Showing posts with label tuts washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tuts washington. Show all posts

Sunday, April 26, 2009

NolaFunk Lagniappe

The first twenty years in retrospect

by Jay Mazza

The first twenty years in retrospect
Last year, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival presented by Shell generated an estimated $300 million in economic impact for the city of New Orleans and the surrounding metropolitan area. An estimated 400,000 people attended the event over seven days in 2009. It wasn't always so.

The festival did not even break even financially in the early days and anecdotal evidence suggests that there were more musicians than music lovers at the first event, held in Beauregard Square (now Congo Square), in 1970.

There were several aborted attempts to create a jazz festival in New Orleans in the late 1960s. The Newport Jazz Festival was the template, but there were also two other festivals of significance, one in Monterey, California in 1968 and the more famous event in Woodstock, New York in August of 1969, that helped define the concept of an outdoor music festival.


French Quarter Fest Recap: April 19, 2009



Bonerama
To finish the evening, I made my way back to the Louis-Louis pavilion to catch the full on brass fury of Bonerama. But to my surprise, Susan Cowsill had since enlisted the help of Bone’s Craig Klein and was busy throwing a party of her own. Before long Bonerama stepped to the sage, closing out FQF with a hard rocking, funky heavy set of balls out brass. Anchored by the trombone squalls of Mark Mullins, Craig Klein and Greg Hicks, the Bones have recently enlisted the services of organist Joe Ashlar to fill the void left in the wake of trombonist Steve Suter’s departure from the group. Though one trombone light, they still brought the heat, and with Ashlar’s churning keys stirring the mix, their jams flowed deep into the funky vortex as the sun set behind them. And that just about wraps it up for French Quarter Fest 2009 – Talkin’ bout New Orleans, ya head!



Scenes from the Ole & Nu Style Fellas Social & Pleasure Club Second Line Parade



A scientist friend of mine once told me about a study he came across on pedestrian power and who gives up the right of way on the sidewalk. He said in this study, no one moved out of the way of immigrants. Generally people moved over for little kids, black men, white men, disabled people. The one group EVERYBODY moved out of the way of...


Behrend rocks with the Hot 8

We started playing around the city like [marching bands]. We didn’t have cars. We weren’t big. After a while, some guys from another brass band and two of us got together and formed what became Hot 8.” The band remained relatively unknown until after the events following Hurricane Katrina.


The Gospel According to John Scofield

RR: There’s so many textures and colors on Piety Street: gospel, New Orleans jazz, blues, funk, sublayers of American jazz, classic rock ‘n’ roll, and I’d love to talk about the musicians that you gathered together for this project. There is strong chemistry with these collaborators starting right off with George Porter, Jr. on bass.

JS: Well, you know, when I decided to go to New Orleans, and wanted to record with New Orleans musicians, and have my music reflect the New Orleans tradition, he was the first person that I thought of for electric bass, for sure, because he’s made so many great records, been on the Meters side, and, also, all of the Allen Toussaint productions, and music that I was a fan of music coming out of that city. He’s legendary, and he sure does a great job. Man, he’s totally a great musician, covers his stuff, and brings his groove to it, and we just had a wonderful time playing together.

RR: Jon Cleary sure matches up quite well with your guitar playing.

JS: Oh, thanks. I’ve been a big fan of Cleary’s. I think I met him about 18 years ago. He blew me away then, and still does now. When I was thinking that we should do these gospel tunes, and really have vocals, I mean, I just love his vocal interpretations—the way he can phrase. He’s one of the great soul singers of our day, really. His piano playing is phenomenal. I knew he would be perfect for this. I was really lucky to get him. I feel like he’s the star of the album.



Isidore “Tuts” Washington

“Tuts” was another New Orleans Piano legend. Born January 24, 1907 in New Orleans he started to teach himself how to play piano at age 10 and then studied with New Orleans jazz pianist Joseph Louis “Red” Cayou. He played with many jazz and Dixieland groups through the 20s and 30s. Hos keyboard style blended elements of ragtime, jazz, blues and boogie-woogie.

After living and playing in Saint Louis for many years he returned to New Orleans and in his later years he became a staple at the lounge of the Pontchartrain Hotel on the corner of St. Charles and Jackson Avenues on the edge of the Garden District.




Glen David Andrews & Friends


Parking lot jam - Easter Sunday:


You walk around a corner and in a parking lot on a Sunday afternoon, you can stumble on more music than most cities produce in a year. Glen David Andrews hosts an open percussion jam session with friends.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

NolaFunk Lagniappe

Jazz it up in 'Nawlins

"Spring in New Orleans is something like nirvana for music lovers, as several eclectic festivals - one arguably among the country's biggest and best - offer untold hours' worth of great performances by artists from the Crescent City and beyond. Not to mention opportunities to savor the exotic cuisine, historic sites and unique culture that's home to the region..."
See also: New Orleans Gears Up for Jazzfest


Pete Fountain to open French Quarter Festival


"I'm tootin' as much as I can, and enjoying it," he said. "I'm tryin' like hell."


















The Here And Now Of George Porter Jr.

“Few bass players in the history of modern New Orleans music are as storied as George Porter Jr. During the course of a career spanning four decades, Porter has not only made a deep impression with his work in the Meters, but he’s notched sessions with artists as diverse as Paul McCartney, Jimmy Buffett, David Byrne, Patti LaBelle, Robbie Robertson and Tori Amos. Early in his career, Porter worked with seminal New Orleans artists like Allen Toussaint, Earl King, Lee Dorsey, and Johnny Adams. Back in 1965, Porter joined on with the Meters, considered by many to be the ultimate fusion of rock, funk and R&B, and gained recognition as one of the scene’s elite bass players.”



Home of the Groove's: "Larry Hamilton: On Record (And In Parenthesis)"
"HOG's ongoing saga about the music from the Malaco/New Orleans nexus focuses on one of the songwriters who Quezergue used, Larry Hamilton. Also an impressive vocalist, he got an early start, joining the locally popular late 1960s soul-funk outfit, David Batiste and the Gladiators, as lead singer while still in high school.."



"Aaron Neville moving back to New Orleans area"

"With Aaron's return, two of the four Neville Brothers will reside in or near New Orleans. Aaron's oldest brother, Art Neville, is back in the family's old Uptown neighborhood. Cyril Neville moved to Austin, Texas, after Katrina. Saxophonist Charles Neville has lived in rural Massachusetts for more than a decade."











From the film "Piano Players Rarely Ever Play Together": Tuts Washington (front), Professor Longhair (rear) and Allen Toussaint





The Kids Are Badass: Quintron and Miss Pussycat at the Bowery Ballroom
"The genius of Quintron is his adeptness at conducting his one-man band. Throughout the show his hands were constantly moving, his left foot keeping the beat on a hi-hat while his right foot was used at one point to turn off the Drum Buddy. Even his mouth had a small microphone shoved into it for added sound distortion. Miss Pussycat is an essential part of the band, providing vocals, percussion, and cheerleading, but where she really shines is through her puppetry."


Band keeps New Orleans jazz traditions alive

"Rather than focusing on specific repertoire, what I wanted to do is focus on the experience of coming to hear the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. That's something as New Orleaneans that is so important to us. It's so connected to our life here. It's connected to our culture."

Also see THIS article &
Preservation Hall Jazz Band keeps magic of New Orleans alive

Ivan Neville's Dumpstaphunk uncorks nasty, nasty funk

"Our take on funk is very, very funky," the singer-keyboardist says, "and very nasty compared to most of the other funk bands now, and the ones that have come before us. We know that we're pretty funky. So I was just thinking of what's nasty and what's dirty, and there's nothing too much nastier and dirtier than a Dumpster."

Somewhere in sculpture heaven, John T. Scott is smiling


"The turnout of Mardi Gras Indians on Bayou St. John Sunday, April 6, was thin, but the costumes were nonetheless fabulous."