A time to revel in the cool music of Mexico’s Hot Lands

Paul Anastasio & Tina Pilione channel the late Juan Reynoso and his music, Friday, December 8, at the Whirlybird

Paul Anastasio and Tina Pilione /DCross photos

By Dominick Cross

For a long brief time last century, I lived in Houston for nine months.

It was my second time stalled in the cemented monstrosity of cloverleaf and high-arching interstate highways, Texas-tall buildings, crawling strip malls, and, on every suburban corner, gas stations with parasitic fast-food nubs attached.

And not last nor least, there’s also the 3.5 million people spread thick everywhere by a giant rolling pin half the size of Florida’s panhandle.

Everything about big cities fence me in. Not a big fan. And that’s why God made AM radio and kept it alive today: Sanity. Now.

I can’t recall the call letters/numbers of the Houston radio stations I’d tuned into in the early 1990s, but I’d already learned that AM is a good way to get the hyper-local flavor of an area — like local/ethnic music and food — if you’re passing through. (Local radio stations in South Louisiana not included.)

Enter Mexican music on the radio. Houston, we don’t have a problem after all.
I’ve always been a fan of roots and rootsy music, or most any genre stripped down to its unplugged basics, so it was easy to get into Norteno, polka, Tejano, Banda, Mariachi and other styles.

But when I heard a fiddle crying, a guitar nodding in agreement while another gently kept pace, I was especially taken. I can’t say for sure it was Juan Reynoso I’d heard, but it was the Tierra Caliente style.

Still last century but a couple of years later, I’d described the Mexican music to Christine Balfa and Dirk Powell, of Cajun band Balfa Toujours.

They knew. In due time, they gave me a Juan Reynoso cassette

Fast-forward to today (early December 2023) and you’ll have Reynoso aficionados, Paul Anastasio and Tina Pilione, performing Tierra Calinte music, Friday, December 8, 2023, 7 p.m., at the still a funky, under-the-radar venue, The Whirlybird. Tix $10. Go HERE for more info.

Here’s a bio bit on Reynoso from Smithsonian Folkways Recordings: Juan Reynoso Portillo (1912–2007) was a self-taught folk violinist from the Tierra Caliente (Hot Land) region of Mexico. He made his first recordings in the 1940s, gradually gaining notice throughout Mexico. In the 1990s, his recordings began to appear in the United States, which eventually led to an appearance at the Festival of American Fiddle Tunes in 1997. He continued to play at the festival for eight consecutive years.

Anastasio first heard Reynoso at a Fiddle Tunes workshop in 1996 where he himself taught fiddle.

“And it’s almost as if what Juan was playing was, like, the edges of a puzzle piece that fit into all those other styles. I don’t know how else to put it.”

Paul Anastasio

When Anastasio inquired about the music, he was told the same story Reynoso had heard himself at home: ‘It’s an old music that’s going out of style and not too many people play it.’

A mission was born at those words.

Anastasio was determined to help save the traditional music of the Tierra Caliente. And to do so, he immersed himself in the music, taking lessons from the master and his contemporaries.

“I went to the festival and then I stayed for a week after and I started setting up the lessons,” Anastasio said. A bilingual festival-goer handled those issues.

“He probably said something to Juan like, ‘This gringo doesn’t speak any Spanish. He really wants to learn. Can we do lessons?’”

A week of lessons would follow on Reynoso’s turf and Anastasio returned to the States. He then went back to Mexico for seven more weeks of lessons and another lengthier lesson session was forthcoming: three months.

“That’s the longest trip I ever did to take lessons,” Anastasio said.

It was more than worth it. Something about Reynoso’s fiddle playing caught Anastasia’s ear and respect.

“Oh, my god. It’s so great,” said Anastasio. “It’s like it has some things in common with fiddle tunes, some things in common with old jazz—some syncopation and stuff like that. Like traditional jazz.

“It just kind of completed the picture for me,” he said. “It’s like, Oh, my God. All this stuff is put together into this regional style. I flipped.”

Anastasio said he “was into a whole bunch of different styles of music,” which would include bluegrass, old country music, Western Swing, swing and traditional jazz. Those styles can be heard on his resume that includes Asleep at the Wheel, Merle Haggard, Larry Gatlin, and Loretta Lynn.

“And it’s almost as if what Juan was playing was, like, the edges of a puzzle piece that fit into all those other styles,” he said. “I don’t know how else to put it.”

One may wonder if Anastasio has dropped all those other styles of music for Tierre Caliente sound.

“No, not really. This was another style that I was trying to get into my vocabulary,” said Anastasio. “In fact, I went and taught at a camp in the east and I was teaching alongside Buddy Spicher, the great country fiddler/Nashville sessions musician.

“He knew I was doing this Mexican music and he expressed a concern that everything that I play is going to be colored by that Mexican style.

“And I think he was relieved to find out I was still able to play swing, traditional jazz, Western swing as I played it before,” he said. “It’s just another tool in the tool box.”

These days and locally, Anastasio plays with Stop the Clock Cowboy Jazz band.

Paul Anastasio

“But I kept playing all the other stuff as well. It just kind of took over some years of my life to study it, transcribe it and play it,” he said.
Not only did Anastasio learn the Hot Lands music, he also found out Reynoso had some other ideas of his own.

“One of the things I learned from Juan Reynoso was he’d always wanted to be able to play the music in his repertoire with a violin trio,” said Anastasio. “He told me, ‘I’d heard radio and TV orchestras playing three-part harmonies. I’ve always thought if they can do it, why couldn’t we do it with our music?’”

So when Anastasio brought other musicians to Mexico to study the music, they ended up figuring out second parts, the harmony parts.

“And then, as we got more people down there to study, we started doing everything for trio,” he said, adding that Reynoso would play his part and Anastasio would write it down, “best I could. At first, it was just by hand on music manuscript. And then as technology advanced, I was able to do it with the Finale.”

And one of those musicians was Tina Pilione.

Anastasio said when Pilione heard Reynoso’s the music, “she flipped out.” He gave her a recording of his lessons with Juan and other fiddlers he studied with, as well as commercial recordings. “She just liked it. She was attracted to it just as I was.”

Ecos de la Tierra Caliente

“I never did really intend to compose anything new at all,” said Anastasio. “But it just sort of happened.”

And once it did, with Anastasio on fiddle, Elena DeLisle on guitar, and Juan Manuel Barco on bajo sexto, the trio released “Ecos de la Tierra Caliente” (Echoes of the Hot Eartj) New Works in the Styles of Mexico’s Hot Lands in 2021.

Anastasio’s original tunes on the CD, recorded at Ed Littlefield Jr.’s Sage Arts Recording Studio an hour north of Seattle, Washington, came about nearly accidentally.

“When I was studying with Juan, I really didn’t mean to start composing new stuff, new works,” he said. “But I’d been practicing and I’d hear some little lick and I’d say, well, that doesn’t sound like anything that Juan played. Or anything any of the other violinists I studied with played.”

With that, Anastasio began to expand on the songs.

“So I flushed it out and before you know it, I had maybe 60 tunes,” said Anastasio. “When an idea came to me, it was like what Mexican genre is this closest to because Juan and those guys played about a dozen genres.”

They played 6/8 dance music, marches, minuets, waltzes, tangos, boleros, swing, fox trots and other styles.

“The fox trot was a big American influence deep down across the border,” Anastasio said.

Anastasio was going for “a distinctive Tierra Caliente flavor” he said. “That’s what I was trying to capture in the original pieces I wrote.”

To accompany, if not accomplish said “flavor,” Anastasio had in mind a certain way to record the session.

“I didn’t want us to record in separate rooms with headphones. I’d rather have it be more of a live feel, so we actually just sat around some microphones in one room with no headphones and played,” Anastasio said. “How do you play together if you’re in separate rooms?

“It’s a live music thing. That’s the deal. That’s how it’s performed, live. So I said let’s record live as if we were doing a performance, playing for a dance, whatever.”

The recording was done in a few days and when Anastasio worked on the mix, it was discovered that DeLise’s guitar needed a boost so they went “back in and remixed everything” to get it right.

Anastasio, who wrote the liner notes, again went back and recorded harmony parts for most to the recorded songs.

“Then I decided not to use it. I said we’re going to put it out with just a single violin part,” he said. “If you start doing something with three violins and harmony, that’s going to have a great big sound and then the next tune on the CD, it can’t help but sound thin after three violins.”

The songs on ‘Hot Lands’ were named after people Anastasio knows, including his wife, Claudia (“Flor de mi vida”), Reynoso, (“Juan el gauche”), other musicians and relatives.

“I was just trying to make it kind of personal,” said Anastasio.

While Barco plays bajo sexto on the recording, it’s generally not found where Anastasio found the music.

“The bajo sexto is almost never heard down in Tierre Caliente,” said Anastasio. “But I like the sound and I like the blend with the guitar. So I basically talked (Barco) into playing with me on the record.”

Both musicians on the recording have played some Mexican music with Anastasio at one time or another.

“And it seemed like a good little trio,” he said. “I’d known them before we went in the studio to do the recording. They’re just good strong players and they like the music. And they like the music.

“We went in and just cut it,” said Anastasio. “Cut it live.”

The CD project was funded by 4Culture, the Washington State Arts Commission. Ed Littlefield Jr. provided use of his Sage Arts Recording Studio with Erick Jaskowiak and Jordan Cunningham as recording engineers. Claudia Anastasio, CD graphics.

Medicine Show returns for 16th event; DeWitt, set to retire from Tommy Comeaux Chair, takes a look back at program

by DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE, LA — When Tommy Comeaux died tragically in November 1997, the music community rallied around the fallen musician and pathologist and sought a way to honor his life.

While it resulted in the Dr. Tommy Comeaux Endowed Chair in Traditional Music at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, funds were needed to make it so.

And, as tradition has it here, the effort to raise funds was centered around music, which was done with annual Medicine Shows. It was the right thing to do for many reasons, but especially because Comeaux, a renowned multi-instrumentalist, had played with BeauSoleil, Basin Brothers, Coteau, the Clickin’ Chickens and others.

Come Friday, April 22, 2022, 7 p.m., the 16th in a series of these evenings is set for Angelle Hall, St. Mary Boulevard and McKinley Street, on the UL campus.

Opening the show will student bands, the Angelle Aces (Cajun), Ragin’ Steppers (zydeco), Saint Street Songsters (string band), Ragin’ & Blues Band (R&B), and Vermilion Express (bluegrass).

Instructors, including Chad Huval, Blake Miller, Megan Constantin, Chas Justus, Gina Forsyth, and Lee Allen Zeno, with special guest Jimmy Breaux on drums, will also be on hand.

General admission to Medicine Show 2022 is $10.00 (free with UL I.D.); and $25.00, which includes admission to a post-show reception honoring the performers, as well as Mark DeWitt, Professor of Music, who was chosen for the inaugural position a dozen years ago and who is retiring this year. Advance tickets available here.

“I did the best I could to move slowly, at first, to get the lay of the land and to see where the demand was and where the low hanging fruit were in terms of what students wanted and what resources we had in the community which turns out we had a lot,” said DeWitt, who relocated from California to Louisiana for the position.

“We were going to do more than Cajun and Creole music all along. Although I feel strongly that that needs to be the core of the program.”

Mark DeWitt, Professor of Music,
Dr. Tommy Comeaux Endowed Chair in Traditional Music

The community resources were abundant and skilled and anxious to get to work and they all figured out the course together.

“The amount of musicians in the community who are so good at what they do and also interested in working in a university environment even if they had never done so before,” he said. “Some of them who hadn’t even gone to college themselves. It was cool.

“We kind of learned as we went. We learned things like teaching fiddle and accordion at one of those summer camps, which is like a one-week camp — as opposed to doing it for 15 weeks — it’s a whole different thing.

“There’s just more time to teach things. You can do it in a different order and do it in a different way,” he said. “So we learned some of that stuff together.”

The first course was Cajun music, something DeWitt was familiar with.

“So I started with Cajun music because that was my interest when I came here, and it also seemed like an obvious thing to start with,” said DeWitt. “And then we also found out there’s also student interest in other types of music too.”

“So we we added bluegrass and that was real popular for a while,” he said. “One of the things I also learned was that the students like something that’s new. So they go for the new thing and then it’s not so new anymore and then you have to do a little more persuading.

After Cajun music came bluegrass “and then we added zydeco band and then some blues and it just kind of grew over time. And now it’s all I can keep up with, it’s about as much a one person can do,” said DeWitt. “So I feel like it’s a good time to hand it over to the next person, whoever that turns out to be. I’ll do my best to share with them tips or secrets or things to remember.”

“We were going to do more than Cajun and Creole music all along,” he said. “Although I feel strongly that that needs to be the core of the program.”

While it was a new program at UL, DeWitt knew it was no secret how the area’s traditional music had kept going all these years and he responded accordingly.

“I knew pretty well we weren’t going to lead with music theory,” he said. “People learn music by ear, right? They learn by hanging out with other people and jam sessions are a relatively recent thing in Cajun music, but it’s still a way for folks to get some reps and get the music in their ear which is really important.

“I knew that going in that music theory was something to teach second, not first,” he said, adding, “or second or third.”

“We have a few traditional music majors, but it hasn’t been as popular a major as I would’ve liked. But then there’s always hope for the future on that,” said DeWitt. “Nonetheless, we’ve had a few and I had taught them a music theory class that was kind of tailored toward traditional music as part of their major.

“And they also got to learn how to read music a little bit in the same classes that the music business majors take, keyboard musicianship classes and so they get exposed to it, but it’s not like a prerequisite coming in. It’s not like they’re getting a sight reading test and they’re auditioning.”

DeWitt returns to California in June and he’s grateful for the opportunity the Comeaux Chair afforded him and all that came with living in South Louisiana.

“I certainly got to meet a lot of great musicians and work with them. Some of those were students, too,” DeWitt said. “But, certainly, the faculty we had and just the chance to actually live here in the middle of all this great music and kind of experience how it all fits together.”

DeWitt, an ethnomusicologist, paused, then continued.

“I’m not sure I can put it into words, even, how the cultural environment that nurtures the whole musical scene here is really interesting to be a part of and try to understand,” he said. “I’m still not sure I could really explain it, but I’m a lot closer than if I never lived here.”

Good deed, hold the punishment; fundraising project nets Grammy nomination for Sweet Cecilia

From a Festivals Acadiens et Creoles, from left, Laura Berard Huval, Callie Guidry, Maegan Berard Rankin, and Al Berard/D.Cross photo

By DOMINICK CROSS

A cool thing about Sweet Cecilia’s 2020 Grammy nomination for their album, “A Tribute to Al Berard,” is that it has all the earmarks of good karma if only for its good intentions from the outset.

And that’s to say that all proceeds from its sales go the Al Berard Memorial Music Fund at Community Foundation of Acadiana.

“It was never about money, obviously,” said Laura Berard Huval, one of three women, who, with her sister Maegan Berard Rankin and their cousin, Callie Guidry, make up Sweet Cecilia. “It was just about how we can help the community, how we can honor dad, include some of his past Basin Brother members to be on the album.

“It was really like healing for us,” she said of the album of her late father’s songs.

Al “Pyook” Berard, who died unexpectedly at age 54 on February 26, 2014, was himself nominated for a Grammy in 1990 with the Basin Brothers in the Best Folk Album category. Berard, fiddler extraordinaire and master of the guitar and mandolin, and mentor to countless folks, was also known for his passion for all things Cajun and Creole.

“Our goal was to never do anything except to honor dad’s legacy and his great music and the songs that he wrote,” Huval said. “So, how awesome.”

“We’ve all been so emotional. We did it all for daddy, just like Laura said,” Rankin said. “It’s a really pure feeling. It’s the most amazing feeling in the world that we can honor his legacy.”

The Al Berard Memorial Music Fund at Community Foundation of Acadiana promotes Acadiana’s musical culture by providing instruments, master teachers, and music scholarships to students of all ages.

In addition, the Threadhead Cultural Foundation in New Orleans, helped fund the project. 

The Grammy nomination on November 24, 2020, in the Best Regional Roots category, came as a surprise to the band.

Laura Berard Huval/D.Cross photo

“Well, I’ll be honest, I did not think we had a shot,” said Huval. “We were up against people that had been nominated before; big names in Cajun and zydeco music. We just thought, ‘Let’s just submit it and, you know, we’ll see what happens.’

“I can say that I was genuinely shocked that we got the nomination. And I think a lot of people were,” said Huval. “It was so unexpected.”

Rankin said the day the nominations were to be announced, “I forgot about it. Laura called like 10 minutes before they were going to announce our category.

“My little baby’s running around and I’m, ‘Oh, let me put the computer on,’” Rankin said. “It was so funny. In the back of my head, the whole scene. Look at this, you know, a mama. Us being mamas like that and just really, I don’t know,” she laughed. “We’re not rock stars. It was just funny. I was still in my gown at 11 a.m. with my baby and I just found out we got nominated for a Grammy Award.”

Sweet Cecilia, a country, rock, folk and Cajun-influenced trio, formed in 2011 and released their first recording, a self-titled CD, in 2015. Three more have followed, including “Sweet Christmas” where “Jingle Bells” will never be the same — and that’s not a bad thing, either.

All the women are vocalists and their three-part harmonies are not to be missed. Or, as music writer Dan Willging penned in OffBeat wrote in his 2017 review of “Sing Me A Story”: “…Sweet Cecilia’s collective, often breathtaking vocals that are really what’s on tap, sometimes with wall-pinning harmonies and other times with swirling, lush background vocals that submerge you into momentary oblivion.”

Huval plays mandolin and acoustic guitar; Rankin plays electric and acoustic guitars and bass; Guidry is on drums and percussion.

Al Berard/D.Cross photo

Lafayette’s two-time Grammy winner in the Contemporary Christian Music Album category, Lauren Daigle, made the announcement, much to Huval’s pleasure.

“Look. I’m obsessed with with Lauren Daigle, okay? So she’s the one who announced it so it was even extra special,” said Huval.

Three songs from the Basin Brothers’ Grammy nominated album, “Let’s Get Cajun,” are on ‘Tribute.’

“It’s so cool,” said Huval. “Like wow.”

The process of going through Berard’s vast genre-jumping repertoire and picking songs for ‘Tribute’ wasn’t an easy task.

“It was hard to choose songs,” said Guidry. “There were a few that were attempted, but, some of them didn’t quite work out. But what came out was a masterpiece, if you ask me.”

Huval said the chosen songs were recorded and they found some worked better than others.

“Eventually, it just all ended up to where it was all Cajun songs,” said Huval.

Rankin said her father’s guitar album, “his masterpiece guitar album, he had some songs on there that we wanted to try to play. One song is called, ‘Count on Me.’

“I had this idea that I wanted to play it on piano and have it sung like an acoustic Lady Gaga style,” said Rankin. “That’s how it started off. He had so many beautiful songs, but exactly like Laura said, the best ones ended up being all Cajun.”

“That was really important to us growing up,” Huval said. “Some people may not know that about us, but Cajun music fed us. Literally. I mean, my dad toured, he played Cajun music his whole life. So, I think it honors that as well.

“That’s who we are. We may not play Cajun music all the time, but it’s who we are. It’s in our blood,” she said. “And I think it was just daddy, definitely his spirit, guided all those choices that we made.”

The project began in 2018 and there was no question that Berard’s studio at his home in Cecilia would be ground zero.

“I was still in my gown at 11 a.m. with my baby and I just found out we got nominated for a Grammy Award.”

Maegan Berard Rankin

“We definitely wanted to embody his spirit there,” said Huval. “And, also, logistically, because our kids, you know, our moms could help us. It was like the whole family helping out during the recording.”

And there was some really big help in having Tony Daigle, six-time Grammy Award winning recording engineer (with some 22 nominations), on the boards. His wins came in the form of three B.B. King recordings, and one each for BeauSoleil, Jo-El Sonnier and John Cleary.

Daigle has worked with the band over the years as well as Berard.

“Tony Daigle,” said Huval. “God bless Tony. He’s the bomb. He’s the best.”

The feelings are mutual.

“They’re amazing. The music inside their bones is just immense,” Daigle said of Sweet Cecilia. “They’re humble and they treat their music with a lot of respect. And I just love that about them.”

Daigle brought his gear to Al Berard Recording Studio because the late musician’s equipment wasn’t up to date and pretty much obsolete. The bulk of the album was recorded there.

“It was a great thing recording at Al’s studio,” Daigle said. “At first it seemed like a bit of overkill to haul all that stuff over there. But when we were there, we all realized, like, wow, this is just…,” he paused. “It brought our spirits up, man. It made us think about the cause, what we were doing.

“It was great,” he said, adding that rice and gravy by Karleen Berard “was the best rice and gravy ever, man.”

“Without him, this would not have happened,” Huval said of the album, the nomination. “And his saying ‘yes’ to this project. He was in it just like we were. His heart and soul was in it and we are blessed to have him in our lives. He’s amazing.”

Maegan Berard Rankin/D.Cross photo

The rest of the recording was at Electric Comoland (or Comoland), Daigle’s studio in Lafayette, La. It is named after the late multi-instrumentalist and physician, Tommy Comeaux, who was accidentally killed riding his bike in 1997.

“Right before Tommy died, we were getting ready to probably do a studio together,” said Daigle. “We’d become partners in the studio world and were thinking about it.

“Man, about two weeks before died, we were sitting around: ‘What are we going to name it?’” Daigle said. “And he made a joke about naming it Electric Comoland, like, you know, Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland (Hendrix’s last studio album in his lifetime).

“And we left it at that,” he said. “And then he got killed.”

Daigle bought some of Comeaux’s studio gear from his father, “and from that point on, I said, ‘Well, I’m just going to name it Electric Comoland.”

At first, Daigle tangled with some mixed feelings about the name because of its similarity to Hendrix’s Electric Lady Studio.

“But,” said Daigle. “I said, ‘Aw, screw it. This is for Tommy.’ That’s going to be how I’ll remember Tommy and how the spirit stays with me through all this.”

Surprisingly, or not, Daigle is up for two Grammy Awards as he also mixed and mastered Cameron Dupuy’s self-titled nominated album which is also in Regional Roots. It was recorded by Brian Brignac (a drummer for Sonny Landreth) in Gonzales.

“My involvement was sort of 50 percent there, maybe a little less,” Daigle said. “Cameron’s the real deal. Ain’t no doubt, man. He’s a young prodigy on accordion. The band is stunning, it’s just a great band.”

But with Sweet Cecilia, “It was absolutely fully all done by me,” he said. “It’s kind of my baby.”

Daigle said he felt good about Sweet Cecilia’s ‘Tribute’ nomination, “because I thought that record is worthy of a nomination,” he said, adding that sometimes name recognition alone can net a win.

“A few months ago, I dreamed about it when I was awake,” said Daigle. “When the Grammys start approaching, you start thinking, ‘What do I have that might have a chance?’ And that record was one of them.

“In my opinion, that’s the perfect record for the Regional Roots category,” he said. “It’s just a perfect record. It’s all original songs, it’s got a special value about it in terms what it’s all about. And it’s pretty cool.”

Daigle said he put some time into “Saute La Barriere” (“Jump the Fence”) and he did so “with absolute total passion because I love it so much.”

The original version of the song “is a basic Cajun kind of tune,” said Daigle. “We changed it to more of a kind of hard blues groove.” He then brought Berard’s original into the process “and I made it fit our new groove. So you’re hearing Al’s original recording inside of there, but it’s totally not the same groove as the original.

“Then we expanded on it, we built onto it and made it just a completely different element, but still having Al in there playing fiddle,” he said.

And the later, Usie’s drum work on “Jump the Fence” was recorded at Dockside Studio in Maurice.

In fact, “Saute La Barriere” (Jump the Fence) is Rankin’s favorite on the recording.

“We did some crazy stuff with it. I think it’s the most unique track on the record,” said Rankin.

Guidry agrees and adds another.

“I love ‘Saute.’ It’s rockin’,” said Guidry. “But I’ve always loved “Dans La Louisiane” because of the harmonies and because it’s so heartfelt.

Callie Guidry/D.Cross photo

“I can just feel him through that song; his love for his local community and the place he was born.”

Huval’s fave is “Fais Do Do Waltz.”

“That was recorded, originally, back in the mid-90s. My dad and Errol Verret did an album and my mom actually sang that song with him,” said Huval. “So it’s always been my favorite growing up; remembering that experience when they were recording it.

“And the song is beautiful. I mean…” she sighed. “It makes me happy to hear it and how we changed it.”

On “Sing Me a Song, Dad,” the trio is reunited with Berard.

“We sing with him. When I hear it, it just gets me every single time,” said Huval. “It’s like, wow, we get to sing with our dad again that way. It’s so special. It’s amazing.”

The 63rd Grammy Awards January 31, 2021, will probably be another event that falls victim to the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic and go virtual.

“Well, I’ll say this because I’m the oldest. I’m over 40 and I’m not mad,” said Guidry as her first cousins couldn’t quite suppress their laughter. “I’m not mad about not having to go buy a dress and look pretty and be presentable and wear heels.

“I’m not mad,” she said. “But, of course, I would love to go. But this is the circumstances and we’re fine with it either way.”

After regaining their composure, Huval and Rankin concurred.

In the Best Regional Roots Album category, Sweet Cecilia is joined by Cameron Dupuy and the Cajun Troubadours/“Cameron Dupuy and the Cajun Troubadours” and the New Orleans Nightcrawlers/“Atmosphere,” both out of New Orleans; Black Lodge Singers/“My Relatives ‘Niko Kowaiks” and Na Wai ‘Eha/“Lovely Sunrise.”

Guest musicians on Sweet Cecilia’s ‘Tribute’ include Huval’s husband, Adrian Huval, Kyle Hebert, Dwayne Brasseaux, Keith Blanchard, Karleen Berard, Laura Huval’s and Rankin’s mother; Gary Usie, Shane Guidry, Ronnie Eades, and James Spells.

Brasseaux and Blanchard were members of the Basin Brothers with Berard. They appear on “La Valse de Cecilia” (“Cecilia Waltz”).

“It really was a family affair,” Huval said. “It was beautiful. There was no pressure to do anything except this was going to be a fundraiser for the Al Berard Foundation.”

All three women are well aware of who put them on the music road and map.

“We have Al Berard to be thankful for. He put us together, really,” said Rankin. “We were his backing band for his guitar band. That’s how it started.”

“I have to say, Pyook took a big chance on me,” Guidry said. “I had a drum set in my room, but I would just play for fun. I never played in front of another human being. And he put me on stage with him as the drummer of his guitar band.

“So that’s how much faith he had in me. And that’s what I feel as a music teacher; I want my students to feel that I have that much faith in them,” Guidry continued. “Because that’s all it takes is somebody to believe in you and you can do amazing things.”

Huval added, “That’s exactly how daddy was,” she said. “So many people have said, ‘If it wasn’t for him, I wouldn’t be playing music.’”

“So that’s how much faith he had in me. And that’s what I feel as a music teacher; I want my students to feel that I have that much faith in them.”

Callie Guidry

Off the Record

Harp on

The Society for the Preservation and Advancement of the Harmonica, via live broadcast on Youtube recently, let it be known that Jerry Devillier, of Eunice, was selected by a panel of his peers as the recipient of 2020’s “Lifetime Achievement Award.”

SPAH is the largest international harmonica organization which features many of the greatest harmonica players worldwide.

It was part of the organizations award ceremony, August 11-15, that culminates its four days of teaching and live performances to large gatherings of people that usually attend the organization’s conference, held annually at a major city.

Devillier continues to be an ambassador for Cajun music and its culture on a worldwide platform.

Due to the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic it was performed on live stream.

Trust-worthy

The Louisiana Trust for Historic Preservation recently honored 10 new award recipients for their impactful efforts to save historic places, build pride and foster engagement in their communities.

Main Street Award – Houma Downtown Development Corporation, Houma
Education Award – Cooley House Foundation, Monroe
Leadership Award – Betty Reed, Lake Providence
Organizational Excellence Award – Morganza Cultural District, Morganza
Stewardship Award – Cameron Preservation Alliance, Sabine Pass Lighthouse Phase 1
Diverse Heritage Award – Gaynell Brady “Our Mammy’s,” New Orleans
Living Trades Award – Dale Pierrottie – Bousillage Specialist, Lafayette
Louisiana Heritage Media Award – Amy & Kelby Ouchley, Rocky Branch
Sue Turner Preservationist of the Year Award – George Marks (NUNU Arts & Cultural Collective), Arnaudville
Winnie Byrd Preservationist Extraordinaire Award – Chee Chee & Lazar “L.J.” Gielen, Crowley
New award categories for this year include Stewardship; Diverse Heritage; Living Trades; and LA Heritage Media Award. If you would like to nominate a person or organization for the 2021 Louisiana Preservation Awards, please contact info@LTHP.org.
For more information about the awards and winners, go here.

French Culture Film Grant winner

The recipient of the 2020 French Culture Film Grant is the narrative short film, “17 Year Locust.”
“17 Year Locust” is written by Trevor Navarre, directed by Logan LeBlanc and produced by Allison Bohl DeHart.

Now in its forth year, the French Culture Film Grant is a unique opportunity designed in partnership with lead sponsor TV5MONDE USA, America’s only 24/7 French language entertainment channel.

“17 Year Locust” synopsis: When a struggling immigrant takes a job as a caregiver to a dying woman, she shares with him a secret that casts a haunting shadow on the American life that he has desperately been pursuing.

#CreateLouisiana announced the award in July.


LFR online classes

Louisiana Folk Roots offers lessons for every skill level, including scratch/beginner, intermediate, and advanced on accordion and fiddle, as well as singing and guitar.
Pre-recorded video lessons with some of Cajun music’s best, Brazos HuvalChad HuvalMegan Brown Constantin, as well as Louisiana French lessons with Codofil-Agence des Affaires Francophones de Louisiane’s Maggie Perkins Justus.

All levels follow the same five songs:

“Le Moulin” by Adam Hebert https://youtu.be/CYpuHiZ-zTw
; “Amite Casse” by Horace Trahan https://youtu.be/JsWzzznjNb4
; “Mon Coeur Fait Mal” by Racine https://youtu.be/1QtXvR8XqX8; 
“I Don’t Hurt Anymore” by Nathan Abshire https://youtu.be/3dK7JmFl3Hc; 
“Jolie Fille” by The Touchet Family https://youtu.be/HNi8Ru96MHQ
There are also lyric sheets and vocabulary sheets, as well as resource guides in all of the appropriate lessons.

Look for more content in the coming months.

A suggested donation is $100 or less. For more info, go to www.lafolkroots.org.

‘American Longhair’ vinyl reissue

Dege Legg’s “Folk Songs of the American Longhair” is out on vinyl for its 10th anniversary.

From Brother Dege on Facebook: “Been a long, up & down, wild ass journey, my loves. Much thx to you for taking the ride with me. In many ways, it’s only just beginning. Keep fighting the good fight out there in whatever way it is you do it. Cheers.”
Go here for album.

As you know, “Too Old to Die Young” was featured in the Quentin Tarantino film, “Django Unchained.” But there’s more: “Frankly, every track on Brother Dege’s Folk Songs of the American Longhair CD could have been in the movie [Django Unchained]. It has a badass score sound to it. Almost every song could be a theme song. It’s like a greatest hits album. But this song ‘Too Old to Die Young’… it’s pretty damn badass. And it’s used in the movie in a pretty damn badass way, I’ve got to say.” – Quentin Tarantino

Renée Reed’s new deed

Renée Reed follows up her captivating debut single “Out Loud” with “Until Tomorrow,” an effortless, inspired union of the haunting folk music that she was raised on and a lilting, lost ’60s French-pop gem on the Keeled Scales label.

Renée is the daughter of musicians Lisa Kaye Trahan and Mitch Reed.

Language & cultural preservation

Although French is spoken less with each passing generation in south Louisiana, some are fighting to preserve the language and keep their traditions alive.

Check out the report from France 24’s Fanny Allard here.

Upcoming and recently released music that may well interest you:

July 1, 2020
Sean Ardoin: Came Thru Pullin’ (Zydekool)
Cameron Dupuy and the Cajun Troubadours: Cameron Dupuy and the Cajun Troubadours (Independent)
Beth Patterson & Hugh Morrision: Iron Roux (EP) (Dun Eistein)
Supercharmer: Magically Bodacious! (Independent)
Warren Storm with Herb Landry & the Serenaders: Live 1957  (Swamp Pop Records)

July 3, 2020
Bobby Mitchell: Try Rock And Roll (Jasmine)
subdudes: Lickskillet (Independent)

July 10, 2020
Johnette Downing and Dickie Knickerbocker: New Moon, Tunes for Little Folks (Independent)

July 13, 2020
Maceo Parker: Soul Food: Cooking With Maceo (featuring a large cast of New Orleans Musicians) (Funk Garage)

July 15, 2020
Monique Bornstein & James Andrews: Born in the Treme (BOOK)  (Independent)
Kidd Jordan: Last Trane to New Orleans (Independent)

July 17, 2020
Gregg Martinez: Mac Daddy Mojeaux (NOLA Blue Records)
Michot’s Melody Makers: Cosmic Cajuns from Saturn (Nouveau Electric Records)

July 24, 2020
Billie Davies: Whadeva (Independent)

August  1, 2020
New Orleans Johnnys: Outta Ya Mind Masters (Independent)

September, 2020
Chris Joseph: Life is a Ride: Overcoming Cancer in Unconventional Ways (BOOK) (Threadhead)
Ingrid Lucia: t.b.a. (Independent)

Fall 2020
Maggie Koerner: Images (Concord Records)

Release dates not yet announced
Big Chief Donald Harrison Jr.: The Eclectic Jazz Revolution of Unity (Independent)
Keith Burnstein’s Kettle Black: Things That Are Heavy Make Me Feel Light (Independent)
Little Maker: The Salty Seas We Used to Know (Independent)
Jeremy Davenport: t.b.a. (Basin Street)
Nicholas Payton with the Simphonieorchester, Basel: Black American Symphony (BMF)

Released in June 2020
Johnny Adams & Lee Dorsey: Johnny Adams Meets Lee Dorsey (Jasmine)
Jeff Albert: Unanimous Sources (Breakfast for Dinner Records)
Bad Moon Lander: Chinese Lanterns (Bubble Bath Records)
Jimmy Buffett: Life on the Flip Side (Mailboat Records)
Grayson Capps: South Front Street: A Retrospective 1997-2019 (Royal Potato Family)
Bobby Charles: Alligators, Sprockets & Bended Knees (Jasmine)
Dr. John: Ske Dat De Dat  (Limited reissue on vinyl) (Last Music Company)
John Lisi & Delta Funk: Retox (Rabadash Records)
Little Death: Little Death (Strange Daisy Records)
Wynton Marsalis: Black Codes (From the Underground) (Reissued from Sony Records) (Music on CD)
Mighty Brother: The Rabbit, The Owl (Independent)
New Orleans Jazz Vipers: Is There a Chance for Me (Independent)
Professor Longhair: The Bach of Rock (Sunset Blvd)
Some Antics: Some Antics (Independent)
The Write Brothers: Into the Sky (Threadhead Records)
Various Artist: Boppin’ by the Bayou: Feel So Good, Volume 22 (Ace)
Various Artist: Cry You One (Soundtrack) (ArtSpot)
Various Artists: Prison Music Project Sessions (featuring Ani DiFranco, Terence Higgins, Zoe Boekbinder, and more)(Righteous Babe Records)
Johnny Vidacovich: ’bout Time  (Independent)