Musical contingent of the Krewe of Kosmic Debris
Freewheeling marching or walking groups personify the boisterous spirit of the Carnival season, strutting and shimmying to snappy, syncopated pulsations and beats from horns and drums.
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NEW ORLEANS MARDI GRAS MUSIC
Mardi Gras music, like Christmas music, is not so much a style of music as it is an aural milieu comprised of various forms: orchestral and big-band arrangements played at tableau balls, Mardi Gras-themed rhythm-and-blues numbers that pour out of jukeboxes, "cutting-loose" jazz tunes that drive revelers to "shake booty" and pump umbrellas in the air, Afro-Caribbean chants and percussive rhythms associated with Mardi Gras Indians, parade-time beats from school bands marching between floats in parades.
The nexus between Carnival and music reflects the festive, let-the-good-times-roll culture of New Orleans, where parading and dancing have long been obsessions.
As New Orleans scholar and clarinetest Michael White once remarked on a radio program, "The desire for celebration is part of New Orleans culture. We parade at the drop of a hat for just about any event you can imagine: you get married, you die, if someone is born. We parade sometimes just for the sake of parading. And people get out and dance; that’s what the spirit is all about."
Indeed, this spirit of joie de vivre—i.e., the Mardi Gras spirit—is almost a precondition of the sounds for which the Crescent City became famous. As Dr. John—the foremost living interpreter of the city’s musical traditions—observes in the liner notes for his Grammy-winning Goin’ Back to New Orleans album, "New Orleans music was not invented, it just kind of grew up naturally, joyously, just for fun."
Being a musician in New Orleans is all about having fun with the music—and at no time is this more evident than during Carnival season. The same Mardi Gras spirit that prompts revelers to shed inhibitions and seek ritual transformation has a way of encouraging playfulness and spontaneity on the bandstand, resulting in countless renditions of old Carnival favorites such as "Carnival Time," "Mardi Gras Mambo," "Second Line," "Go to the Mardi Gras" and "Big Chief." And it seems that every year brings the release of new would-be anthems, as bands try to repeat the feat of the ReBirth Brass Band, whose infectious brass/funk number "Do Watcha Wanna" exploded during Carnival 1991. Thus, the Carnival songbook is continually expanded and reinvented, helping fuel a brisk business in releasing the Mardi Gras equivalent of Christmas-music anthologies.
As long as there have been parades, dances and masked balls in New Orleans, there has been a steady demand for musicians. "Carnival, by providing the audience, the money, and the forum in which to develop music and musicians, helped create the New Orleans music tradition," historian Reid Mitchell, in his book All on a Mardi Gras Day: Episodes in the History of New Orleans Carnival (Harvard University Press, 1995), observes.
Louis Armstrong reigning over the 1949 Zulu parade
Armstrong played in the Zulu parade as a young man and can be heard on King Oliver's "Zulu's Ball"; released in 1923, it became the first in an evolving canon of recordings that pay homage to the social aid and pleasure club-an iconic mainstay of Carnival famous for its blackface makeup, coconut throws and colorful assemblage of characters.
Photo courtesy of the Louisiana State Museum
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In the late 1800s, the city had over 100 brass bands, most of which were affiliated with fraternal orders, fire companies, militia companies, as well as various social and benevolent organizations—"mutual-aid" societies created to fund medical, funeral and burial services for dues-paying members. In his book Mitchell notes that in celebrating Mardi Gras around the turn of the century, "white maskers hired black bands to ride with them in spring wagons, providing music for their dancing." These horse- or mule-drawn wagons were forerunners of the bandwagons found in today’s Carnival parades.
The early brass bands, playing mostly dirges, marches and quadrilles, were made up of musicians with some formal training and who could thus read sheet music. Jazz emerged when this tradition overlapped with Latin and African sensibilities—in particular, the improvisational style of black musicians.
Mardi Gras, observes Mitchell, "did not ‘create’ jazz. It did, however, reflect the reasons New Orleans would become the birthplace of jazz...." Or as parade designer and Carnival historian Henri Schindler puts it in his book Mardi Gras: New Orleans (Flammarion, 1997), "the joyous license of the music owes more than a passing acquaintance to the liberties of Mardi Gras and a population long-accustomed to dancing in the streets."
By around the turn of the century, when Louis Armstrong came into the world and began soaking up the sounds of the Crescent City, jazz was being played in Carnival parades. In his autobiography, Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans (Prentice-Hall, 1954), Armstrong recounts having had the misfortune of stopping for a beer at a barroom that was near the scene of gunshots. Wrongly suspected of being a culprit, he was briefly incarcerated.
Satchmo was released from prison on Fat Tuesday and ran into the Zulu Social Aid & Pleasure Club parade. "It’s a funny thing how life can be such a drag one minute and a solid sender the next," he writes. "When I ran into this celebration and the good music I forgot all about Sore Dick [the dreaded prison yard captain] and the Parish Prison." He goes on to note that the Zulus "march to the good jumping music of brass bands while the King on his thrown scrapes and bows to the cheering crowds."
A key element of New Orleans’ "happy-times music," as Dr. John calls it, is that it invites participation. It makes you want to tap your feet, clap your hands, get up and move. "When I was growing up in New Orleans, just a little weed-hopper from the Third Ward, I used to think: ‘Oh, man, this music makes me feel the best!' " writes Dr. John, a.k.a. Mac Rebennack, in liner notes for Goin’ Back to New Orleans.
In New Orleans, the dance people dance when they hear this music is known as the second line. Second lining grew out of traditional African-American parades—specifically, jazz funerals. Strictly speaking, the "second line" refers to the mass of people—uninvited guests whom everyone expects to show up—who follow behind the procession.
Before arriving at the cemetery, the band plays solemn dirges. But after the services, when the procession is a respectable distance away from the cemetery, the musicians celebrate the life of the deceased by bursting into up-tempo parade bounces such as "When the Saints Go Marching In," "Didn’t He Ramble" and "Bourbon Street Parade." The distance between the performers and the audience breaks down, as the second liners engulf the band, moving to the beat as bodies gyrate and umbrellas twirl.
In the documentary Jazz Parades, folklorist Alan Lomax notes the similarities between second-line parades and traditional parades in West Africa, where the band is an integral part of the dancing crowd. "You see it in the crouching, sliding steps; in the improvisation of the dancers. Most prominently in the change of level, from low to high and back again, which is so characteristic of Africa," he observes.
In colonial times in New Orleans, the focal point of Afro-Caribbean musical and dancing culture was the Place des Negres, later renamed Congo Square, where slaves were allowed to gather on Sundays. Until it was suppressed around 1835, Congo Square was a public market and venue for communal drum-and-dance convocations, providing continuity for African forms of festive merriment that nurtured the creation of second-line parades and jazz. The percussive rhythms and call-and-response chants that drove the revelry entered the vernacular of New Orleans music, yielding a primal undercurrent that would later become the foundation of funk.
The Guardians of the Flame Cultural Arts Collective, accompanied by percussionist Bill Summers (far left), on Mardi Gras 2009
Combining music, dance and elaborate costuming, the Mardi Gras Indian tradition is a conduit for cultural retention, bringing communities together to interpret their past, express ritual freedom and honor their ancestors.
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The key conduits of this tradition are Mardi Gras Indians—African-Americans who "mask Indian" on Mardi Gras. "The music of Mardi Gras Indians can be characterized as ‘call and response’ with polyrhythmical drumming," Jerry Brock, writing in Wavelength magazine, explains. "There is a lead singer who is accompanied by a chorus and numerous percussionists. In form, their music represents one of the purest retentions of an African tradition found in New Orleans."
Slaves and Native Americans intermingled from the earliest days of colonial Louisiana. They shared similar belief systems involving ceremonial communion with ancestral spirits. And both groups had in common the experience of being subjugated by the dominant culture.
For the black community, the yearly Carnival festivities offered a chance to escape the burdens imposed by the established order and express ritual freedom, even rebellion. By adopting the persona of the Indian on Mardi Gras, New Orleanians of African descent symbolically reclaimed the festive space of Congo Square. "The Indians would never have entered the folk streams of New Orleans music had it not been for Carnival," conclude co-authors Jason Berry, Jonathan Foose and Tad Jones in Up From the Cradle of Jazz: New Orleans Music Since World War II (Da Capo Press, 1986).
Generally speaking, the songs of the Mardi Gras Indian tribes, or "gangs," celebrate acts of bravery and defiance ("We won’t kneel down"), as well as the proud heritage of the Indian nations. Yet the specific origins and meanings of such coded lyrical chants as "two way pockey way," "oom bah way" and "mighty kootie-fiyo" remain shrouded in mystery.
In a city where culture bubbles up from the streets, the lyrics and beats of the Mardi Gras Indians have inspired and informed an extraordinarily diverse range of players, from jazz legends (Jelly Roll Morton and Danny Barker) to masters of New Orleans funk (The Meters and The Neville Brothers), rhythm and blues (Professor Longhair, Earl King and James "Sugar Boy" Crawford) and even modern jazz (Donald Harrison Jr.).
In his memoir Under a Hoodoo Moon: The Life of Dr. John The Night Tripper (St. Martin's Press, 1994), Rebennack recalls growing up hearing Mardi Gras Indians play "a real funky kind of street music." For his Goin’ Back to New Orleans album, released on the Warner Bros. label in 1992, The Night Tripper assembled a team of local musical luminaries, among them Chief Howard "Smiley" Ricks, a percussionist and Mardi Gras Indian. One of the album’s standout tracks is a thumping rendition of a traditional Mardi Gras Indian song, "My Indian Red," arranged by the late Danny Barker. On the cover of the album, which pays tribute to the polyglot musical heritage of the Crescent City, Dr. John appears in full Mardi Gras Indian regalia: an elaborate hand-sewn suit of plumage and beadwork.
Dr. John's Grammy-winning Goin' Back to New Orleans album
A superlative evocation of the Crescent City's polyglot musical heritage.
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The Mardi Gras Indian tradition goes back at least as far as Reconstruction, though it wasn’t until the 1950s that the sounds associated with that tradition began to be translated into popular music. Sugar Boy Crawford’s "Jockomo," released on the Chess label in 1954, became a jukebox classic. And Huey "Piano" Smith used a famous Indian chant, "Oom bah way, tu way pocky way," in the very first line of his hit "Don’t You Know, Yockomo."
The most enduringly popular song associated with the black Indians of Mardi Gras is "Big Chief." Written by New Orleans guitarist-composer Earl King, the song was first recorded in 1964 for Watch Records. The session included Rebennack, who later became known as Dr. John, on guitar and Professor Longhair on piano. King whistles and handles the vocals on "Big Chief Part 2" ("Me big chief me got ‘em tribe/got my Spy Boy by my side"), considered to be the session’s definitive version.
King, who wrote the song for Professor Longhair, describes its origins in the radio documentary Come on Baby Let the Good Times Roll: The Story and Music of Earl King, produced by David Kunian. "It was really about an Indian breaking into the commissary and stealing the whiskey out of there in one of those little towns," he relates. The song’s title, however, was inspired by King’s mother. A cousin had nicknamed her "Big Chief," he explains in the documentary, because she was a heavy woman who would "go on the warpath" when chores were neglected.
"Big Chief" became a rollicking signature song for Professor Longhair and can he heard on Crawfish Fiesta (Alligator), Big Chief (Rhino) and House Party New Orleans Style (Rounder), among other albums.
Growing up in New Orleans, the Professor became uniquely attuned to the rhythms of the streets. He danced tap on Bourbon Street and frequently joined in second-line parades, beating out rhythms on bottles, cans or whatever objects were at hand. He later accentuated the swinging marching-band music of street parades in his distinctively percussive piano playing. As George Winston has noted, the "Fess" had three basic styles: rhumba boogie, slow blues and straight calypso.
"Go to the Mardi Gras," probably his most famous composition, is a rhumba boogie that creates the aural effect of a train ride. The narrator of the song is rolling into New Orleans for Mardi Gras—specifically, the parade of the Zulus. Fess first cut the song in 1949 for the Dallas-based Star Talent label, but that version was never released. Another version was cut in 1950 by Atlantic Records. But the 1959 Ron Records version is the keeper. "Propelled by John Boudreaux’s feverish second-line drumming, and a scrappy New Orleans horn section, the song’s festive lyrics and Longhair’s melodic whistling make this the unforgettable treatment," writes Jeff Hannusch in the liner notes for Collector’s Choice, a Rounder release.
Dr. John, who played guitar on the Ron session, has credited Fess with having "put funk into music," and indeed, "Go to the Mardi Gras" exemplifies the Afro-Caribbean sensibility that has shaped the cultural identity of New Orleans since the days of Congo Square.
Professor Longhair, aided by the likes of conga player Alfred "Uganda" Roberts, tapped into the primal beat of Congo Square. But it wasn’t until the first commercial recording of Mardi Gras Indians that a concentrated form of this New Orleans roots music was first heard outside the mostly black, working-class neighborhoods were the Indians—or "Injuns," as they’re affectionately known—performed.
New Orleans keyboardist and pop R&B composer Willie Tee, a.k.a. Wilson Turbinton, and his brother, saxophonist Earl Turbinton Jr., had grown up in the midst of Mardi Gras Indians in New Orleans’s Calliope housing project. The Willie Tee band first played with The Wild Magnolias Mardi Gras Indian tribe at the Tulane Jazz Festival in 1970. Several years later Tee assembled a stellar group of local musicians, called The New Orleans Project, for a session with The Wild Magnolias, led by Theodore Emile "Bo" Dollis, and Joseph Pierre "Monk" Boudreaux, chief of The Golden Eagles tribe and boyhood friend of Dollis’s.
St. Augustine's "Purple Knights"
in the 2009 Krewe of Endymion parade
For New Orleanians, the parade-time beats of high school marching bands are inextricably associated with the aural milieu of Carnival.
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The Wild Magnolias, released on the Polydor label in 1974, combined the chants and funky percussion rhythms of the Indians with jazz-flavored jamming. The follow-up, They Call Us Wild, released in 1975, is included among Offbeat magazine’s "100 Essential Louisiana CDs."
"The blend of Chief Bo Dollis’ fierce vocals, Willie Tee’s slinky keys, Earl Turbinton’s screaming sax, percolating conga (from Prof. Longhair collaborator Alfred 'Uganda' Roberts) and wah-wah space guitar (from the original of a long line of 'Guitar June's, 'Guitar June' Johnson Jr.) results in an absolutely flawless long-form funk," writes Roger Hahn in Offbeat, adding that "the mostly original song list is steeped in terrific tunes based on subjects derived from black Indian culture (‘New Suit,’ ‘Fire Water,’ ‘Injuns, Here We Come,’ ‘New Kind of Groove,’ ‘We’re Gonna Party'). It may have been a short-lived experiment, but on They Call Us Wild, the blending of black Indian culture and the emerging genre of funk reaches a rarified pinnacle of popular musical expression."
They Call Us Wild, originally a Europe-only release, remained something of an underground legend until being re-released on PolyGram in 1994. A long-awaited new album, Life is a Carnival, reuniting Bo Dollis and The Wild Magnolias with Monk Boudreaux, appeared on the Metro Blue label in spring 1999. IIncluded are four new songs by special guest Dr. John, as well as a rendition of his anthem "Mardi Gras Day." Robbie Robertson is featured on the title tune, taken from the songbook of his old group, The Band. Other guests include Bruce Hornsby, Cyril Neville, Marva Wright and Davell Crawford.
The Wild Magnolias broke new ground by fusing Mardi Gras Indian music with more popular idioms. But the most influential Mardi Gras Indian recording of all time is The Wild Tchoupitoulas, released in 1976 by Island Records. It marked the first time that The Neville Brothers—Art, Charles, Cyril and Aaron—came together as an ensemble.
They united behind their uncle, the late George Landry, who was the driving force behind the project. Better known as Big Chief Jolly, he led The Wild Tchoupitoulas, an Uptown tribe, now defunct. A former merchant seaman, Uncle Jolly played blues piano, banged out rhythms on the tambourine and spun lyrics from Mardi Gras Indian street lore.
The Wild Tchoupitoulas—also among Offbeat’s 100 Essential Louisiana CDs—is described in Up From the Cradle of Jazz as "one of the great musical statements issued from New Orleans, a remarkable fusion of street chants and folk rhythms set to brilliant instrumental and percussive backing."
Laying down the slippery grooves: The Meters, the seminal funk outfit founded by keyboardist-composer Art "Poppa Funk" Neville. Back in 1954, at the tender age of 17, Neville, as leader of The Hawketts, achieved jukebox immortality when he did the vocals on "Mardi Gras Mambo," one of the most popular Mardi Gras tunes of all time. The song was recorded again in 1975 by The Meters on their Fire on the Bayou album. A year after the release of The Wild Tchoupitoulas, in 1977, The Meters disbanded and Art joined forces with his brothers.
Chief Jolly died in 1980, but his spirit lives on in the funky rhythms and soulful vocal harmonies of The Neville Brothers. In their live performances, especially during Carnival, the Nevilles like to tip their hats to Uncle Jolly and the Indians by playing songs such as "Brother John," "Iko Iko" and "New Suit."
Chief Jolly figures prominently in two cuts on the Nevilles’ Grammy-winning 1989 release on A&M Records, Yellow Moon. "Wild Injuns," an original song, is a rambunctious tribute to "Mardi Gras Injuns down in New Orleans." And in a reworking of A.P. Carter’s gospel classic "Will the Circle be Unbroken," Cyril Neville mourns the passing of his beloved uncle: "Undertaker, undertaker/ won’t you please drive real slow/That’s Chief Jolly that you carry/I sure hate to see him go."
Over the years, the brass band tradition has proven to be no less of a wellspring of Mardi Gras music than the Mardi Gras Indian tradition. Many of the city’s top horn players started out playing in Mardi Gras parades. No matter how spectacular the floats, a parade isn’t a parade without the rhythmic excitement of the bands.
"When I used to go to Mardi Gras parades," Stanton Moore relates in Offbeat, "the first thing you’d hear coming down the street was the drums. I would get so excited. I think that funk music just gives you that same feel, that rhythmic feel that makes you go, ‘Oh, yeah, here it comes!’ " (Moore is the drummer for New Orleans funk band Galactic.)
Danny Barker
The Mardi Gras music tradition has benefitted greatly from the brass band revival he set in motion.
Photo by Pat Jolly
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As the authors of Up from the Cradle of Jazz point out, "New Orleans music is built from the bottom up: drums first, bass second, then guitar and horns."
"In New Orleans roots music," Dr. John relates in his memoir, "the drummer is crucial, chronic to our thing because he lays down the foundation of what New Orleans music is all about: the funk." The New Orleans drummer, he adds, "leans heavily on the bass drum, playing double-clutch rhythms" and breaking up the beat into "two-and-four-bar patterns (and sometimes even an eight-bar pattern)."
As Dr. John recounts in liner notes, session drummer nonpareil Earl Palmer, a New Orleans native, had a name for this New Orleans style of syncopation: " ‘Let’s play a little Funky Butt,’ he’d say. That’s exactly what it was. Music to make you dance and shake your butt until your butt is funky."
Historian Mitchell notes in his book that trombonist Kid Ory, a major force in jazz in the first half of the century, "won the second-liners over with his version of ‘Funky Butt,’ a ‘ratty’ song." Second-liners shake booty to a parade-time back beat popularly known as "the second-line beat"—"a dancing, marching, strutting sort of step or beat," as drummer James Black described it in New Orleans Jazz and Second Line Drumming (Miami: Warner Brothers Publications, 1995), by Herlin Riley and Johnny Vidacovich.
The most ubiquitous Carnival song associated with brass bands and marching bands is "Second Line," a hypnotic bounce that’s played at big parades, barbecues and even opulent Carnival balls.
" ‘Second Line’ is actually a combination of two songs, ‘Picou’s Blues’ and ‘Whuppin’ Blues,’ " Milton Batiste, the originator of the song, explains in Offbeat. "I got the idea for the song’s intro from David Bartholomew [the legendary New Orleans composer, arranger and Fats Domino collaborator]. He’d play that little riff after the band’s break when he wanted the guys in the band to get back on the bandstand."
Second Line, Parts 1 and 2, recorded in 1974 by Stop Inc., are the most famous versions of the song. Both are included on Best of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, Vol. 1 (Mardi Gras Records).
Batiste plays trumpet and leads The Olympia Brass Band. Founded by Harold "Duke" Dejan in 1958, it’s rooted in the tradition of old-time brass bands that played marches, hymns, dirges and blues. But its repertoire has evolved to incorporate songs like "Go to the Mardi Gras," "Blueberry Hill" and "Don’t Mess With My Toot Toot."
Mardi Gras music has received a tremendous boost from the brass band revival movement that has been going on in New Orleans since the early 1970s. It all began after the late Danny Barker—a banjo and guitar player who worked with everyone from Jelly Roll Morton and Bunk Johnson to Cab Calloway, Benny Carter and Lucky Millinder—returned to his native New Orleans from New York and started the Fairview Baptist Church Band to turn young people onto the classic brass band tradition. Out of that came The Dirty Dozen Brass Band. A key force in reviving the street-parade tradition, the Dozen mingled an improvisational style of traditional jazz with bebop, funk and R&B—and thus inspired a new generation to pick up horns and evolve the music in new directions. (The Dirty Dozen’s Live: Mardi Gras in Montreux, released in 1986 on Rounder, is included among Offbeat’’s100 Essential Louisiana CDs.)
Most of the members of the ReBirth Brass Band were in high school when the band started out in the mid-1980s. They got their break in 1990, after the release of their first album on Rounder the year before. The title song, "Do Whatcha Wanna," became a big smash with the young late-night crowd after club DJs started spinning it between hip-hop and rap numbers. The song, with a throbbing tuba bass line and a chorus shouted like a Mardi Gras Indian chant ("Do Wat-cha Wanna....Do Wat-cha Waaa-na!"), got picked up by black commercial radio and became a local hit, something no brass band had ever achieved. Blasting from car stereos, jukeboxes and front porches all over the city, it became the party theme song for the 1991 Carnival season. (Do Watcha Wanna is another of Offbeat’s 100 Essential Louisiana CDs.)
Just about every Carnival season since has brought new would-be anthems, though none has hit as big as "Do Watcha Wanna." "Indian Princess," written by J. Monque’D, was released in early 1994 and quickly became the single for that year’s festivities. Against rolling rhythms reminiscent of "Go to the Mardi Gras," R&B diva Marva Wright, trading vocal leads with Monque’D, sings of a princess turned queen ("I’m a big queen ju-kin’ and jum-pin’ "). The chorus features the Creole Wild West Mardi Gras Indians.
Jazz drummer Idris Muhammad and saxophonist Donald Harrison Jr., appearing on Carnival Day 2003 with the Congo Nation Mardi Gras Indians
The once-obscure music and traditions of Mardi Gras Indians, synthesizing African, Caribbean and American folkways, are now emblazoned on the aesthetic and cultural consciousness of New Orleans.
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Two years later, "Gimme My Money Back," by The Treme Brass Band, emerged as a Mardi Gras anthem. And for Carnival 1999, All That, a brass-funk combo, turned out a rap-flavored song, "Mardi Gras ’99."
Mardi Gras songs usually reflect the musical sensibility of the era in which they’re written. The rhythms of modern urban culture inform Young Guardians of the Flames’s 1998 release, New Way Pockey Way (First Tribe Records). The title track is a traditional Mardi Gras Indian song infused with funk and elements of hip hop.
Members of the Harrison family figure prominently in the Young Guardians, which is an extension of The Guardians of the Flame. Donald Harrison, the late big chief of the Guardians tribe, contributed vocals and lyrics on New Way Pockey Way. Son Donald Harrison Jr., one of the finest jazz saxophonists of his generation, arranged four of the songs.
Donald Jr. is responsible for the groundbreaking album Indian Blues, released in 1989 on the Candid label. Featuring Dr. John, Smiley Ricks and The Guardians of the Flame, it synthesizes Mardi Gras Indian music and modern jazz.
In an interview with Offbeat, Harrison recalls how the idea for the album came to him when he was masking Indian with his father’s tribe. "I had this magical revelation one Mardi Gras," he relates. "I was hearing how the Indian music and jazz could be merged together. I was hearing the swing beat in the Indian music."
It’s no wonder that musicians are drawn to Mardi Gras and its fabled cornucopia of sensory stimuli. In a way, the exuberant kaleidoscope of Mardi Gras is a metaphor for the incestuous cross-pollination and collaboration that characterizes the New Orleans music scene.
In liner notes for Ain’t No Funk Like N.O. Funk, a compilation of contemporary New Orleans funk, DJ Davis, who hosts a brass band program on community radio station WWOZ, recounts his experience marching with Krewe of Jew-Lu on Mardi Gras 1998. (Jew-Lu is a Carnival club founded in 1993 by The New Orleans Klezmer Allstars.)
"Everyone in purple afro wigs, weird glasses, silk and sequined costumes, drinking their beer and wine....In addition to members of the Klezmers, Mas Mamones, the Iguanas, Royal Finger bowl (and it turns out non-New Orleans artists including Leftover Salmon, G-Love’s Special Sauce, and Blues Traveler), there were members of Galactic, Walter Wolfman Washington’s Roadmasters, All That, Iris May Tango, Flavor Kings, Smilin’ Myron, Brides of Jesus, New World Funk Ensemble and The Nightcrawlers.
"It’s that kind of tight music scene down here...," adds Davis, who plays keyboards for All That. "The birthplace of jazz, New Orleans is the greatest musical Mecca on the planet."
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