that I love," says Dave Torkanowsky, a renowned local jazz pianist who
has played with Powell for 25 years.
"He
is the living history. He's the last of his kind. This town is the
beachhead of African culture in America, and he is a direct uncut
descendant from that. I mean, the humidity is in his playing."
Shannon
Powell will be playing at this year's New Orleans Jazz and Heritage
Festival in late April, and his band, Powell's Place, has a new album
coming out soon. If you listen carefully, you can hear the humidity.
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