A blog about world and global music from a guy who co-hosts the KUNM Global Music Show, 89.9 FM Albuquerque/Santa Fe, http://www.kunm.org. I post one song a day, with reflections on the music, life, and whatever else comes into my mind.
Showing posts with label New Orleans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Orleans. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
Getting Jiggy with It: Beth Patterson and "Mary Patterson's/All in the Family/The Rathfarnham Lilters"
Beth Patterson brings us today's random tune, called Jigs: Mary Patterson's/All in the Family/The Rathfarnham Lilters. From Lafayette, Louisiana, Beth Patterson is a singer-songwriter who starts from a base of Irish and Celtic music and adds a few drops of Cajun, worldbeat and progressive rock. She began her career playing Cajun bass and as a classical oboist, and studied traditional Irish music and ethnomusicology at University College Cork in Ireland. She finished a bachelor's degree in music therapy at Loyola University in New Orleans, and she took up the Irish bouzouki which is now her preferred instrument. She was a founding member of the Poor Clares, an Irish ensemble that opened to rave reviews in New Orleans, and she has also released four solo albums and two with the Poor Clares. You can find Jigs: Mary Patterson's/All in the Family/The Rathfarnham Lilters on her 1999 album Hybrid Vigor.
Listen to songs like this and more on the KUNM Global Music Show every Monday night from 10 pm - 1 am Mountain Standard Time. Live streaming, program information and the two-week digital archive can be found at http://www.kunm.org.
Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beth_Patterson
Labels:
All in the Family,
Beth Patterson,
Celtic,
global,
Irish,
Jigs,
KUNM,
Louisiana,
Mary Patterson's,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
The Rathfarnham Lilters,
world
Friday, March 1, 2019
Let's Go Get 'Em: Cha Wa and "All On a Mardis Gras Day"
We are getting close to Mardi Gras in a few days, and the randomizer comes up with a winner in the form of today's song, called All On a Mardi Gras Day. The song is performed by Cha Wa, a band that melds New Orleans brass band sounds with the Mardi Gras Indian musical tradition and explores contemporary interpretations of traditional Mardi Gras Indian songs through the vocals of Big Chief Monk Boudreaux of the Golden Eagles Mardi Gras Indian tribe. Founded by drummer Joe Gelini, the band also features J'wan Boudreaux, grandson of Monk Boudreaux and himself the spyboy for the tribe. The name of the group, Cha Wa, means "we're coming for you" in the Mardi Gras Indian vernacular. You can find All On a Mardi Gras Day on Cha Wa's debut album Funk 'n' Feathers (2016).
Listen to songs like this and more on the KUNM Global Music Show every Monday night from 10 pm - 1 am Mountain Standard Time. Live streaming, program information and the two-week digital archive can be found at http://www.kunm.org.
Sources: http://www.chawaband.com/#chawa-section
Labels:
All on a Mardi Gras Day,
Cha Wa,
Funk 'n' Feathers,
global,
KUNM,
Louisiana,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
world
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Tightly: Cha Wa and "Hold 'Em Joe"
From New Orleans comes today's random tune, called Hold 'Em Joe. The song is performed by Cha Wa, a band that melds New Orleans brass band sounds with the Mardi Gras Indian musical tradition and explores contemporary interpretations of traditional Mardi Gras Indian songs through the vocals of Big Chief Monk Boudreaux of the Golden Eagles Mardi Gras Indian tribe. Founded by drummer Joe Gelini, the band also features J'wan Boudreaux, grandson of Monk Boudreaux and himself the spyboy for the tribe. The name of the group, Cha Wa, means "we're coming for you" in the Mardi Gras Indian vernacular. You can find Hold 'Em Joe on Cha Wa's debut album Funk 'n' Feathers (2016).
Listen to songs like this and more on the KUNM Global Music Show every Monday night from 10 pm - 1 am Mountain Standard Time. Live streaming, program information and the two-week digital archive can be found at http://www.kunm.org.
Sources: http://www.chawaband.com/#chawa-section
Labels:
brass band,
Cha Wa,
Funk 'n' Feathers,
global,
Hold 'Em Joe,
KUNM,
Mardi Gras Indians,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
world
Friday, November 9, 2018
Here We Come: Voices of a Nation with "Voices of a Nation"
Today's random song is by Voices of a Nation, a group out of New Orleans that does music in the tradition of the Mardi Gras Indians. Unfortunately, I can't find much information on Voices of a Nation, however, it is a project led by Big Chief Juan Pardo of the Golden Comanche and includes Big Chief Kentrell Watson of the Wild Mohicans, 2nd Chief Jeremy Stevenson of the Monogram Hunters, and Romeo Bougere of the Ninth Ward Hunters. The Mardi Gras Indians are 38 organizations in New Orleans known as tribes, loosely separated into Uptown and Downtown tribes. The Indians base their history on escaped black slaves finding help and shelter from local Native Americans, though the first Indian tribe, the Creole Wild West, may have actually been created out of members of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. The Mardi Gras Indian tribes traditionally mask and parade during Mardi Gras season, and in the early days it was also a time for violence and to settle scores with other tribes. However, Mardi Gras Indian Chief Tootie Montana almost singlehandedly stopped the bloodshed in the late 1960s by promoting the creation of beautiful costumes. "I was going to make them stop fighting with the gun and the knife and start fighting with the needle and thread," he said, and today, when Mardi Gras Indian tribes meet on the streets of New Orleans, the "fight" is a show of elaborately sewn and beaded costumes and bluster, rather than violence. You can find this song, Voices of a Nation, on the Voices of a Nation CD (2017).
Listen to songs like this and more on the KUNM Global Music Show every Monday night from 10 pm - 1 am Mountain Standard Time. Live streaming, program information and the two-week digital archive can be found at http://www.kunm.org.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mardi_Gras_Indians
Labels:
global,
Jeremy Stevenson,
Juan Pardo,
Kentrell Watson,
KUNM,
Louisana,
Mardi Gras Indians,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
Romeo Bougere,
Voices of a Nation,
world
Friday, November 3, 2017
Green Willow for a Year: The Poor Clares and "All Around My Hat"
The Poor Clares, an Irish band formed in New Orleans in 1993, sings today's random tune, called All Around My Hat. The Poor Clares, upon establishment, had an auspicious debut at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival (Jazz Fest). They were not the typical Irish band, mixing their own compositions in with traditional Irish music and also throwing in some New Orleans jazz and Cajun music as well. After one of their founding members, Beth Patterson, left the group, they reformed under the name Re Mor (Gaelic for Big Easy). You can find All Around My Hat on their 1996 album Resurrected Lover. You can hear some of their unique sound in this funky take on an English traditional song from the 19th century.
Listen to songs like this and more on the KUNM Global Music Show every Monday night from 10 pm - 1 am Mountain Standard Time. Live streaming, program information and the two-week digital archive can be found at http://www.kunm.org.
Labels:
All Around My Hat,
folk,
global,
Irish,
KUNM,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
Resurrected Lover,
The Poor Clares,
traditional,
United States,
world
Sunday, January 29, 2017
A Long Cultural Journey: Bruce Daigrepont and "Acadie À La Louisiane"
Cajun mainstay Bruce Daigrepont brings us the random tune for today, called Acadie À La Louisiane. Daigrepont, born in New Orleans, started learning guitar at age five and banjo at age ten, and at 20 began to devote himself to learning French accordion. He formed his own Cajun band in 1980 and began appearing at the regular fais-do-do dances at New Orleans' Maple Leaf Bar on Thursdays. In 1986 he moved the fais-do-do to the world famous Tipitinas on Napoleon and Tchoupitoulas Streets - and he continues to play it every Sunday from 5 - 9 pm. He and his band play homemade instruments and sing all of their songs in Cajun French, and they have built up a very loyal fan base. You can find Acadie À La Louisiane on his 1989 album Coeur des Cajuns, though we actually found it on a sample album by Putumayo called Louisiana Music Sampler.
Labels:
Acadie À La Louisiane,
Bruce Daigrepont,
cajun,
Coeur des Cajuns,
global,
KUNM,
Louisiana,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
New Orleans,
Putumayo,
radio,
world
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Fly Swatter: Bo Dollis, Monk Boudreaux, Kermit Ruffins and Rebirth Brass Band with "Shoo Fly"
Some New Orleans music royalty comes together for a rousing song featuring Mardi Gras Indians and brass. Shoo Fly is performed by Mardi Gras Indian chiefs Bo Dollis and Monk Boudreaux, with Rebirth Brass Band and trumpeter Kermit Ruffins. Bo Dollis was the big chief of the Wild Magnolias Mardi Gras Indians, and he passed away in January 2015. Monk Boudreaux was also a member of the Wild Magnolias until 2001 when he left the group due to disputes with the manager over payments. He is currently big chief of the Golden Eagles Mardi Gras Indians. Kermit Ruffins is an American jazz trumpeter who is influenced by Louis Armstrong and Louis Jordan and has been known to hit a high C on his trumpet. He is the leader of the Barbecue Swingers, a traditional jazz quintet, and he not only plays at his shows but often cooks barbecue for the crowd. He also co-founded the Grammy Award winning Rebirth Brass Band in 1983 while attending high school in New Orleans' Treme neighborhood. The band combines traditional New Orleans brass band music with funk, jazz, soul and hip hop. Shoo Fly can be heard on The Mardi Gras Indians Super Sunday Showdown CD (1992).
Labels:
Bo Dollis,
global,
Kermit Ruffins,
KUNM,
Mardi Gras Indians,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
Monk Boudreaux,
music,
New Orleans,
radio,
Rebirth Brass Band,
Shoo Fly,
Super Sunday Showdown,
world
Thursday, February 18, 2016
Synchronized Belles: Hi-Fi Sky and "Belle Louisiane"
We have something a little different for you in today's random tune. Belle Louisiane is by Hi-Fi Sky, a band founded in New Orleans that evacuated along with the rest of the Hurricane Katrina refugees. They play drone-electronica rooted in the music of the Acadian and French cultures of New Orleans. Belle Louisiane can be found on their 2005 album Music for Synchronized Swimming in Space.
Labels:
ambient,
Belle Louisiane,
drone,
global,
Hi-Fi Sky,
KUNM,
Megan Kamerick,
Michael Hess,
music,
Music for Synchronized Swimming in Space,
New Orleans,
radio,
world
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