Showing posts with label marc broussard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marc broussard. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

NY Times: The Night New Orleans Came to Brooklyn




Starting with a parade (down an opera-house aisle) and ending nearly three hours later with a jam session, Red Hot + New Orleans brought a generous Crescent City spirit to the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Friday night to kick off a two-night stand.


Trombone Shorty, who also plays trumpet, was curator of the show, the latest of the Red Hot Organization’s AIDS benefit concerts, which donated some proceeds to the New Orleans NO/AIDS Task Force. Born Troy Andrews in New Orleans, Trombone Shorty is ubiquitous in his hometown as a bandleader and a sideman; his 2010 album, “Backatown” (Verve Forecast), is nominated for a Grammy Award.

He assembled his city’s longtime stars, including Irma Thomas and Dr. John, along with local stalwarts like the trumpeter Kermit Ruffins; the keyboardist Ivan Neville; the hip-hop producer Mannie Fresh; the soul singer Marc Broussard; and members of two pre-eminent brass bands, Rebirth and the Dirty Dozen. Trombone Shorty sat in with just about everyone, playing R&B, funk, jazz and the New Orleans hip-hop variant called bounce. He also led his own band (and the concert’s house band), Orleans Avenue, which put the heft and dynamics of rock behind his own riffing, growling trombone.


Five years after Hurricane Katrina, the musical culture of New Orleans has persevered, still cherishing its long memory, its amiably shared local lore, its rhythmic genius and songs that are tough-minded even as they grin. Perhaps inevitably, the city’s culture is growing less insular. Many of the concert’s performers have had televised moments lately — or, like Trombone Shorty and Mr. Ruffins, repeated exposure — on the HBO series “Treme.” Mr. Ruffins sang the “Treme” theme during the concert’s final jam on “When the Saints Go Marching In,” which also segued into a Mardi Gras Indians song, “Let’s Go Get ’Em.”


New Orleans music also maintains its jazz-funeral determination to celebrate rather than mourn. Partners-N-Crime, a rap duo that had local bounce hits in the 1990s, enlisted Trombone Shorty and Rebirth members for a second-line parade sound in “Foot Work”; it included the lines “Katrina’s gone, can’t cry no more/ All the money’s gone, but the levees ain’t broke no more.”


Giant Mardi Gras beads hung over the stage and dangled from the box seats; a video backdrop showed images of the city and its people. That didn’t turn the opera house into a carnival, but the music got people up and dancing.


Dr. John and Ms. Thomas each did minisets of hits. Ms. Thomas seesawed between sultriness and ache in “It’s Raining” and “Ruler of My Heart.” Dr. John cackled through “Such a Night” with a splashy barrelhouse piano coda, turned to funk with “Right Place, Wrong Time” and led a spooky “Walk on Gilded Splinters,” with Mr. Neville on Hammond organ playing atmospheric chords like smoke signals.


True to a New Orleans heritage, two-fisted piano reappeared through the show. Mr. Neville riffled through the Mardi Gras mambo of Professor Longhair’s “Big Chief,” and an unannounced guest, Jonathan Batiste, splayed chords across the keyboard in “Saints.” In his own segment, Mr. Neville seized a family legacy, playing the jigsaw New Orleans funk of his uncle Art Neville’s band, the Meters. Mr. Ruffins, who sang when he wasn’t playing sweet and tart trumpet, looked toward Louis Armstrong, reviving a southern African song from the Armstrong repertory, “Skokiaan,” and sharing “What a Wonderful World” with the R&B singer Ledisi, whose scat-singing fluttered around his rasp.


The concert had some ups and downs; Mannie Fresh is an important figure in New Orleans hip-hop as a producer (notably of the Hot Boys, who included Lil Wayne and Juvenile), not a rapper. But Trombone Shorty had clearly set out to present New Orleans as a city whose glory days aren’t over. One of his band’s tunes was called “Hurricane Season,” and it was no lament. With high-note-trumpet lines and a “Hey!” shout-along, it was a signal that the city’s music would push ahead.


Additional pics from Nola.com:

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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Upcoming: Red Hot & New Orleans @ BAM feat. Trombone Shorty

Red Hot + New Orleans

Part of the 2010 Next Wave Festival

Dec 3 & 4 at 8pm

World Premiere

Produced by BAM & Paul Heck / Red Hot Organization

Musical director Trombone Shorty

Featuring:
Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue
Dr. John
Irma Thomas
Kermit Ruffins
Ledisi
Marc Broussard
Ivan Neville
Partners-N-Crime
Mannie Fresh
Roger Lewis (Dirty Dozen Brass Band)
Phil and Keith Frazier (Rebirth Brass Band)
Video Design - Yuki Nakajima
Stage Design - Alex Delaunay


The Red Hot series returns to the Next Wave Festival (Red Hot + Riot, 2006; Red Hot + Rio 2, 2008) with Red Hot + New Orleans, saluting the music of the Crescent City.


From its deep traditions of jazz, blues, funk, and “second line” sounds to the more raucous “bounce” music scene, an exceptional group of emerging artists and established legends assembles to celebrate the resurgent and resilient sound of New Orleans, a city whose spirit has influenced countless artists and styles. Join music director Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews (one of the many NO musicians featured in the new HBO series Treme), as he brings a little piece of The Big Easy to Brooklyn.


This program is produced by BAM in association with The Red Hot Organization in recognition of World AIDS Day (Dec 1). Part of the proceeds will benefit New Orleans’ NO/AIDS Task Force.


BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
120min, no intermission
Tickets: $25, 45, 55, 65

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Trombone Shorty signs to Verve

New Orleans 'Supafunkrock' Phenom Trombone Shorty Bursts Onto National Scene With 'Backatown' (April 20/Verve Forecast)

Produced By Galactic's Ben Ellman, Featuring Guest Appearances By Lenny Kravitz, Allen Toussaint And Marc Broussard, Album Caps Deluge Of Honors, TV And Festival Appearances + More For Trombone Shorty

In 2010 alone, 24-year-old New Orleans singer / songwriter / multi-instrumentalist and all-around musical powerhouse Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews has signed with Verve Forecast Records and performed on Good Morning America and ESPN's SportsCenter in the run-up to the Super Bowl. He has seen recordings he contributed to earn a Grammy® award (Buckwheat Zydeco's “Lay Your Burden Down”) and an Oscar® nomination (Dr. John's "Down In New Orleans" from the hit Disney film 'The Princess and the Frog'). He has taped two appearances - as himself - for the upcoming HBO series 'Treme' from ‘The Wire’ creator David Simon, and played with his band Orleans Avenue as honored guests on Saints owner Tom Benson's float in a victorious post-Super Bowl Mardi Gras parade.

He's just getting started.

On April 20, Verve Forecast will release Trombone Shorty's new album 'Backatown,' an explosive, homegrown combination of funk, rock, R&B and hip-hop he calls “Supafunkrock.” The album was produced by fellow New Orleanian Ben Ellman of Galactic and features fourteen songs, all but one of them written or co-written by Andrews. Guests on the album include Lenny Kravitz, Marc Broussard and Allen Toussaint, who contributes piano to a take on his own composition "On Your Way Down," the album's lone cover.

'Backatown' is a local term for an area of New Orleans that includes the historic Treme neighborhood - or 6th Ward - from which Trombone Shorty hails. Home to Congo Square, birthplace of Louis Armstrong, it has been called "the most musical neighborhood in America's most musical city." A virtuoso prodigy trombonist, brilliant trumpet player, and soulful, charismatic singer, Shorty has been performing with some members of Orleans Avenue - which includes Dwayne "Big D” Williams (percussion), Mike Ballard (bass), Joey Peebles (drums), Pete Murano (guitar) and Dan Oestreicher (baritone sax) - since childhood. The group taps into these roots to create a streetwise, gritty sound all its own on 'Backatown.'

Shorty, who possesses "the presence of a rock star" (NY Times) and has built his reputation on "blistering, bold, exuberant and cutting edge" (USA Today) live performances, is currently on tour with Orleans Avenue, and has already confirmed several major 2010 festival appearances, including one of the prestigious closing sets at Jazzfest, a triumphant return to Bonnaroo, a debut performance at the Hollywood Bowl for the Playboy Jazz Festival, and more.

Though 2010 promises to be Trombone Shorty’s breakout year, he’s no stranger to the spotlight. In 2005, at age 19, he toured the world as a member of Lenny Kravitz’s band (“Shorty’s a genius,” says Kravitz, “he plays his ass off and he’s a beautiful human being”). In 2006, he joined U2 and Green Day for a rousing performance to reopen the Superdome after Hurricane Katrina (“We were just mesmerized by him,” U2’s The Edge said after an earlier encounter with Andrews’ live show). And in 2008, he performed at the NBA All-Star Game with Harry Connick Jr., Kermit Ruffins and Branford Marsalis.



Monday, February 9, 2009

NolaFunk Lagniappe

Innovative Dr. John changed music


Dr. John, aka Mac Rebennack, is among an impressive group of piano players from New Orleans, including Professor Longhair, Fats Domino, James Booker and Allen Toussaint.
Some might be surprised to learn the 68-year-old Rebennack began his career as a guitar player. Although he’s a little fuzzy on the details, he said he was a teenager when he made his first South Shore appearance, filling in for a guitarist who couldn’t make the show.

BackTalk with Papa Mali


Guitarist Malcolm “Papa Mali” Welbourne made his reputation in Texas with the Austin-based Killer Bees; in Shreveport, Louisiana, where he grew up; and in New Orleans, where he went every summer to visit his grandparents. The dreadlocked axeman has hovered on the margins of New Orleans’ music scene for years, playing with the Radiators on one gig and Galactic on another. His 2007 solo release Do Your Thing, produced by Dan Prothero for Fog City, the San Francisco label central to Galactic’s development, is a classic New Orleans session—all rhythmic nuance and deep, grainy textures. The basic tracks were recorded in New Orleans at Truck Farm Studios with a core band that consisted of Papa Mali, Robb Kidd on drums, Kirk Joseph on sousaphone, Henry Butler on piano and Big Chief Monk Boudreaux on vocals and percussion. Mali’s approach to the New Orleans tradition is perfectly articulated on the otherworldly evocation of Mardi Gras dawn, “Early in the Morning,” with the Golden Eagles Mardi Gras Indians and Reverend Goat Carson throwing down an awesome chant.



New Orleans piano style: As explained by Jon Cleary





NY Post: The Big Easy Is Back

New Orleans is no longer struggling to recover from Hurricane Katrina. Instead, the Crescent City is alive and kicking—and the place for upscale travelers to visit this winter.

That renaissance makes New Orleans the hottest destination du jour. Although "80 percent of the city was flooded," at one point, according to Mary Beth Romig, director of communications for the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau, the devastation was a call to arms for many New Orleans natives to reinvest in their beloved Big Easy.


Eric Lindell, "Low on Cash, Rich in Love" (2008)


Unless you're Eric Lindell, a native of San Mateo, Calif., who not only aspires to a Van Morrison/Delbert McClinton-level of outsider R&B glory, but blends in enough funk and swamp pop from his one-time adopted home of New Orleans to make it sound new. ("Low on Cash, Rich in Love" was recorded and mixed at the city's Piety Street studios.) No surprise, then, that Lindell's horn-driven groove can be mistaken, at first, for a party record. But there is a notable depth, and a rare authenticity, across "Low on Cash" -- principally because of Lindell's ferocious talents as a writer, singer, harp blower and guitar picker. That helps him to synthesize a rootsy and mature soundscape into this cohesive sophomore effort for Alligator, one which moves with thrilling ease across influences as diverse as Curtis Mayfield and Little Feat over to the Meters and Sam Cooke.




More on Allen Toussaint’s forthcoming album

While Toussaint has always known material like “West End Blues” and “St. James Infirmary,” he admits that, as a performer, “I hadn’t tackled them on my own. ‘Tackle’ is a bad word—I hadn’t caressed them on my own, except to listen from time to time in passing. Even the gigs that I’ve done during my gigging days, I was playing whatever was on the radio at the time, boogie-ing and woogie-ing and the like. I hadn’t been through this standard bag. I always loved those songs, but I had never been in a setting where that is what I would do for a while. Until now.”


SEND A PRESERVATION HALL VIDEO VALENTINE CARD TO THOSE YOU LOVE

CLICK HERE to send a Preservation Hall Video Valentine Card to your Sweethearts on Valentine's Day! The emailable valentine card features the Preservation Hall Hot 4 Music Video 'I Can't Give you Anything But Love". The Valentine will be delivered to your sweet recipient on Valentine's Day.






First CD Since 2000 by Cyril Neville

Cyril Neville CD cover

A new CD by Cyril Neville is coming out April 7 on M.C. Records called Brand New Blues. Cyril wrote or co-wrote most of the songs on the CD. Special guests include Art Neville, Ivan Neville, Waylon Thibodeaux & Tab Benoit. The project was produced by Brian J of Pimps of Joytime. This marks Cyril’s first release since 2000.


VARIOUS ARTISTS / “Classic New Orleans Mixtape”




This week we feature 44 songs from a four-CD, 119 track, box set called Crescent City Soul – The Sound of New Orleans 1947 – 1974. It was the “Official CD Collection of the 1996 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.” Unfortunately, it is out of print—“unfortunately” because this is the best single collection of classic New Orleans R&B ever assembled and it doesn’t even come close to including everything. There’s no Neville Brothers, only one track from The Meters, no Chocolate Milk, no Allen Toussaint, no secondline music, only one Mardi Gras song, no Mardi Gras Indians, and only one song that references “The Popeye” (a New Orleans dance that produced a bevy of recordings) yet, even considering all that is not included, this collection is leagues better than whatever is a distant second collection.


Carencro soul singer Marc Broussard vows to 'Keep Coming Back'

One sign of Marc Broussard's career advancement: Jay Leno now pronounces the Carencro native's name correctly.

Introducing Broussard's 2004 "Tonight Show" debut, Leno stumbled over the singer's surname, then tried to atone with a faux-Cajun accent. When Broussard returned in October to sing "Keep Coming Back, " the title track of his current album, Leno greeted him with a warm, "Welcome back, buddy. Good to see you again."

Broussard's forward progress is hard won. A formidable set of pipes -- equal parts Joe Cocker, Otis Redding and Brian McKnight -- and early breaks catapulted him out of southwest Louisiana. He's since logged many miles and confronted the music industry at its most callous.