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.

Celtic Bayou Festival

Because there’s more to celebrating St. Patrick’s Day than drinking green beer

Whiskey Bay Rovers perform Saturday, March 17, at the Celtic Bayou Festival

by Dominick Cross

LAFAYETTE, LA. — Just as Christmas is more than receiving gifts, and, likewise, Easter is not just about chocolate bunnies (hollow or solid), so, too, St. Patrick’s Day is way more than green beer and shamrocks.

And to bring the latter point home, there’s the Celtic Bayou Festival that begins Friday, March 17, 2023 — St. Patrick’s Day — and continues through Saturday, March 18, Downtown Lafayette, at The Hideaway on Lee, 407 Lee Avenue.

Celtic Bayou Festival’s mission “is to preserve and promote the Irish culture in Acadiana,” said Sheila Davoren, festival coordinator. “And expose the traditions of it to those who aren’t aware of how to authentically celebrate St. Patrick’s Day.”

The fest kicks off Friday, 6 p.m. with music at 6:30 by The Here and Now, Máirtín de Cógáin, and Dirk Powell, Caleb Clauder and Reeb Willms.

Music line-up for the Celtic Bayou Festival, Friday, March 17

Cover is $10 or a weekend (Friday-Saturday) special of $20. Keep an eye out for Jameson Irish Whiskey drink specials.

Come Saturday, March 18, do know that Lee Avenue will be blocked off from Vermilion to a block past Clinton.

“That’s where all the festivities are going to happen,” said Daveron. “In the old Don’s Seafood Restaurant parking lot we’re putting up a massive tent we’re calling The Guiness Main Stage tent.

“That’ where the main activities and music is going to happen,” she said. “We are going to have music at the Hideaway as well. We have a pub underneath the tent called the Bailey’s Pub.”

Unfortunately, the now famous Bailey’s Irish Pub facade won’t be seen due to the difficulty presented by a parking lot and not the ground.

Regardless, Saturday gets underway with the traditional Pub Crawl. Interested persons meet at the Bailey’s Pub in the big tent at 9 a.m.

The crawl begins at 9:30 a.m. Cost is $10.00 per person and includes discounted drink specials at designated pubs and a T-Shirt for the first 50 to sign-up. Price of drinks are not included in Pub Crawl admission price.

Following a toast or several, the troupe heads to participating establishments in Downtown Lafayette.

KLFY’s Gerald Gruenig will wear a kilt as the Grand Marshall of the festival. The Whiskey Bay Rovers and festival cofounder Tony Daveron will also participate in the crawl.

“So there’s lots of singing and merriment,” said Daveron. “And as Tony (Daveron) says, ’They’ll be having the Craic (Irish for fun/enjoyment/goodtimin’).”

An Irish Blessing, 11:45 a.m., marks the official opening of the festival at the Guinness Main Stage and by noon the music and fun begin on Guinness Main Stage, the Hideaway Celtic stage and the Hideaway Snug and goes until 10 p.m.

The Saturday lineup features Gaulway Ramblers, The Here and Now, Whiskey Bay Rovers, Avoca, Amis duTeche, Drew Landry, Elise Leavy, and The Birch Trees.

“We’re going to have three rotating areas of music,” Daveron said. “We have something for everyone. We’re family friendly.”

Admission Saturday is $15 per person, or a weekend (Friday-Saturday) special of $20; kids 7-12 are $5; 6 and under admitted free.

“We don’t want to travel on St. Patrick’s Day and we want to have fun in our backyard and we realized the only way to do that is start our own thing.”

Sheila Daveron

Along with the music and food vendors, one can expect a Guiness Cook-off, a Bailey’s Bake-off, Redhead, Freckle & Best Dressed competitions, the Tir Na Nog Children’s Tent, Irish dance workshop, a parade featuring the Baton Rouge Caledonian Pipe Band, and Celtic craft vendors.

The Whiskey/VIP Tent will have two Irish Whiskey Tasting events ($20 advance/$25 at door), and an Irish Language Class with Scott Miller which is open to the public.

The Children’s Museum of Acadiana sponsors the Children’s Tent and will include Celtic craft making, face painting, music and even Shamrock Bingo.

Elise Leavy performs Saturday, March 18 at Celtic Bayou Festival

“I think, for us, it’s generational. This is a culture we want the kids to be exposed to,” said Daveron. “We hope that they can keep the tradition alive. That’s a very big thing in the Irish culture.

“In fact, that is actually a motto for the Hibernians,” she said. “The Ancient Order of Hibernians, which is an Irish-American group, their motto is ‘Keep the Tradition Alive.’ And we want to do it in a very respectful way.”

Daveron said in addition to bringing kids to the fete, grandparents, too, are encouraged to attend.

“We encourage the grandparents to come out,” she said. “Sometimes, the grandparents are the ones who are from Ireland and they want their grandchildren to experience the Irish culture and in the correct way.”

Green beer or Lucky Charms cereal doesn’t exactly showcase what the Irish experience is about.

“Unfortunately, some people might have a festival and it’s not embodying the actual celebration of St. Patrick’s Day and the Irish culture,” said Daveron.

The Celtic Bayou Festival is an antidote to misconceived ideas about the Irish and it’s something Daveron takes seriously.

Daveron is a first-generation Irish-American woman whose father was from Ireland. Her mother, also Irish, is from the Bronx and her mother’s parents were from Ireland. And Daveron’s husband, Tony, is also from Ireland.

“So it’s important for us to pass on the culture to our kids,” said Shelia Daveron. “Our kids are very involved in the festival. They’ve been entertainers for the festival in the past with the Irish dancing.

“They’ve also played at the festival,” she said. “It’s important for Tony and I to continue this and pass this on.”

Daveron said her father was a Hibernian, New York Chapter.

“When I first moved down here, one of the things I did around St. Patrick’s Day was I went online and try to see if there was a chapter in Lafayette — and there was,” she said. “They actually help us do this festival.

“The Hibernians are very involved with this festival and I know that that makes my dad proud, although he’s not with us anymore,” Daveron continued. “I know that he would be very proud to hear that I have this close relationship with the Hibernians down here.”

The Gaulway Ramblers perform Saturday, March 18

Even with the help of Hibernians, volunteers are still needed.

“We have been getting people trickling in, but we’d love more volunteers, of course,” said Daveron. “Lafayette is such a festival environment. We have so many amazing festivals and people understand how important it is to have volunteers.”

The Celtic Bayou Festival came about seven years ago as one of those necessity is the mother of invention for Tony and Shelia Daveron, the couple behind the event.

“When Tony and I were first down here, people used ask us — everybody knew Tony as the Irish Guy (who also owns Irish Guy Landscaping) and he played Irish music and they knew I was an Irish dance teacher — and people would come up to us, ‘Hey, you’re Irish. What’s going on for St. Patrick’s Day?’

“And we were like, ‘Nothing.’ There’s absolutely nothing. If you want to see St. Patrick’s Day, let’s go to New Orleans or to the parade in Baton Rouge or Metairie. Metairie has a huge St. Patrick’s Day parade.’

“And so we would leave town, not because we wanted to, but also because we were getting gigs,” she said. “Tony was getting gigs in New Orleans and my dancers (Ryan School of Irish Dance) were getting gigs in Baton Rouge.

“So we were constantly drawn out of town for St. Patrick’s Day,” she said.

After a while, the couple’s respective schedules and traveling wore thin on a day they should be celebrating.

“We don’t want to travel on St. Patrick’s Day and we want to have fun in our backyard and we realized the only way to do that is start our own thing,” Sheila Daveron said. “It was a win-win for everybody. We were expanding the exposure of the culture and we were getting to celebrate in our backyard.”

Celtic Bayou Festival schedule for Saturday, March 18, 2023

Southern Screen Festival returns for 12th year with in-person/virtural opportunities to view films and docs

The Quiet Cajuns, a short documentary by Conni Castille about Acadian Usher Syndrome that afflicts many family trees with deaf/blind aunts, uncles and cousins.

from BHP Reports

LAFAYETTE, LA — Keep in mind a couple of don’t miss local documentaries when The 12th annual Southern Screen Festival will be presented in-person in Downtown Lafayette, Louisiana November 10-13, 2022.

Southern Screen gets underway Thursday, Nov. 10,: 630 p.m. at Acadiana Center for the Arts, 101 W. Vermilion St., with a Champagne + Oysters social.

On the screen is Band of Outsiders (narrative feature screening), a 1964 Jean-Luc Godard reimagined gangster film where two restless young men enlist the object of both of their fancies to help them commit a robbery—in her own home.

The Louisiana docs are The Quiet Cajuns and Roots of Fire.

Conni Castille’s, The Quiet Cajuns, debuted at the AcA in March of this year. The short doc is about two generations of Acadian Usher Syndrome, which has sprinkled many family trees with deaf/blind aunts, uncles and cousins. Cinematographers were Allison Bohl Dehart and Brian C. Miller.

Show times at Southern Screen are Saturday, Nov. 12, 2022, 12:35 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 13, 11:45 a.m. You’ll also have the option to stream online.

Castille’s previous docs are I Always Do My Collars First (2007), Raised on Rice and Gravy (2009), King Crawfish (2010);and T-Galop: A Louisiana Horse Story (2012).

Roots of Fire is summed up this way: The battle to revive a dying tradition comes to life through the young musicians of Southwest Louisiana in this powerful musical documentary. Amidst shuttered rural dance clubs and encroaching globalization, five Grammy award-winning artists lend their voices, examine the discrimination that almost erased their customs, and share the unique sounds created when the forces of fresh talent and deep history collide to fight for cultural survival.

Presented by CODOFIL (Council for the Development of French in Louisiana), ‘Fire’ is directed by Abby Berendt Lavoi and Jeremey Lavoi. Producers are Abby Berendt Lavoi, Jeremey Lavoi, Stephen Thorpe

Roots of Fire screens Saturday, Nov. 12, 7 p.m. and is available virtually, as well.

Highlights of Southern Screen include sessions with Franki Chan (IHEARTCOMIX) and entertainment lawyer, Steven Lowy.

Highlight screenings include Roadrunner: Triangle of Sadness, Fire of Love documentary, and local Louisiana and international short films.

You have options to view the films, in-person or virtually.

Herewith the Southern Screen Festival schedule:

Thursday, November 10
 
6:30PM-9:35PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Champagne + Oysters SocialBAND OF OUTSIDERS (narrative feature screening)In the 1964 Jean-Luc Godard reimagined gangster film, two restless young men enlist the object of both of their fancies to help them commit a robbery—in her own home.
 
Friday, November 11
 
6:00PM-7:00PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Short Fiction Writing Competition Winner Announcement + ReadingJoin us as we name and read the winner of this year’s short fiction story based on the theme of “Celebration and the South.”
 
6:00PM-7:00PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Film Festival Programming AMA w/Eric HatchBaltimore based film programmer, critic, and distributor Eric Hatch will be available to answer any questions you have about film festival programming.
 
7:05PM-8:35PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
BUTTERFLY IN THE SKY (documentary feature screening)
A delightful story of the beloved PBS children’s series “Reading Rainbow,” its iconic host LeVar Burton, and the challenges its creators faced in cultivating a love of reading through television.
 
8:30PM
Wild Child Wines
Friday Night Social w/ Boma Banga + Basher
Grab some drinks and enjoy the hypnotic reimagining of 1960s and 70s Congolese Rhumba with Boma Bango and the freak out dance, free avant-pop, post-jazz groove punk music of Basher.
 

Saturday, November 12
 
11:00PM-12:30PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Louisiana Storytellers Panel w/ Abraham Felix (Filmmaker), Cheryl Duvall (Storyteller), Drake LeBlanc (Filmmaker), Linda Midget (LPB/ Moderator)
From audio stories to commercial content to indie films, learn how these local creators celebrate community through their craft.
 
12:35PM-2:15PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Shorts Series 1-
 
11 – An unconfident hooper plays a pickup game to 11, and with the help of his best friend, he’ll showcase skills that he didn’t believe he had.
 
QUITTING TIME – City bus driver, Luis, end his shift—but fills his hours with an extra-curricular activity that keeps him on the move.
 
PATTERN – We all get lost in patterns. For some of us they can be totally consuming.
 
WILD CHILD – On a cold evening in the French Quarter, a woman’s quiet evening transforms into something wilder.
 
EVA WANTS TO STAY IN – After coming home exhausted from work, Eve is confronted by a literal pile of chores and her wife, Audrey, ready to hit the town.
 
JUDY’S THOUGHTS – In 1981, a vibrant mother recorded her thoughts on a cassette tape as her life was slipping away.
 
THE QUIET CAJUNS – The story of Acadian Usher Syndrome sprinkles many Cajun family trees with deafblind aunts, uncles and cousins.
 
Followed by filmmakers Q&A
 
2:20PM-3:50PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Know Your Film Rights w/ Steven Lowy
Set yourself up for success by learning how to navigate the legal landscape of rights that often arise when making a narrative or documentary film.
 
4:15PM-6:35PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
TRIANGLE OF SADNESS (narrative feature screening)
Social hierarchy is turned upside down when a celebrity model couple are invited on a luxury cruise for the uber-rich.
 
7:00PM-8:25PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
ROOTS OF FIRE (documentary feature screening)
Followed by filmmaker Q&A
The battle to revive dying traditions comes to life through the young musicians of Southwest Louisiana.
 
8:30PM
Hideaway Hall
ROOTS OF FIRE After Party w/Pine Leaf Boys and Special Guest
 

Sunday, November 13
 
11:00PM-12:40PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Shorts Series 2 –
 
THE NEGRO AND THE CHEESE KNIFE – Have you ever heard of a Black man with a cheese knife? Unfortunately for Antione, neither have the police.
 
DAY OF THE DEB – The looming apocalypse forces a broken-hearted man to come to terms with the women who left him.
 
CAFFEINATED – An ex-couple finds themselves facing the undead as they bide time in the shelter of a bar.
 
THE PERFECT DAY – Charlie Hoover, an aspiring ad man living in his van, eagerly answers a job posting to videotape Linda Lindell’s online life coaching series.
 
VIOLET BUTTERFIELD – A mortician beautician brings out the beauty in death that her clients could have had in life.
 
STRANGER THAN ROTTERDAM WITH SARAH DRIVER – The completion of Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise hinged on the smuggle of one of the world’s most controversial films.
 
A SHAMAN’S TALE – A powerful shaman embarks on a mystical journey from the deep jungle to the cosmos.
 
HOT MOTHER – At an idyllic hot springs retreat a vacationing mother and daughter bicker and avoid connection.
 
Followed by filmmakers Q&A
 
12:45PM-2:15PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Fixing it in Post: Digital Clean-Up on a Lo/No Budget Session w/ Dag Luther Gooch
Wanna know what you can and can’t do in post or how to avoid a bunchofexpensivepostwork? Compositing? CameraTracking? Rotoscoping? Get all of your questions answered and more.
 
2:30PM-4:06PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
THE INTEGRITY OF JOSEPH CHAMBERS (narrative feature screening)
A family man, hoping to prove his survivalist capabilities to his family, irresponsibly heads off into the woods to go deer hunting.
 
4:15PM-5:45PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
Storytelling in Marketing: Experiential and Digital Session w/ Franki Chan
Sit down with Crescendo! Host Greg Bresnitz to explore FRANKI CHAN’s IHEARTCOMIX, a Los Angeles based studio responsible for some of the most innovative modern marketing campaigns.
 
6:00PM-7:40PM
Acadiana Center for the Arts
FIRE OF LOVE (documentary feature screening)
Katia and Maurice Krafft loved two things — each other, and volcanoes.
 
7:45PM
Blue Moon Saloon
Wrap Party w/ Speech Fuzz + Bruisey Peets
That’s a wrap for Southern Screen 2022. Close out the festive weekend with drinks, food and twee pop, indie-rock band Speech Fuzz along with the dreamy sounds of Bruisey Peets.
 
For more information about Southern Screen 2022 please visit www.southernscreen.org.

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.

¡Vamos!

Latin Music Festival devuelve

Cimafunk headlines Latin culture fête featuring authentic cuisine, professional dancers, art and kids activities

Michelle Colón elaborates on songs, Malentina of the Lafayette Latin All-Stars, and the line-up

Michelle Colón fronts Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars, set to hit the Latin Music Festival stage at Parc International, 5:30 p.m., Saturday, October 1, 2022, in Lafayette, Louisiana.

by DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE, LA — Absent two years courtesy of COVID, the Latin Music Festival returns and is raring to go at Parc International in Downtown Lafayette, Saturday, October 1, 2022.

A new start time, 4 p.m., is in place along with Festival International de Louisiane as producer of the Asociación Cultural Latino Acadiana’s family-friendly event that showcases Latin food, dance, art, and, of course, music.

The line-up features Cuban funk superstar Cimafunk, Rumba Buena from New Orleans, Acadiana’s own Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars, as well as Latinos on the Rise, a variety show.

Tickets are $10 and are available here and at the gate. Kids 12 and under admitted at no charge.

Front and center of Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars is Michelle Colón, a native of Puerto Rico and Lafayette resident for 10 years. Colón is a singer, songwriter, and stage (most recently, “Closer,” at Cité des Arts in Downtown) and film actor.

“We’re performing some of our most established classics that people love to hear and they’re the ones we get the most requests and for good reason,” said Colón. “They’re the ones we like to play the most. So that’s a good thing.”

The band, together since February, is scheduled to take the stage at 5:30 p.m. with a set list that includes Latin classics by Eddie Palmieri, Celia Cruz, La Lupe, Willie Colón.

Other songs (viewable on YouTube) include Héctor Lavoe‘s “No Me Den Candela” at The Grouse Room, and Palmieri’s “Café,” performed at The Hideaway. Both venues are in Lafayette.

Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars

In addition, keep an ear out for a couple of originals by Colón, who has also penned songs in other genres.

“I am extremely happy we’ll be playing two original tunes,” she said. “I have plenty more, but to get a band to learn all the parts and rehearsing within enough time has been a challenge. So I decided we’d do two instead all of the rest of mine.

“I thought it was a good balance to do a few songs people have never heard before, combined with a lot of classics that they can sing along and dance to.”

The Lafayette Latin All-Stars (Editor’s note: The pedigree of these guys earns the All-Star moniker) are Josh LeBlanc (GIVERS, Serpentine Man), trumpet; Tim McFatter, saxophone; Paul Tassin, keyboard; Troy Breaux, drums; Eric Auclair, bass; Jeff George, guitar; and Evan Ceaser, congas.

Colón takes a personal interest in the songs she sings, even when they’re not her own.

“I’ve always felt that if I’m singing it, I want it to be my story,” she said. “Even the songs that I choose to cover, actually, I still think, ‘Would this be something I feel — it’s my story.’”

Colón has a procedure she follows when writing a song.

“I usually have a very good idea of what the song sounds like, which means I have the melody,” said Colón. “Now, because I cannot produce and I’m not very well versed in an instrument, I’ll usually use a piano to find my melody.”

From there, she’ll take the song to Josh LeBlanc “and he will find the chords and then he can translate that for the rest of the band,” she said. “And Troy (Breaux), because he knows so much about this music, he will lay down the percussion aspects and he will also inform the band anything in their (music) language that they wouldn’t understand otherwise.”

Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars plan play to Colón originals, “Missing Out” and La Mala.”

Colón said “Missing Out” is sung in Spanish, “but the chorus is a call and response from Spanish to English. So I decided to call it ‘Missing Out.’”

Expect “La Mala” to be the band’s opener.

“It’s interesting because I think that it’s Malentina’s signature song because Malentina, the name, I derived it from the malicious one,” she said. “I love it because I always did what everybody told me to do.

“The day that I decided that I was going to go out on my own, it just felt right to call myself ‘The Malicious One.’ It’s not about doing evil, but it is about making and breaking my rules.

“And it gives me a lot of freedom,” Colón said. “I think that’s why I suddenly feel I’ve found myself — my voice and my lyrics — because I feel free to do that.”

Which is a nice seque to…

Malentina

When not singing with the the eight-piece Latin band, Colón takes Malentina on solo endeavors, as seen and heard in Para Tí (a must see and listened to visual EP).

Michelle Colón as Malentina.

“She definitely has an esthetic; she’s definitely a persona,” said Colón. “At the end of it all, what’s cool, is that at the bottom of it all, I’m still me. And I am her. It’s impossible to divide myself from her.

“But I feel like when I embody her, I have a little more freedom to be who I want to be,” she said, adding, “which is ironic, but I think that’s just how us humans operate sometimes.”

Malentina’s “Camelia,” a full-length album with a wide-range of genres in English/Spanish, is expected to hit the streets in 2023.

As either Malentina or herself, Colón looks forward to the festival, the food and taking in the music.

“The acts we’re having — I still can’t believe Cimafunk is coming back,” she said. “I was kind of star-struck by them at Festival International.

“I’ve seen the other band that’s performing, Ruba Buena, in New Orleans,” said Colón. “And they are fantastic. In fact, there are like 10 people in one band.

“It is my hope that it sets the tone for years to come and people can expect a really bombastic and lively Latin Festival.”

From jam session to intangible connection to Festival stage, local horn player LeBlanc sits in with international band(s)

Josh LeBlanc, right, sat in on trumpet with The Flying Balalaika Brothers, Thursday, April 28, 2022, in Day 2 of Festival International de Louisiane in Downtown Lafayette. DCross/photo

by DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE, La. — It was the before times, 2019 to be exact, at a jam session just steps away from Festival International de Louisiane in Downtown Lafayette, when Josh LeBlanc and his trumpet met The Flying Balalaika Brothers.

And in no time LeBlanc was asked to join his newfound, yet strangely familiar, musician friends on a Festival stage.

“I just randomly jammed with them,” said LeBlanc, an Abbeville native living in Lafayette. “The next day, they asked me to play with them at Festival. I even had less time to prepare the last time. It was literally the day after, but I just pretty much improvised over a lot of their stuff.

“(Zhenya Rock) was quickly showing me stuff back stage as best he could,” LeBlanc recalled, adding that his days with gypsy swing band, Vagabond Swing in 2009-2010, had helped in the endeavor. “And I was like, ‘I’m very familiar with these modes and scales and style.’”

Upon Festival’s 2022 return, it was this past Thursday evening that the Russian/Ukrainian/U.S. band and LeBlanc were reunited on Scene Laborde Earles Fais Do Do.

And this time around, it was smooth sailing.

“I’m just kind of looking at him, waiting for him to give me the signal,” said LeBlanc. “But I had a chance to chart-out everything and write charts for it — in-between other bands I’ll be playing with for Festival.”

‘It just felt like, immediately, I’d been playing with them forever.’

Josh LeBlanc

LeBlanc had a gig later that evening with Malentina & the Lafayette Latin All-Stars at the Grouse Room, Downtown Lafayette.

And come 7 o’clock Saturday evening at Festival, LeBlanc will sit in on a couple of songs with Delgres at Scene LUS Internationale.

It wasn’t a stroke of luck that LeBlanc, who also plays bass with the band, Givers, finds himself blowing his horn with international musicians, it was a choice (and, of course study, practice, practice and practice).

“I was a marching band geek. Whenever I discovered jazz, that’s when I changed. That was in college,” he said. “Once I discovered jazz, I was like, ‘Cool. I can improvise and make my own music.’ I tried doing classical trumpet for a while, but it wasn’t for me. It’s too rigid.

Josh LeBlanc, right, awaits the word from Zhenya Rock, with accordion, to take off on a solo. DCross/photo

“Thankfully, I studied jazz so I can do things like this and just improvise,” said LeBlanc, with a nod to the stage as Haiti’s Lakou Mizik set up, now that it was vacated by The Flying Balalaika Brothers. “Just tell me the key and then I’ll try to make up something that fits.”

So while Vagabond Swing, in some ways prepped LeBlanc for The Flying Balalaika Brothers, there was also a connection with the band members at that 2019 jam that defies description.

“There was something about meeting them, I felt like immediately I knew them somehow. It was like a weird thing,” LeBlanc said. “You know, Russian culture and then Louisiana culture, you wouldn’t think there’s an intersection there, but for some reason, it just felt like, immediately, I’d been playing with them forever.”

Festival, conceived as a multi-faceted cultural event of international scope and significance, continues through Sunday.

The remaining schedule:

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

For Dogs’ sake

As a matter of public safety, animal safety and basic common sense, do leave your pets at home when attending Festival.

Cassandra jumps for joy and Clarence concurs on the news that they’ll miss Festival again this year. DCross/photo

We, the upright, two-legged mammal with opposing thumbs who actually enjoy loud music, tons of people we don’t know, and can traverse Downtown’s hot sidewalks and streets with ease without burning the pads off our feet, should use our status on the food chain and do right by our pets.

Festival returns front, center, and live in Downtown Lafayette; Ukraine’s DakhaBrakha set for Saturday night

Festival International de Louisiane is underway in Downtown Lafayette, April 27-May 1, 2022. DCross photo from FIL 2019

by DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE, LA — It appears the planets are aligned for Festival International de Louisiane when it returns, live, to Downtown Lafayette this week after two years in pandemic postponement purgatory.

Festival, the well-earned, singular moniker given to the five-day international music, food and art spectacular, runs Wednesday, April 27, 2022 through Sunday, May 1, 2022.

Ordinarily the only concern, the weather, looks to hold rather nicely with pleasant sunny days and doable humidity with comfortably cool evenings — at least until possibly sometime Sunday.

An unusual concern and the reason behind the past two vacated years, covid (festivalus interruptus), in whatever version it finds itself as these days, is of low concern here, according to the CDC.

So, with weather and covid in the bag, coupled with the usual stellar music line-up, Festival should experience some hefty crowds.

And those crowds will no doubt swell to see and support DakhaBrakha (Saturday, 9 p.m., Scene Tito’s Handmade Vodka Lafayette), a group from Ukraine whose country is under attack from Russia. One might want to also check out the Flying Balalaika Brothers (Thursday, 6 p.m. Scene Laborde Earles Fais Do Do). The group consists of musicians from Russia/Ukraine/U.S. and that ought to show the world that we can get along.

But it all begins Wednesday at Scene Laborde Earls Fais Do Do when father-son zydeco bands hit the stage. Nathan & the Zydeco Cha Chas open at 6:30 p.m., to be followed by Lil’ Nathan & the Zydeco Big Timers.

By the way, look for a new release coming from Nathan & the Zydeco Cha Chas. Also, take note that Dennis Paul Williams, Cha Cha guitarist/artist, is illustrating a book on zydeco with Michael Tisserand.

Internationally speaking, the line-up also includes The Wailers (Jamaica), Locos For Juana (Colombia/Venezuela/Argentina/U.S.), Les Filled de Illighadad (Niger), Natu Camara (Guinea), Vieux Farka Toure (Mali), Cimafunk (Cuba), Lakou Mizik (Haiti), and Son Rompe Pera (Mexico) and others.

Louisiana is well-represented with Zachary Richard, Sonny Landreth, Julian Primeaux, Cedric Watson & Bijou Creole, Roddie Romero & Michael Juan Nunez, Sunpie & the Louisiana Sunspots, Lost Bayou Ramblers w/79rs Gang, Dustin Dale Gaspard, The Daiquiri Queens, Boma Bango, Magnolia Sisters and Sou Express Brass Band, and others.

Opening ceremonies are Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Scene LUS Internationale. Here’s the schedule:

Wednesday, 4.27.22 Thursday, 4.28.22 Friday, 4.29.22 Saturday, 4.30.22 Sunday, 5.1.22

For dogs’ sake

Cassandra jumps for joy and Clarence concurs on the news that they’ll miss Festival again this year.

As a matter of public safety, animal safety and basic common sense, do leave your pets at home when attending Festival.

We, the upright, two-legged mammal with opposing thumbs who actually enjoy loud music, tons of people we don’t know, and can traverse Downtown’s hot sidewalks and streets with ease without burning the pads off our feet, should use our status on the food chain and do right by our pets.

OPINION Festivals Acadiens et Creoles: Take this break we’re given and revel in it

By DOMINICK CROSS

After two years, Festivals Acadiens et Creoles returns to the familiar surrounds of Girard Park for a weekend celebration of Cajun and Creole cultures in music, food and arts and crafts.

Yee-the-hell-haw!

And yet, the pandemic that dropped in on the world in March 2020 and which appears to be ebbing in the U.S., is, sad to say, on the rise in Europe and China.

And if all goes the way it has the past two years, the U.S. will probably again get the COVID en masse.

So the never-ending roller coaster ride continues.

This is way past exhausting. It’s been way too long and it’s way past on my last nerve which may be found in the crumpled mask I last wore in public nine days ago. It’s on the floorboard, passenger side.

Goodness gracious, I’m so tired of the pandemic. I’m tired and saddened by the unnecessary sickness and death of friends and countless strangers.

I’m especially over the obtuse chunk of citizenry who’ve been misled about the virus (and the election and the insurrection) by cynical politicians and their ilk whose platform of misinformation is peddled by certain media outlets.

You may know of these people. The ones who couldn’t be bothered with the simple task of wearing a mask, or getting the vax for not only themselves, but also their fellow Americans. Medical exemptions duly noted.

And now these same people are riding around the country in a convoy protesting any and everything designed to help put this pandemic to bed.

If I may, WTF?!

And there’s also the fresh pain of the War on Ukraine and where it may lead. I’m not a masochist, so I’ll not go there.

I’m so sick of it all. I’m worn down and nearly out.

I, we, all of us need a break from the insanity and inanity of the past two years before all meaning is lost and tossed, not unlike a book pulled from our public library shelves by the self-righteous.

So just in time, a hero emerges in the form of this upcoming festival weekend and it’s right here and it’s right now and it’s knocking on our door.

With tears of joy, I swear I can hear Monte Hall exclaim as only he could: “Festivals Acadiens et Creoles! C’mon down!”

Ah, yes. A reprieve. A respite. A revival, even. A weekend where we’re all sure to see, converse, hug and dance with friends we haven’t seen in two years.

We can still be cautious without being paranoid; Festivals Acadiens et Creoles is held outdoors. And our hearts can still go out to Ukrainians without being on our sleeves.

Take this break we’re given and revel in it.

Monday and the woes of the world will be here soon enough.

At long last, Festivals Acadiens et Creoles returns live and in-person under the great oaks of Girard Park

The late Courtney Granger will be honored Saturday, March 19, 2022, 1 p.m. on Scène Ma Louisiane.
DCross photo

By DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE — In this much needed pause between calamities — a waning pandemic and the possibility of WWIII — make the best of the opportunity to indulge in Festivals Acadiens et Creoles, this weekend (March 18-20, 2022) in Girard Park.

The springtime version of the festival that’s usually held in the fall marks the 48th running of the music, food, arts and crafts extravaganza celebrating the Cajun and Creole cultures. One doesn’t have to go back in history to recall that COVID-19 put a halt to life as we knew it this time of year in 2020, and the virus kept most of us off-balance through 2022.

Virtual festivals became the rule of thumb everywhere and got us by, like decaf coffee, until the real deal that’s about to go down in two days and upcoming months. So, bring on the caffeine, the great outdoors, dancing shoes and an appetite for food, fun and frolic in all of the usual ways. Almost.

“We’re celebrating finally getting back together again, live in the park,” said Barry Ancelet, president of the board of Festivals Acadiens et Creoles. “We want people to please be responsible. Let’s not get carried away, careless at this point to undo the good things that are happening.

“Hopefully, as many people as possible will be vaccinated and just be responsible in how we gather. If anybody feels sick or symptomatic of anything, really, not just COVID, but anything, you know, they’ll stay home.

“Let’s just be safe. Let’s be smart,” he said. “If you’re coughing or running a fever, stay home.”

Festivals Acadiens et Creoles will again return to its normal time in October — yep, we’re getting a two-for-one this year — sans hurricane, pandemic or another world war.

Ancelet said that the original event that became this festival was held in the spring in Blackham Coliseum. But there are no plans to return to this time of year on a regular basis.

“We’re going to have the festival in October,” Ancelet said. “This spring festival is to make up for the one we didn’t have last October. In October, we’re still dealing with hurricane season, but I think it’s become our home, become our time.”

While bad weather may be an issue, it should take place when we’re all tucked away for the night. As of Wednesday, there’s “the chance for some severe weather as the front moves through, which is expected to be in the early morning hours of Friday,” according to KATC Weather, noting that the weekend outlook is good.

Music to your ears

The festivals’ line-up includes the usual Grammy-noms and Grammy winners, standard bearers of years past, envelope pushers of the present, and new bands with familiar names.

There is a tribute to the late Courtney Granger, Saturday, March 19, 2022, 1 p.m., on Scène Ma Louisiane. Granger, who left us way too soon at 39 in September 2021 , played Cajun fiddle and Cajun sang with The Pine Leaf Boys and Balfa Toujours. He sat in with everybody and would make the hair on your neck stand up knocking off a country crooner classic. Granger released Beneath Still Waters in 2016 and if you order it now, you should have it in your collection by next week.

Over the weekend, there’s the golden opportunity to listen and dance to Sheryl Cormier & Cajun Sound, Chubby Carrier & the Bayou Swamp Band, Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys, Wayne Singleton & Same Ol’ 2 Step, Roddie Romero and the Hub City All-Stars, Geno Delafose & French Rockin’ Boogie, Bonsoir, Catin, Curley Taylor & Zydeco Trouble, Balfa Toujours, Joe Hall and the Louisiana Cane Cutters, Feufollet, Savoy Family Band, Cedrick Watson & Bijou Creole, Riley Family Band, The Potluck Band, Jesse Lege, Lil’ Nathan & the Zydeco Big Timers, Jourdan Thibodeaux et les Rodailleurs, Wayne Toups & ZydeCajun.

MUSIC SCHEDULE HERE

Chris Ardoin and NuStep Zydeco, opening night, Friday, March 18. DCross photo

The Bayou Food Festival will give you a taste of the Cajun and Creole cultures, and the Louisiana Crafts Fair artists and craftspeople will have their wares to marvel over and purchase.

Looking ahead

Ancelet said the board will meet in early April to plan the fall festival, in which the week of will coincide with an ethnomusicology conference in Lafayette.

“We’ve got some interesting plans for the next one,” he said. “None of this is in stone, but what we’re discussing right now is celebrating Louisiana as an international Francophone crossroads, examining the connections Louisiana has to the rest of the French speaking world.

“Part of that is going along with the likelihood that we’re going to have a major, international Francophone Ethnomusicology Conference in Lafayette the week of the festival in October,” Ancelet said, adding, “all of this is in the planning stages, but this is what we’re shooting for.”

Look for scholars and performers from the Francophone areas “that we’re examining to see the connections,” said Ancelet. “Not only to ponder them, but hear them.”

Joshua Clegg Caffery, director of the Center for Louisiana Studies at University of Louisiana-Lafayette, and Ancelet have been is discussion with Roger Mason, musician/ethnomusicologist who worked with Claudie Marcel-Dubois, the French ethnomusicologist about the conference.

A similar ethnomusicology conference was held over Zoom last year.

Who knew?

As it happened, Mason had a major impact on Ancelet’s life during his collegiate years, and, as it so happens, anyone who has ever enjoyed Festival Acadiens et Creoles.

Mason came to Louisiana in the early 1970s “and met with and learned from and recorded with the Balfa Brothers, Nathan Abshire, the Ardoins — a lot of the founding members of that generation — so he’s very well connected and a long-time, not only fan of, but very knowledgable of Cajun music and zydeco.”

While in Nice, France, when Ancelet was on his academic year abroad in 1972-73, Mason was playing “Crowley Two-Step” in a coffee shop, “And it changed my life,” said Ancelet.

Ancelet introduced himself and said he was from Louisiana and that the song eased his homesickness.

“And he said, ‘You must know all of the people I learned from, Dewey Balfa, Nathan Abshire…,’ and I said, ‘I don’t know any of those people, but I need to know who they are.’”

Roddie Romero & the Hub City All Stars, Saturday, 3:45 pm, Scène Ma Louisiane. DCross photo

Mason told Ancelet that when he gets back home, go to Basile, get directions to Dewey Balfa’s house and introduce himself. So, in the summer of 1973, he knocked on Balfa’s door.

“I said, ‘Are you Dewey Balfa?’ And he said, ‘Yeah, I am.’ I said, ‘I’m Barry Ancelet and I’m from here and I was in France and I met Roger Mason,” recalled Ancelet, who said in his nervousness, his response got faster and faster before Balfa urged him to slow down and invited him inside.

“I went in and that’s how I got involved in all of this,” Ancelet said. “And it was in part due to Roger Mason.”

And nearly 50 years later, here we all are.