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In recent months several new
resources on Cajun, Creole,
and Zydeco music have become
available.
One Generation at a Time:
Biography of a Cajun and
Creole Music Festival
by Barry Ancelet and Philip
Gould, published by the
Center for Louisiana Studies
of the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette,
covers the 32-year history
and evolution of what today
is generally known as
Festivals Acadiens (the
music portion is actually
named Festival de Musique
Acadienne). The text by
Barry Ancelet, the prime
organizer of the event,
includes invaluable
information about each
year's festival and about
the performers and their
music. Most of the
photographs are by Philip
Gould, including many
classic, iconic images of
musicians that you have
probably seen before such as
the cover photo of Dewey
Balfa and his daughter
Christine. Gould captured an
amazing dueling accordion
photograph of Zachary
Richard and Wayne Toups and,
by fortunate chance, a shot
of a young Steve Riley as a
spectator gazing intensely
next to the stage on which a
few years later he would be
a main attraction. To
purchase this book or the
other Center for Louisiana
Studies book described
below, go to the
nonprofit Books XYZ web site. Anyone seriously interested in Cajun music needs to get a copy of Accordions, Fiddles, Two-Step, and Swing: A Cajun Music Reader, edited by Ryan A. Brasseaux and Kevin S. Fontenot, and published in 2006 by the Center for Louisiana Studies. In addition to articles first published in various periodicals, the book features new essays that describe the current music scene and address questions about the future of Cajun music. There is also a chronology and a list of recommended readings. Especially welcome in 2007 is the publication of Iry LeJeune: Wailin’ the Blues Cajun Style by Ron Yule with Ervin LeJeune, released by Fiddle Country Publishing. The book is based on extensive interviews with Iry’s surviving son, Ervin, and many other family members, friends, and the musicians who knew him. In addition to offering the only detailed account of Iry LeJeune’s life, including the broad range of experiences that helped to shape his creative genius during his all too brief career, the book also provides details and stories about his recordings, the only complete set of French-English lyrics of his songs available, a discussion of Iry’s accordion style written by Chris Miller, and other lagniappe, plus numerous photos never before published. Yule also published a compilation of biographies of all of the musicians inducted in the Lake Charles Chapter Cajun French Music Association Hall of Fame—some 170 musicians, accompanied by photographs. The current edition goes through 2006, with a supplement being issued each year to update the publication. Inductees are from throughout the region, ranging from Amédé Ardoin and Joe Falcon to Jo-El Sonnier and Jackie Caillier. Dedans le Sud de la Louisiane, shot in 1972, may very well be the best documentary on Louisiana's French music and culture ever produced, so it is very good news indeed that this classic film by Jean Pierre Bruneau is now available as a DVD, handsomely packaged in a small book that contains discussions of songs and marvelous old photos. In an overview of the discovery of Louisiana’s Cajun and Creole cultures by outsiders, Bruneau describes himself as “seduced by the music and the lifestyle of the Cajun bayous and the desire to share with the world the beauties of this vibrant and fragile French speaking community.” The film gives us music and interviews featuring Nathan Abshire, Alphonse “Bois Sec” Ardoin, the Balfa Brothers, Clifton Chenier, Bee and Ed Deshotels, Bee Fontenot, Canray Fontenot, Adam and Cyprien Landreneau, Dennis McGee and Sady Courville, and Revon Reed. The DVD notes are in both French and English, and the film has English subtitles. Bruneau obviously fell in love with the French-speaking people of South Louisiana and their world, and that love is apparent in every frame of this film, an abiding affection that continues to this day in the care with which he has prepared the DVD package. The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings, published in fall 2006, reviews almost 6,000 CDs. The entries for each musician or group include a few sentences of biographical information, followed by brief reviews. The reviews offer an overall assessment along with pointed evaluations of particularly good or bad cuts. All of the songs are not listed, but each review does include the names of the individual musicians who played on the CD (if they can be identified). Most of the major figures in zydeco are included, going back to Amédé Ardoin up through Geno Delafose, Chris Ardoin, and Keith Frank, though others, like Leroy Thomas and Jeffery Broussard, are never mentioned. The reviews, primarily by Tony Russell and Chris Smith, are certainly incisive and can be quite acerbic. They appreciate zydeco, but their criticism can be unsparing. For example, reviews describe one performance as "constipated" and another as "seven minutes of mindless agitation." In addition to entries on recordings by individual musicians, the book also reviews compilations.
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Updated 12-22-07. All photographs and text by David Simpson, LSUE. |
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