Do the math: Spectacular music + cook and/or taste a gumbo + shake a leg + camp + jam amongst tents + pass a good time = Blackpot Festival

Music and dancing go hand in hand at Blackpot Festival & Cookoff.

Dominick Cross, story/photos

LAFAYETTE, LA — We’re knee deep in fall in South Louisiana.

Halloween is less than a week away. The New Orleans Saints are in action (such as it is), and the Blackpot Festival & Cook-Off is back in full form, Friday and Saturday (October 28-29, 2022) at Vermilionville, 300 Fisher Road.

If you’re counting, which includes not counting the COVID years of 2020-2021, Blackpot is in its 16th year of presenting an eclectic collection of music and musicians not commonly heard in these parts.

Yes, there’ll be Cajun and zydeco and la la, as well as Old Time, blues, string band, Western swing, bluegrass, singer/songwriter, Tex-Mex, ragtime, country — music you can enjoy even if the power grid goes down.

And, yes, again, the square dance session is in its usual Saturday morning slot at 11 a.m. with The Faux Paws with Nancy Spero calling.

Then there’s the camping.

Where there’s grass, there are tents…

Coupled with a wide-ranging line-up, the option to camp on festival grounds and partake in or simply enjoy pop-up jams (day & night and the wee hours), also sets BlackPot Festival & Cook-Off apart from other festivals in the area.

…and where there are tents, jam sessions break out all over the Blackpot campground all day and all night.

Another divergent particular at Blackpot is the costume contest set for 10 p.m. Saturday night at the Main Stage, between Los Texmaniacs and The Revelers. And why not? After all, Halloween is just two days away.

Blackpot Camp

In the meantime, Blackpot Camp is underway at Lakeview Park & Beach, 1717 Veterans Memorial Hwy., Eunice. There are musical instrument and music style classes underway through Thursday, covering Cajun fiddle, guitar and accordion; Western Swing, Old Time, harmony vocals, rhythm, drums, and dance.

The nightly dances, open to the public, have two bands and begin at 8 p.m. and so far have featured Joe Hall & the Cane Cutters, Blackpot All-Stars, Chas Justus & the Jury, The Revelers, a Square Dance and the 99 Playboys.

Coming Wednesday, it’s Bruce Daigrepont, the Honky Tonk All-Stars; and Thursday, it’s Preston Frank, followed by Cajun music.

Blackpot Fest

The Blackpot Festival itself gets started 6 Friday evening with, well, options across three stages. The Fraulines open the Main Stage; a Cajun jam with the Daiquiri Queens takes place at the Chapel Stage; and Renée Reed performs at the Schoolhouse Stage.

The Pine Leaf Boys close out Day 1 of Blackpot and before that goes down, you can also hear K.C. Jones, Roochie Toochie and the Ragtime Shepherd Kings, Jackson & the Janks, John R. Miller & Chloe Edmonstone & J.P. Harris, and The Shabbys.

Come Saturday, Jesse Lege starts the day-long music extravaganza with a Cajun jam at 10 a.m. Square dancing begins an hour later and then an hour after that, all music breaks loose.

Square dancing – complete with instruction and plenty of beginners – gets the juices flowing at 11 a.m. Saturday.

The impressive lineup includes: Sheryl Cormier, Cedric Watson et Bijou Creole, The Daiquiri Queens, Preston Frank and Ed Poullard, The Murphy Beds, The Georgia Parker Trio, Amis du Teche, Forest Huval, Diamond J. & the Ruby Red Raindrops, Travis Stuart, Libby and the Loveless, Epi & Friends, Ferd, The Hushabyes, Golden Shoals.

See Saturday’s extensive schedule here.

One of the many bands on the schedule is Lafayette’s Major Handy who will hit the Chapel Stage, Saturday, 6-7 p.m. While only Handy’s name is listed, do know the set will include his band, Major Handy & the Louisiana Blues Band.

“We’re going to have the whole band,” said Handy.

Major Handy and friend. Robin May photo

The band consists of Carmen Jacob, drums; Ramsey Robinson, guitar; Lincoln Landry, bass/vocals; and Handy, accordion/vocals.

And if you’re wondering what you’ll hear, well, here ya go:

“I’m going to be doing Major Handy, bro,” Handy chuckled. “You know, rhythm & blues and jazz and, I don’t know, maybe there’ll be zydeco.”

Handy’s set list includes Just My Imagination (The Temptations); Last Two Dollars (Johnnie Taylor); It’s Alright (Curtis Mayfield) Turning Point (Tyrone Davis); I’ll Take You There (The Staple Singers) and I’m On A Wonder (Clifton Chenier).

You can also expect a few of Handy’s tunes with Come On Home, Zydeco Feeling and Trailside.

Handy, steadily gigging after the pandemic, is also recovering rather well from a stroke in January 2020. Handy said he’s doing “Pretty good. I just got a little limp that aggravates me every now and then,” he said. “But, you know what? It’s leaving.

“It’s all but over,” continued Handy. “It’s not that bad. Every time I go to therapy, I come back a little bit better and stronger.”

COOK-OFF

While there will be food and beverages about, one would be remiss not to mention the Cook-Off. It is an integral part of the festival. Heck, it’s in the event’s name: Blackpot Festival & Cook-Off.

John Vidrine check on his chance at a prize while onlookers check on John Vidrine.

The cook-off takes place Saturday afternoon. Folks can visit each chef’s outdoor kitchen and sample their creations.

Anyone can enter from amateur to professional for a chance at prizes and bragging rights. Categories include Gravy, Gumbo, Cracklins, Jambalaya, dessert.

Entry fees are $75 for individuals; Civic organizations, $100; and Business, $125. Go here for more info.

BLACKPOT TICKET INFO
Weekend pass includes camping, $70; Friday night, 6 p.m.-midnight (no camping), $30; Saturday noon-midnight (no camping) $40.

Shake Your Trail Feather: Paddle your way to a fun fundraiser on Bayou Teche, or even take the land route, you’ll still pass a good time

FYI: The Bayou Teche National Paddle Trail stretches from Port Barre to Patterson. That’s 135 miles and a heckuva lot of paddle strokes.

FYI: However, come Saturday, October 22, 2022, the TECHE Project’s Paddle Parade on the Teche, as part of its annual fundraiser, Shake Your Trail Feather, isn’t nearly the length of Louisiana’s sole National Paddle Trail.

FYI: In fact, you’ve got two paddling options: a 4.5 mi./2-hour paddle, or a 6.5 mi./2.45-hours.

FYI: No more FYIs, the story follows…

by DOMINICK CROSS/story & photos

BREAUX BRIDGE — Like all festivals and other fun-filled indoor/outdoor events and activities so far this year, Shake Your Trail Feather returns to full form and function on and along Bayou Teche at Parc des Ponts, Saturday, October 22, 2022.

The annual fundraising fete comes in two parts beginning with the morning Paddle Parade that gets rolling 9-ish a.m. with shuttle busing/registration and such. Paddlers will be serenaded by two bands, Amis du Teche and Cajun Fire, on two barges along the bayou route.

And then, along the banks of the bayou at Parc des Ponts, the party in the parc commences at 11 a.m. with lunch trucks, libations & beverages, merch sales, kids activities and catch some fine live music by Horace Trahan and the Ossun Express, from noon to 2 p.m.

The Mississippi Kite is the event’s bird this year. That means decorations, in some fashion or another to honor this small, but mighty bird of prey, will adorn the two music barges floating along with the aforementioned paddlers.

It is hoped that paddlers, as well as landlubbers in the parc, will costume themselves in Mississippi Kite regalia.

“Every year we have a theme bird. This year it’s Mississippi Kite,” said Patti Holland, executive director of the TECHE Project. “So we have Mississippi Kites that are going to be flying from the barges on strings on bamboo poles kind of hanging out there and some of them are going to be mounted on cypress.”

The decor will include moss and palmetto and feather boas.

“We’re giving out prizes for the best dressed birds,” Holland said. “So people should don their feathers and come shake them.”

Kayaks and canoes wrap-up their journey as the Paddle Parade comes to an end at Parc des Ponts in Breaux Bridge.

Some paddlers even decorate their kayaks and canoes.

A kayak raffle, courtesy of Pack & Paddle, will be held.

As of Tuesday, October 18, 2022, Holland said about 85 people have already registered for the Paddle Parade.

“We had 35 people show-up at the door last year,” said Holland. “So we had like 150 people registered last year. And we’re probably tracking to have about the same this year.”

At Shake Your Trail Feather, look for sticker decals to attach to a snake-shaped (like the bayou itself) outline on your kayak/canoe (as RVs do when camping around the country) to indicate where you’ve paddled, like, from, say, Breaux Bridge to Parks.

Also look for a Towns of the Teche poster “which is kind of cool,” said Holland. “It has symbols for the different towns on the Teche and has the cultural write-ups of the symbols that represent those towns.”

For example, Breaux Bridge is the crawfish; St. Martinville is the Evangeline Oak; and Arnaudville is Deux Bayous.

Paddling through COVID

The TECHE Project’s annual funder did paddle atop Bayou Teche during the COVID-19 pandemic the past two years, but stopped short of holding the terra firma activities because they’re smart like that.

“We missed the the Party in the Parc for two years,” Holland said. “But we did have the Paddle Parade both years because it was something that could be done outside and people could space.

“But you couldn’t do live music and serve alcohol and food for a couple of years,” she said, adding with much enthusiasm: “So we’re back in the parc.”

The pandemic was actually a boon to such outdoor activities.

A paddler sports a feathered hat as she got into the spirit of the Paddle Parade.

“Paddling took off during the pandemic. It was something people could do,” said Holland. “It’s relatively inexpensive to go out and buy a kayak and hit the water.

“It was good for the paddle culture,” she said. “I think RVs and paddling took off during the pandemic.”

Proceeds from the TECHE Project event go to building the Bayou Teche National Paddle Trail, which will provide access docks and other amenities for paddlers in the 15 towns along Bayou Teche.

Currently, 13 docks have been installed and there’s two more yet to do.

“One’s going go to Poche Bridge where the paddle starts off,” said Holland. “And the other one’s going in at Leonville.”

The organization has been in the dock-installation business some seven or eight years. When the remaining two are completed, one may wonder if Shake Your Trail Feather will continue.

“Hopefully,” Holland said. “The (Paddle) Parade has gained some momentum. So, yeah, I’d like to think that Shake Your Trail Feather is going to continue on and there’s always going to be amenities that we’re going need for the paddle trail.”

And these amenities would be kayak lockers, trash cans, benches, upkeep, etc.

“Even though we do turn them over to the towns for long-term ownership and maintenance, there’s always little ancillary things that the TECHE Project brings to the trailheads,” said Holland.

Paddle Parade particulars

Paddlers are asked to register before Saturday, October 22, 2022.

Tickets for either the shorter or longer paddle are the same price ($15 for adults and $10 for kids 12 and under). The day-of price will be $18 for adults and $12 for kids 12 and under. All tickets include a festival pin with this year’s bird, the Mississippi Kite.

There will be a pre-paddle shuttle ($5 cost at the bus) from each location. The shuttle bus leaves Lil’s on the Teche at 9 a.m. and Parc des Ponts at 9:15 a.m.

Please note that registration does not include kayak rental, lunch or shuttle. If you are interested in renting a boat with a life vest for the Paddle to the Party, contact Bayou Teche Experience, Pack and Paddle or The Backpacker.

The parade is limited to non-motorized watercraft.

TECHE Project

Overall, TECHE Project has been around since 2008 and has some 400 folks bent on making Bayou Teche a healthier waterway for the wild inhabitants in and around it, as well as for humans for fishing, kayaking, canoeing, boating, tubing and, yes, swimming.

These paddlers have left the Paddle Parade and are ready to check out the Party in the Parc.

As of 2021, 58 tons of trash and debris has been pulled from the Teche. So that, coupled with the docks, the rare National Paddle Trail designation, all put a smile on Holland’s face.

“I’m really amazed at what we’ve done,” said Holland. “We’re nearing completion on a first class paddle trail and we’ve got the only National Water Trail in the State of Louisiana and I think there’s only 33 nationwide.

“So that’s quite an accomplishment,” she said. “And we’ve kind of changed the mindset of people living and playing up and down the Teche to have more pride in Bayou Teche.

“The bayou’s much cleaner now than it used to be,” Holland said. “Now when we go out to collect garbage, there’s not that much out there.”

Twilight on the Teche

A TECHE Project membership party, Twilight on the Teche, is scheduled for November 5, 2022, 6-9 p.m., in New Iberia. Food, beer and wine are on tap.

The event is free for current members and $25 for those who want to join the nonprofit or renew their membership. Live music by David Greely and Chas Justus.

A pre-party Sunset Cocktail Cruise, 5-6 p.m., is $12. Tickets are limited and available on Eventbrite. RSVP: techeproject@gmail.com or 337.706.2323.

Jourdan Thibodeaux: A Cajun original brings his songs and energy to the Festivals Acadiens et Creoles stage

Jourdan Thibodeaux

DOMINICK CROSS/story&photos

LAFAYETTE, LA. — Jourdan Thibodeaux may or may not be an influencer, but he’s definitely an original.

You can hear his originality in Boue, Boucane et Bouteilles (Mud, Smoke and Bottles), his previous release on Valcour Records and in the upcoming, the tentatively named L’Âme, L’Amour et La Mort (Soul, Love and Death).

And you can see and hear, as well as dance to songs from both recordings Saturday, October 15, 2022, 6:15 p.m., at Festivals Acadiens et Creoles when Jourdan Thibodeaux et les Rôdailleurs take to Scène Ma Louisiane in Girard Park.

The Cajun and Creole cultural celebration gets going 10:30 a.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. Sunday with a French Mass. See schedule here.

The festival, with Cajun and Creole music, food, arts and crafts, jams runs through Sunday. The fall version returns the event to its original scheduled time and date on the calendar after an absence of two consecutive years, courtesy of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A spring version of Festivals Acadiens et Creoles was held earlier this year under remarkably similar weather.

Thibodeaux said festival-goers can expect the complete song list from Soul, Love and Death and other songs, too.

“It’s all original music. We’re doing all the one that’s on the new album,” Thibodeaux said. “So we’re kinda going to focus on a lot of that and then some of the other ones from the last one.”

A street date for the release is in a couple of months.

“We’re just about finished with the new album,” he said. “The goal was to have it out for festival, but schedules didn’t allow us to get it out that quick.”

Thibodeaux said if there’s a theme to the new release it’s “Songs about my life. So, it touches base on a bunch of different things: upsides of love, downsides of love.

It’s got a track from when Thibodeaux was diagnosed with cancer of the larynx when the 30-something was 21, and another song “that kind of talks about the future and after we dead,” he said. “That focuses on what comes after us. What we leave behind.

Jourdan Thibodeaux et les Rôdailleurs: Joel Savoy, guitar; Adam Cormier, drums; Jourdan Thibodeaux, fiddle; Cedric Watson, accordion; Alan Lafleur, bass.

“Not necessarily me personally, but us as a people what we’re leaving behind,” he paused. “I guess me, personally, to a degree.”

Thibodeaux then waxes philosophically.

“I don’t know, have we done anything impactful that’s actually going to matter,” said Thibodeaux. “Everything we do matters, you can look at the butterfly effect. You know what I mean? Not in terms of any type of legacy type thing, but in terms of how did I contribute to society as a whole.”

From all outward implications, Thibodeaux has been impactful regarding the Cajun culture, from literally singing its praises at home and on tour, to trying to save the language with a healthy dose of humor to get it across on social media.

The musician has produced and stars in video vignettes in Cajun French with English subtitles, entitled Louisiana French du jour.

“People kept asking me all the time how could they learn French. A lot of people that say they’re interested, they want to learn, you know, ‘I want to speak the language. My grandpa spoke, my mama and daddy spoke, whatever, and I’d really like to learn,’” said Thibodeaux.

“I kept getting on different resources, but then I was like I should come up with something that can kind of engage people,” he said. “I feel like a lot of people try, but it takes a lot of will power to sit down and try and learn something in a school-type setting, even if it’s just yourself.

“Just the delivery of the content is normally very, I don’t know, it’s school-like,” Thibodeaux said, adding he wanted to do “something that can be a little more engaging, a little more attentive but still keep the focus on the task at hand.

“Here’s something that you can look at, you can try and learn, enjoy without feeling like you’re working,” he said.

Thibodeaux has posted 15-20 entertaining and informative videos.

“If you just get it back in front of p people and let people know this is something you can do, something you can try,” he said. “With the old people…just talk your language. There’s so many old people that don’t because they hesitant, they weren’t really looked upon in the best light for a long time.

“And then with the young people, I find they’re hesitant because they’re scared of doing it wrong, or scared of whatever,” said Thibodeaux. “And it’s like, just take that pressure off and let it be something fun, honest and real.”

This approach to the Cajun language, and even the music is intended to keep the culture alive. And there’s something else, too.

“Pass it on to your kids. Make people realize if you get enough kids going, you can reconstruct the same way they deconstructed us,” Thibodeaux said. “They didn’t go after adults that were doing one thing and say, ‘Hey, do it differently.’

“They went to a bunch of kids and said, ‘Hey, don’t do this anymore.’ So if you go and approach your own children and say, ‘Hey, live like this.’ Then they will and that will be the thing that takes form,” he said. “If you can just introduce them to the language, introduce them to the music, to the food, to the everything, then as they grow, that’s their life they identify with,” he said. “And it’s them who’s going to be the progeny.”

Thibodeaux said it wasn’t until he began touring that he saw exactly what South Central Louisiana has and how it differs from the rest of the country.

“Until I started traveling, I would have never realized how different it really is,” he said. “And then once you get out and see everything else it’s like there’s a lot of places that have a lot to offer and they’re really cool and I love them, I love going there.

“But you’re always so ready to come home.”

Jourdan Thibodeaux and Cedric Watson

Thibodeaux has performed publicly for 10-11 years, but “I grew up playing music at the house,” he said.

“I would sing the old songs with my grandma – the old French music – I learned a lot of that growing up. And then my grandpa from the other side, we’d sing songs.”

His first instrument was the drums (“So I’d play anything anyone was willing to play”) before he moved on to fiddle.

“I had one neighbor for a while who wanted to play accordion, we were 6th, 7th, 8th grade,” Thibodeaux said. “So he’d try and play the accordion and I’d try to play the drums. We were pretty much just making a racket in the barn, but we were trying.”

Fast-forward to today and you can’t miss the amount of energy when the band hits the stage. And there’s a good reason why this is so.

“It’s probably because it’s just honest. It’s really easy to play a song and get in a song when you feel it honestly,” said Thibodeaux. “When I start playing — these are all stories from my life — this is my real life that I’m sitting here talking about.

“So to feel that and to engage with that is really easy because it’s my feelings,” he said. “And then on top of that, the privilege of playing with these tremendous musicians that I have on stage with me, that they can hear what I hear in my head.”

And those musicians are Joel Savoy, guitar; Cedric Watson, accordion/fiddle; Alan LaFleur, bass; Adam Cormier, drums.

Thibodeaux expounded on “…they can hear what I hear in my head,” a/k/a how he writes songs.

“I don’t know music like everybody else. I don’t know what notes I’m playing, I don’t know all these chord structures and all this stuff they talk about, it means nothing to me,” said Thibodeaux. “So all I can do is sit and hum them a part, or tell them I think it sounds like this. And they just understand and they can play it in such a way and add their own touch to it to create so much.

“It’s really an exciting feeling to hear something in your head that doesn’t exist and then have world class guys turn around and be able to play it back at you in a way that better than you can even imagine.

“It gets you pumped up pretty quick,” he said.

Jourdan Thibodeaux high-stepping.

In a festival or live setting, having world class musicians with you on stage is one thing. An appreciative audience is another and just as important.

“When you get on stage, you’ve got the guys playing, you’ve got the energy of the crowd. The crowd completely changes how you perform,” said Thibodeaux. “When you can see the people into it, the people feel it, that’s a feeling you can’t even put into words.

“I know everybody who plays can relate to it, everybody can always see it, but there’s no way to explain what that does to you as a person to know you’re bringing these people happiness, they’re having a good time.

“Or even if it’s a sad song, you can see that they feeling it,” he said. “You’re communicating in a whole different way and it’s wildly powerful.”

No one knows what the future holds for the Cajun cultures, but in the right here/right now, Thibodeaux will be doing his part.

“As long I’m alive, it’s going to keep going. Ain’t no doubt about that,” he said. “As far as after us, i’m seeing a lot of real talented guys coming up.

“Incredible musicians,” said Thibodeaux. “There’s a handful of them we go out and watch and they’re really, really impressive, the young guys. And that definitely gives me a lot of hope.”

That talent and hope can be found in the likes of Cameron Fontenot, Donovan Bourqe and Seth Spell.

“They get up there and they really killing it,” Thibodeaux said.