Showing posts with label wardell quezergue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wardell quezergue. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

RIP: Wardell Quezergue, R&B Great

New Orleans arranger, producer and bandleader Wardell Quezergue passed away this morning at East Jefferson Hospital in Metairie at age 81. The cause of death is not yet known, but Quezergue was in declining health in recent years.

Wardell Quezergue. Photo by Greg Miles.

Wardell Quezergue. Photo by Greg Miles.

Quezergue arranged and produced many soul and R&B classics, including Professor Longhair’s “Big Chief,” Robert Parker’s “Barefootin’,” Phil Phillips’ “Sea of Love,” the Dixie Cups’ “Chapel of Love,” King Floyd’s “Groove Me,” Jean Knight’s “Mr. Big Stuff” and Dorothy Moore’s “Misty Blue.” When OffBeat‘s John Swenson interviewed him in late 2007, he recalled how he and drummer Smokey Johnson wrote the New Orleans’ classic, “It Ain’t My Fault”:


We had an office on Orleans Avenue and he came in and he said “Quiz”—he used to call me Quiz—he said, “I have something I want you to hear. I want you to record this on me.” “Okay, let me hear it.” He started to diddle with his hands on my desk—dump de-dump dump dump diddle ump de-dump dump dump. I said, “That’s a good beat. Where’s the melody?” He said, “That’s where you come in!”


In his later years, Quezergue and Johnson were involved in a lawsuit over unpaid royalties for the song. The suit was settled earlier this year.


Despite being legally blind since 2005, he continued to work as much as he could. When the Ponderosa Stomp arranged for Quezergue’s orchestra to perform, he would write new charts by dictating them to his son, Brian. In our current issue, the Stomp’s Ira Padnos remembers asking Mac Rebennack if he would perform “Storm Warning” and some of the guitar-based songs he recorded before adopting the Dr. John persona at the 2008 Stomp. “As long as Wardell [Quezergue] does the arrangements, I’ll be willing to take a stab at it, ” said Rebennack, who also had Quezergue do the arrangements for his 1992 album “Goin’ Back to New Orleans and 2004′s N’Awlinz: Dis Dat or d’Udda.


Quezergue’s signature was the bigness of his sound, using large horn sections and strings. He was known as “the Creole Beethoven,” but he explained the nickname’s origins to Swenson with gentle, self-mocking humor:


The thing with [Professor Longhair] is this: Fess, he had to sing live, he never did overdubs as far as I know. I think that was one of the reasons Earl [King] sang on “Big Chief.” That was the first time I worked with the Professor. “Big Chief” had five saxophones, three trumpets, three trombones and five rhythm parts. Artists weren’t used to working with bands like that. I guess that’s how I got the nickname “Creole Beethoven”—not because I’m so brainy; it’s just that everything I did was so loud.


Quezergue was given an honorary degree by Loyola in 2009, and his career was celebrated in New York City that July in an event at Alice Tully Hall.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Sample "Here Come the Saints" by Chief Howard and the Uptown Warriors

"Here Come the Saints" MP3 for Download



Chief Howard
Chief Howard

"Here Come the Saints" MP3 (3 min., 50sec.)


Performed by Chief Howard and the Uptown Warriors


Click the arrow above to play a short sample.

Produced and Arranged by Wardell Quezergue


Executive Producer - Loyola University

Written by Chief Howard Miller (BMI)


Guitar : Jay Griggs
Bass : Brian Quezergue
Saxophone : Raymond Moore
Trombone : Jeffry Albert
Trumpet : Brian Murray
Percussion : Uptown Warriors



© 2009 Chief Howard & the Uptown Warriors

Unlicensed duplication of this MP3 is illegal. For licensing & booking information call Ashlye Keaton @ 504-782-8271



Monday, July 27, 2009

In Pictures: Ponderosa Stomp - Tribute to Wardell Quezergue @ Alice Tully Hall

c/o Brooklyn Vegan

photos by Jacob Blickenstaff


Wardell Quezergue (facing band) and his Big Band

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Tony Owens

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Robert Parker

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

The Dixie Cups

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Dorothy Moore

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Tammy Lynn

Wardell Quezergue Tribute


Wardell Quezergue Tribute


Dr. John / Mac Rebbenack

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Zigaboo Modeliste (drums) performing Hey Pocky Way with Dixie Cups and Tammy Lynn

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Dixie Cups with Dorothy Moore

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Dr. John (guitar)

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Zigaboo Modeliste and Band

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Raymond Jones and Brian Quezergue

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Michael Hurtt (r) and Dr. John

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Jean Knight

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell addressing the audience

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

finale (Big Chief)

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Wardell Quezergue Tribute

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

In Pictures: Tribute to Wardell Quezergue @ Lincoln Center, NYC - 7/19/09

By greg aiello


Wardell Quezergue


Dr. John


Zigaboo Modeliste w/ the Rhythm & Blues Orchestra


The Rhythm & Blues Orchestra w/ Dr. John, Tammy Lynn & Zigaboo


The Dixie Cups


Jean Knight


Dorothy Moore


Tony Owens


Ensemble Finale


Thanks Wardell!

Monday, July 20, 2009

New Orleans Meets New York as Dr. John and Ponderosa Stomp Honor Wardell Quezergue

By David Fricke on Live Shows


Photo: Bedder/Getty

The third night of the inaugural Lincoln Center edition of the Ponderosa Stomp — the annual spring resurrection of forgotten roots-rock and R&B heroes and heroines, founded and held in New Orleans — was an oddly formal affair, compared to the outdoor soul and rockabilly shows presented earlier in the week. “Everybody get on your feet/You make me nervous when you’re in your seat,” Robert Parker sang on Sunday night in a well-preserved voice at the start of his 1966 hit “Barefootin’,” one of the many Crescent City R&B classics associated with the evening’s honoree, producer-arranger-songwriter Wardell Quezergue. But sitting down is where the otherwise delighted audience at Alice Tully Hall stayed during most of the two-hour revue. In New Orleans, when a song like that is in the air, anything short of a shimmy is against the law.


But Quezergue, who turns 80 this year, deserves the lofty setting. In the Sixties and Seventies, he earned the nickname “The Creole Beethoven” for his masterful blend of New Orleans rhythms and commercial wisdom in bedrock soul recordings such as Earl King’s Trick Bag” (1962), Professor Longhair”s “Big Chief” (1964) and King Floyd’s “Groove Me” (1970), then on mainstream collaborations with Paul Simon and Willie Nelson. At Lincoln Center, Quezergue conducted a ten-piece band from a chair as more than half a dozen of his original charges, including Dr. John, the Dixie Cups, Jean Knight and Tammy Lynn, recreated their biggest hits with him.


Original Dixie Cups Barbara and Rosa Hawkins were teenagers when they cut “Chapel of Love” and their 1965 Top Forty version of the Mardi Gras Indian chant “Iko Iko,” but the current trio (now featuring a Neville sister) was as spunky as it is each year at Jazz Fest. Tony Owens, a bear of a soul man with a radical-fade haircut, reprised his 1970 collector’s favorite, “Confessin’ a Feelin’,” with a great yearning growl, and Mississippi-born singer Dorothy Moore fought the country heartbreak in “Misty Blue” and “Funny How Time Slips Away,” covered with Quezergue in the mid-Seventies, with gospel brawn. Dr. John got the biggest slice of the night, and used it to play early sides he cut when he was still just Mac Rebennack and one of Quezergue’s regular session cats, among them 1959’s “Storm Warning” (the Doctor played guitar, his first instrument) and “Sahara,” a propulsive 1961 fusion of TV-detective-theme noir and galloping Huey Smith-style piano.


There were, strangely, no emcee (performers came on without announcement) or speechs celebrating Quezergue’s gifts and past. (He made brief remarks near the end). A little more wildness would have gone a long way. But to get Dr. John performing — and Quezergue conducting — a nutty 1958 ode to a TV horror-movie host, “Morgus the Magnificent,” in such refined surroundings was worth the juxtaposition. It was a truly weird — therefore typically New Orleans — thrill.






NY Times: Honoring an R&B Arranger Who Helped Singers Shine

Arrangers don’t get noticed much. Like cinematographers, they usually fill in the structures and concepts of others: songwriters and producers, who call on arrangers to deploy horns, strings or other sounds that might unobtrusively improve a song. But people who read album credits recognize that Wardell Quezergue, a working musician since 1953, is the rare exception: an arranger whose long career reveals him as a consistent catalyst of New Orleans R&B, and not just because he shares the songwriting credit on a ubiquitous New Orleans song, “It Ain’t My Fault.”



At Alice Tully Hall on Sunday night, the Lincoln Center Festival allied itself with the Ponderosa Stomp Foundation — the New Orleans record collectors-turned-promoters who find the musicians behind the obscure singles — to present a tribute to Mr. Quezergue. His wryly understated arrangements for horn sections in particular, drawing on local parade traditions and big-band jazz, often prod, tease or talk back to a singer and a song, with a chortling layer of syncopation that has helped define New Orleans rock.


Thursday, July 16, 2009

Ponderosa Stomp @ Lincoln Center Starts Tonight, to be broadcast on WFMU

c/o Brooklyn Vegan


Lincoln Center

The first two nights of The Ponderosa Stomp at Lincoln Center, July 16th and 17th are part of Lincoln Center's Midsummer Nights Swing, taking place at Damrosch Park. Each night kicks off with a dance lesson at 6:30 and the music starts at 7:30. Thursday night features The Get Down, a night of soul music excellence featuring William Bell, Harvey Scales, The Bobbettes and the incomparable Bo-Keys. Friday night brings rockabilly to the forefront with the Best Dance in Town, in which New Orleans wild man Joe Clay, Sun Record's Carl Mann and the legendary brother/sister duo The Collins Kids throw down, backed by Deke Dickerson and his Eccofonics.

Sunday, July 19th, a tribute performance takes place at Alice Tully Hall in the Starr Theatre, in which a high-octane array of Stomp artists will pay musical tribute to the "Creole Beethoven", Wardell Quezergue. Quezergue, nicknamed by Allan Toussaint, has made musical history countless times as the man behind timeless hits like "Mr. Big Stuff", "Iko Iko" and "Chapel of Love". A genius musician, arranger and producer who is largely unknown outside of New Orleans, Quezergue helped shape the soulful sounds of the south into international hit records. The show features R&B icons The Dixie Cups and Robert Parker; soul greats Jean Knight, Dorothy Moore, Tammy Lynn, and Tony Owens; legendary New Orleans drummer Zigaboo Modeliste; New Orleans musician, producer, and session man Mac Rebennack (Dr. John); garage-music pioneer Michael Hurtt; plus Wardell Quezergue's Rhythm & Blues Orchestra, an all-star ten-piece band led by Quezergue himself in a rare New York appearance.


The Ponderosa Stomp @ Lincoln Center's first night, The Get Down, will be broadcast live on WFMU. The second, July 17th, will be recorded for a later broadcast on July 30th. Tickets for the events are still on sale.

More info on the Stomp and the full lineup of performers (or you can check out "virtual trading cards" for each), below...


Ponderosa Stomp info

The Ponderosa Stomp Concert, a New Orleans musical tradition, highlights the world's most authentic musicians of rockabilly, R&B, jazz, blues, garage, soul, funk, and swamp pop. The annual show has become a must-see event, functioning as a showcase for living musical history. The Ponderosa Stomp exists to acknowledge, pay tribute to, and teach the cultural significance of the unsung heroes and heroines of rock-n-roll, rhythm & blues and other forms of American roots music. Events in New Orleans every spring include two jam-packed nights of music, a conference and symposium, film festival, record hop and now, a museum exhibit. Unsung Heroes: The Secret History of Louisiana Rock & Roll is currently on display at the Louisiana State Museum in the historic Cabildo in the heart of the French Quarter, running through May 2010. Lincoln Center and the Stomp teamed up together to produce three nights of music this week celebrating stars of rockabilly, soul and R&B.

July 16th (Midsummer Night's Swing):Ponderosa Stomp: The Get Down
* William Bell - a principal architect of the Stax/Volt sound.
* The Bobbettes - girl group known as the 'Harlem Queens' known for their hit, "Mr Lee"
* Bo-Keys - authentic, greasy Memphis soul stew w/ Stax Records stars
* Harvey Scales - a hard-hitting soul man, writer of "Disco Lady" and "Love-i-tus"

July 17th (Midsummer Night's Swing):Ponderosa Stomp: Best Dance In Town
* Joe Clay - New Orleans' proto-rockabilly genius, appeared with Elvis
* The Collins Kids - 50's TV faves, this brother/sister duo features double neck guitarpyrotechnics
* Deke Dickerson & The Eccofonics - the nitro-charged country and rockabilly specialists
* Carl Mann - Sun Records artist had his first hit with Nat King Cole's "Mona Lisa"


July 19th (Lincoln Center Festival): A Tribute to "The Creole Beethoven,"
Wardell Quezergue, celebrated New Orleans arranger and mastermind behind
countless rhythm and blues classics. On the bill:
* The Dixie Cups - hit makers who recorded classics, "Chapel of Love" and "Iko Iko."
* Jean Knight - New Orleans-based singer of "Mr. Big Stuff."
* Tammy Lynn - soul singer and legendary background singer for the Rolling Stones, Dr. John, and countless others.
* Zigaboo Modeliste - New Orleans master drummer and member of funk originators the Meters.
* Dorothy Moore - Malaco Records' soul/blues balladeer.
* Tony Owens - Lost soul king of New Orleans.
* Robert Parker - recorded his hit record, "Barefootin'" with Querzegue
* Mac Rebennack - New Orleans musician/producer/arranger/ songwriter better known as Dr. John.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

NolaFunk Lagniappe

Ponderosa Stomp to take over New York's Lincoln Center in July


The Ponderosa Stomp, the annual celebration of "lost" legends of R&B, soul and rock 'n roll between Jazz Fest weekends, decamps to New York in July for three concerts at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

Stomp founder Ira "Dr. Ike" Padnos and his crew have previously staged Stomp-style concerts in the Big Apple, but never before in such a prestigious venue. The Lincoln Center Web site notes that the three Stomp shows are devoted to "showcasing living history and thriving art, exposing new talent, reviving careers, and praising the unsung heroes who planted the very roots of American music."

"The Get Down" on July 16 focuses on soul and R&B. "Best Dance In Town" on July 17 spotlights rockabilly. The July 19th show is a tribute to New Orleans arranger Wardell Quezergue featuring Mac "Dr. John" Rebennack, the Dixie Cups, Jean Knight, Meters drummer Zigaboo Modeliste, Robert Parker, Dorothy Moore, Tammy Lynn, Tony Owens, Michael Hurtt and Quezergue himself.




Home of the Groove's "Let's Hear More From Snooks. . . Aw-rite?"
I've been burning up what few brain cells I have left trying to remember the first time I sawFird 'Snooks' Eaglin, Jr. perform live. This lack of specifics has much more to do with my age (and maybe what I was drinking back then) than with the impact of his performance, I'm sure.


Fortunately for me, I got to see him play often in New Orleans. So, his always entertaining, go-for-it gigs have all blurred into one big stream of consciousness memorial funfest, making it hard to sift out that one show that got me started. I know it was in the early 1980s, more than likely at Jazzfest; but, whatever the venue and exact date, I immediately became a fan of that extraordinary man, as have so many others who caught his shows out at the fairgrounds racetrack or in a local club, such as the Rock 'n Bowl. Over the years, people would call me when I was doing radio in Memphis, saying they'd been to New Orleans and were knocked out by a guitar player and singer named Snooks - best music they heard; and I have gotten similar comments since I've been doing the blog. He had that effect. As noted here and elsewhere, Snooks passed away on February 18th, just prior to Mardi Gras, at the age of 73. Another of New Orleans' unique voices and talents has slipped away.


Morning 40 Federation's last gig: an eyewitness account...



The final show was at One Eyed Jack’s, a popular venue for the band. I’ve spent the past two New Year’s Eves watching them there, the past two Halloweens at DBA, and two Voodoo Fests at some tent… I don’t know – I was drunk. Blues tent? Gospel tent? Neither really seems appropriate. 40’s tent.

I arrived at Jack’s around midnight and the opening act had yet to come on. I selected my favorite spot: front row, center stage. I sat there with my Pabst Blue Ribbon and my double shot of tequila like a cop on a stake out. I didn’t care how long it was going to take- I was going to get what I came here for.



Dragon Smoke | 02.26.09 | Santa Cruz

While Dragon Smoke's lineup has shifted in the past, the current quartet - Ivan Neville (keys, vocals), Eric Lindell (guitar, vocals) and Galactic's Stanton Moore (drums) and Robert Mercurio (bass) - has gelled over the past couple years, and it showed at Moe's. "This is supposed to be a fun band for us," quipped Neville during the first set, and the syncopated pleasure of their union showed in their eyes and limbs and spread readily to the audience. While this could be a showcase for jam vehicles full of wicked solos, they seemed more interested in cohesion, playing to songs rather than riffs and showing enjoyable restraint when each took the spotlight. I'm as big a fan of a good groovy cutting contest as the next funkateer but I'm more impressed when four salty dogs like this harness their super powers for music with slightly less slop. Their previous gigging has produced a small but tasty catalog with a few originals (I think) and primo covers such as Dyke & The Blazers' "Let A Woman Be A Woman, Let A Man Be A Man," Billy Preston's "Will It Go Round In Circles" and James "Sugar Boy" Crawford's beloved Mardi Gras fave "Iko Iko" (originally titled "Jock-A-Mo" for you trivia buffs). Regardless of the platform, what's obvious is how much they dig these occasional gatherings, a fact that hummed in every note, stage glance and even between sets as the quartet warmly chatted with anyone who extended a hand.






M.V.N.P-Live At Tipitina's: "THE WEEKEND MIX"



I've been wanting to share this one for ahwile. In short, this is one of the single greatest New Orleans moments I have ever experienced. The scene is New Year's weekend, 2003. I had been in New Orleans a few days already, spent New Year's Eve at the House Of Blues with Jon Cleary, experienced parades, fireworks, food, drink, and the usual Crescent City spontanaiety that keeps you on your toes. This was a truly incredible week that was coming to a close. I had one more night of music.



The show was billed as M.V.N.P..

The lineup:



Drummers extraordinaire Stanton Moore & John Vidacovich
Bass- George Porter Jr.
Keys- Ivan Neville

With Special Guest-Cyril Neville



Listen: The Life and Times of Irvin Mayfield



Big Easy Music Awards

The Big Easy Foundation announces its music awards nominees for 2009

Dr. John is the Big Easy Entertainer of the Year.


Kermit Ruffins' Livin’ a Tremé Life



Coming April 28th.


Buckwheat Zydeco’s Alligator Records Debut, Lay Your Burden Down, Set for May 5 Release, Celebrates Band’s 30th Anniversary!


Alligator Records has set a May 5, 2009 release date for LAY YOUR BURDEN DOWN, the stunning label debut from American musical legend Stanley “Buckwheat” Dural Jr. and his band, Buckwheat Zydeco. The New York Times says, “Stanley ‘Buckwheat’ Dural leads one of the best bands in America. A down-home and high-powered celebration, meaty and muscular with a fine-tuned sense of dynamics…propulsive rhythms, incendiary performances.” The Louisiana vocalist, accordion and organ master recorded the new CD at Dockside Studios in Maurice, Louisiana with Steve Berlin (Los Lobos) producing (as well as leading the horn section). Buckwheat Zydeco celebrates its 30th anniversary with the new CD and a lengthy tour, beginning with a Main Stage appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on May 2, 2009.



Live Review: New Orleans Indie Rock Fest II

Glasgow
While many may know New Orleans as the birthplace of jazz, the funkiest city on earth, and the “chocolate city” (thanks to C. Ray, our douchebag of a mayor), many don’t think of it as the home to one of the most progressive indie scene in the US. Well, there’s something new brewing down here in the delta, and the New Orleans Indie Rock Collective is busy stirring up the pot. The NOIRC is a one-of-a-kind, grass organization that fosters the development of and creates awareness about the burgeoning NOLA indie music scene. And they actually get shit done (collectively)… unlike our local bureaucrats! Apart from producing kickass compilation albums featuring the local talent, they host a biannual showcase. Last weekend (March 5th-7th), I attended the second New Orleans Indie Rock Fest to sample the cookin’ from the underground.




2009 Jazz Fest poster featuring Allen Toussaint created by New Orleans artist James Michalopoulos

New Orleans artist James Michalopoulos was the artist chosen to create the 2009 Jazz Fest poster. The poster, which will be sold online and at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, features Allen Toussaint.



Thelonious Monk Institute to graduate its first New Orleans class

As Davy Mooney's two-year tenure in the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Performance draws to a close, the guitarist is looking forward to sleeping again.

Mooney landed one of seven slots in the prestigious graduate-level jazz education program in 2007, the year the institute moved from the University of California, Los Angeles to Loyola University in New Orleans. It's been a whirlwind ever since.