Basin Street Band

History, experience have musicians on same page

Basin Street Band (l-r) Tommy Shreve, Sarah Gauthier, Tony Broussard, Dudley Fruge (behind Broussard), Jimmy Hebert and Ron Fruge / Ted Thibodeaux photo

by Dominick Cross

LAFAYETTE, La. — Tony Broussard don’t play.

Well, ok. He plays sax. And he sings.

But where he doesn’t play is with the bands he’s put together or been a part of over the years, which is to say chocked full of some good musicians.

Take Boogaloo, Force, Sound Advice and All-in-All, and, especially now, Basin Street Band.

Time was on Broussard’s side when he got the itch to return to the music scene with a new band after being away for several years.

He started scratching that itch in 2016.

“I wasn’t in a rush,” Broussard continued. “It was just going to be on my terms and my time table. And it was going to have to be the right guys.”

And that’s fine. However, an unexpected obstacle — “a huge revelation” — revealed itself at the outset.

“Everybody is playing in every band,” he said.

Tommy Shreve / DCross photo

Friend and musician, Daryl Fontenot, informed Broussard of a new reality: “There are no bands anymore that start up and you have dedicated players in that band,” Broussard said he was told.

In other words, it seems the Gig Economy had even encroached on the profession where it probably got its name in the first place.

“Everybody’s playing in five, six different bands,” said Broussard. “How do you put a band together with any kind of continuity if you always have different players sitting in with the band.

“It just boggles the mind.”

Broussard took note, figured in some ego and financial reasons and more or less concluded: “I don’t know, man. I think there’s both aspects to that,” he said. “And I think the other thing is that there’s just no music. No money. The money they’re paying is the same money I was making 30 years ago.

“That’s just the way that it is. That’s just the music business. There aren’t the venues that they used to have,” said Broussard, who may have touched on an inconvenient truth when he added: “And just the social attitude about drinking alcohol and driving and all of that, it’s changed the landscape of the music industry.”

Still, he persevered.

“So, it took me probably three years before I started to get people together to try and put a band together,” said Broussard. “I knew what I needed as far as the players went, what kind of players I needed for this band to make it work and give it the groove it needed.”

Talent and skill are one thing, but a key ingredient for Broussard was experience.

“And it’s not something you can teach anybody,” Broussard said. “You can’t teach somebody about a groove if they’ve never experienced a groove.

“A band that can get in a groove together is such, man, an emotional thing,” he said. “It’s just not something you can teach. It’s a chemistry. Not only is it a musician chemistry, but it’s a musical chemistry. And it has to happen naturally.”

So, while time was on Broussard’s side to put a band together, timing was a whole different thing.

“By the time I did find the right group of musicians to start playing,” he said. “It was the middle of COVID.”

No worries, by the time COVID cases came down and masks pulled off, Basin Street, after a change of personnel here and there, was ready to rock and roll — with a stellar line-up:

Tommy Shreve, guitar; Ron Fruge, guitar, Jimmy Hebert, bass; Dudley Fruge, drums; Sarah Gauthier, vocals; and Broussard, alto/tenor sax.

And all of the musicians can and do sing.

Ron Fruge and Jimmy Hebert / DCross photo

“What’s really cool is that I’ve never played in a band with the caliber of musicians that are in this band,” said Broussard. “It elevates everybody’s playing. You don’t have to think about what you’re doing and you can just concentrate on making the music.

“And that’s where we are with this thing, man. It just happens naturally,” he said. “It’s scary-good sometimes. It really is.”

It doesn’t hurt that musicians in the band have a history together, some going back decades.

Tommy Shreve and Dudley Fruge were roadmates when they toured with Zachary (Richard),” said Broussard. “Jimmy (Hebert) played with Zachary for a while.

“And Dudley’s brother, Ron, is a freakin’ monster on his own. Great guitar player, great singer,” he said.

And Hebert and Broussard also go way back to Boogaloo. Hebert has performed and/or recorded with Zachary Richard, Hunter Hayes, Richard Lebouef, and Kevin Naquin.

A result of such high caliber musicians who know each other, “You don’t have to teach anything,” said Broussard. “You don’t have to say anything because it’s happening.”

It’s what folks have come to expect after witnessing the talent and skill of Shreve, the Fruges and Hebert over the years; they hardly need an introduction.

An unknown quantity, however, was Gauthier.

“I didn’t know this girl from Adam. She happened to be sitting in with Major Handy,” said Broussard. “Somebody had taken a video and that’s how I first became exposed to Sarah.

“And man let me tell you, Sarah just brings just a whole other thing — just her style and versatility — man, I can’t say enough about Sarah and her stage presence and how she presents a song,” he said.

Ted Thibodeaux, a local musician who returned to the area not too long ago, concurs. (Editor’s note: I couldn’t make a recent Basin Street gig, so Ted took some of the photos and talked about the band for this story when they played at The Ruins.)

“I never saw Sarah (Gauthier) sing before,” said Thibodeaux. “I don’t know where she came from — Saturn, maybe? Seems like she’s from another planet she’s so good.”

Thibodeaux explained: “Anybody who can sing Janis Joplin and then jump like that with no hesitation to sing ‘At Last’ (Etta James) is really good.””

Gauthier teaches theater (her first love) in the Louisiana Public School Systems Gifted Program and she runs Theatre Acadie.

“I learned I could sing later on in life and so this gives me the opportunity to fulfill my performance desires without having to be in a six-week long rehearsal for a play,” Gauthier said. “So I’m still able to get on stage and do what I love doing.”

She got her late start singing with New Iberia’s Blue-Eyed Doll from 2011-2015. These days, Gauthier also sings with the band Ask for Ashley.

Then Basin Street came calling.

“When they asked to sing with them, I was like, ‘Yes.’ It was not even a question,” said Gauthier. “I like singing rock and roll. And I think there’s more of a performance aspect there.

Sarah Gauthier and Tony Broussard / Ted Thibodeaux photo

“But with Basin Street, I really get to hone in on my vocal craft. They are stellar musicians with a ridiculous amount of experience. I’m learning a lot as a musician with those guys.”

Gauthier said there’s a lot to appreciate being a member of Basin Street.

“I love it that I’m not the only singer in the band,” said Gauthier. “Every single person in the band sings and four of us sing lead, so I get to sing a lot of backup and I just get to dance and play the tambourine.

“I feel like everybody is singing from their soul, so that’s great because that’s the only way I know how to sing,” she said. “Everybody puts their all into it.”

And like Broussard, Gauthier can feel the intangible vibe within the band.

“It’s kind of magical. We really have a good mesh on stage,” she said. “There’s a really great connection and it’s hard to find that where everyone feels really comfortable with one another.

“You can feel when somebody’s kind of changing the groove or adding something to it and we all just go along with it,” said Gauthier. “It’s great.

“They know music backwards and forwards, so even if we skirt around and do a little something, we all know how to get back to where we were.”

Broussard said having pair of stellar guitar players like Shreve and Fruge goes a long way with a band.

“When they can work together, it’s very rhythmic. Percussive might even be a way to put it as far as how that contributes to the groove just by the nature of having two guitar players,” Broussard said. “There’s a percussiveness in the sense in how a guy plays guitar and rhythm guitar and letting songs breathe.

“You don’t have to have music at every second of the song,” he said. “In my opinion, the tightness of a band is not how they manage all the notes, but how they manage the quiet time — those spaces — how precise they are with the dead spots of a song.”

Basin Street covers plenty of genres, from rock and roll, R&B, to local music from Wayne Toups, Zachary Richard, and Marc Broussard.

“It’s kind of magical. We really have a good mesh on stage.”

Sarah Gauthier

“You have to do your standard stuff. You got to do like, ‘I Got Loaded,’ and some of the swamp pop things just because of South Louisiana,” said Broussard. “But we mix it up with some Neville Brothers. We do ‘Pockaway.’ Some bands just do that during Mardi Gras. Man, that’s a great song.”

You can also expect to hear some Robert Palmer, Janis Joplin, The Band, Aretha Franklin, Delbert McClinton, Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett and other crowd favorites.

“We can present a song and give it our own flair and flavor, but also be precise and consistent of what it is we’re playing,” he said. “It’s a mixture of stuff, but it’s been our goal to do great music that not many bands, if any bands, are doing.”

Thibodeaux said Basin Street left an impression.

“Phenomenal, man. The level of talent in this group and the camaraderie and the professionalism…” Thibodeaux trailed off. “The sound was good. It wasn’t too loud. It was mixed. He had a variety of strong vocalists.

“I don’t even dance, but for some reason this night, I was dancing,” he said.

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

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

Dominick Cross, story/photos

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

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

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

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

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

Then there’s the camping.

Where there’s grass, there are tents…

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

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

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

Blackpot Camp

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

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

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

Blackpot Fest

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

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

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

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

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

See Saturday’s extensive schedule here.

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

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

Major Handy and friend. Robin May photo

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

COOK-OFF

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

FYI: No more FYIs, the story follows…

by DOMINICK CROSS/story & photos

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

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

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

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

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

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

The decor will include moss and palmetto and feather boas.

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

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

Some paddlers even decorate their kayaks and canoes.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Paddling through COVID

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

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

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

The pandemic was actually a boon to such outdoor activities.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Paddle Parade particulars

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

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

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

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

The parade is limited to non-motorized watercraft.

TECHE Project

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

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

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

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

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

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

Twilight on the Teche

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

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

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

¡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.”

CABLOG author, Dege Legg, talks music, life, quarantine and, of course, his book

Dege Legg / photo: Lucius Fontenot

by NATHAN STUBBS

Award-winning writer and musician Dege Legg, aka Brother Dege, has charted an unconventional career course, following a creative spirit and impulsive gut along a zig-zag path that has included stints as a journalist, warehouseman, mechanic, homeless shelter caseworker, and for five years, late night cab driver in the Acadian hub city of Lafayette, Louisiana.

Documenting this dashboard vantage point of the after hours underworld of Cajun and Creole country is his new book, Cablog: Diary of a Cabdriver, out Nov. 10 by UL Press. Crafted from Legg’s personal journal, Cablog is a rare exhibit in the nonfiction genre, a poignant documentation of the often neglected fringe of our community. With an ear for dialogue and eye for detail, Legg captures the charm and despair of real-life character plights. Cablog picks us up for a shotgun ride through the storied downtown corners and less traveled backroads that, much like Brother Dege’s music, dive into a gritty Southern Gothic folklore that is both infamous and inspiring.

Nathan Stubbs (NS) caught up with Dege (BD) for a brief Q&A about Cablog, and how he’s coping through all the historical mayhem of 2020. Go here for a review.

NS: You’ve toured throughout North America and Europe several times with your band Brother Dege & The Brethren. How are you adjusting and what’s daily life like now that the pandemic has put live concerts and travel on hiatus?

BD: All good. To be honest, I needed a break from the grind. After a solid decade of banging around in vans, at the club level, I was a little burnt. I’d already blocked out the spring and summer 2020 for recording and the CABLOG book, so it all worked out perfectly with minimal distractions. And it gave me a chance to recharge the batteries. But now I’m feeling a little stir crazy and ready to roll.

NS: Do you expect live concerts will come back bigger than ever? Or is live entertainment forever changed?

BD: Who knows? All bets are off. But maybe both. It’ll probably come back huge at the enormo-dome level and slowly come back in the club sector. So many smaller venues have closed down because of the pandemic stuff that it may take a bit to get them back open.
NS: You’ve worked so many jobs – musician, cab driver, journalist, line cook, homeless shelter caseworker. If you were to choose another career path aside from music, what do you think it would be?

BD: If I had to do it again, I would’ve gone the academic route and become a professor of something interesting or gone the full-pirate program and lived on a boat.
NS: So many people are going through job adjustments with the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic. What’s Brother Dege’s best career advice?

BD: First off you have to be nuts to do music or art as a career after a certain age unless you’re lucky enough to be Bruce Springsteen or someone like that. It’s a tough living with a ton of anxiety. But then again, the creative life kind of chooses you, and then you just hang on and try to keep it out of the ditch. It ain’t always easy. Advice: trust your gut, take the slow-growth train, and don’t wait for anyone to do anything for you. Just go out and do it, especially if you live in the Deep South. Nobody’s going to do it for you.

NS: Your song “Too Old to Die Young” was famously featured in the Quentin Tarantino film Django Unchained. “Hard Row to Hoe” was the theme for the TV show After the Catch. (Both songs are from Legg’s 2010 release, “Folk Songs of the American Longhair”) What have you been binge-watching in Quarantine and what guilty pleasure film or TV show would you love to see your music in?

BD: My quarantine TV diet is mostly exclusively composed of kooky YouTube videos on obscure topics like overunity generators, exopolitics, anti-gravitic technology, Van Halen live footage (1977-79), 20th century Arctic exploration (i.e. dudes getting stuck in the ice), and survival documentaries (dudes getting stuck on mountains), nanotech/A.I. (programmable matter). Plus a bunch of other nutty stuff.

NS: A lot of bands are increasingly featuring their music in commercial advertisements. Is that something you’ve considered? Could you ever see “Partial to the Bitters” as part of a coffee promotion or “Hard Row to Hoe” in like a John Deere ad?

BD: 20 years ago scoring a commercial was considered selling out. Now it’s like a saving grace moment for most indie artists. It’s the wild west out there in music land, so as long as you’re not selling war machinery or genocide, I think it’s fairly acceptable nowawdays. I’ve never had any of my music in any commercials, so I’m not sure what would work.

NS: You’ve also been nominated for a Grammy as well as being an award-winning writer. What accolade are you most proud of or is giving awards for art all bullshit?

BD: They’re kind of bullshit and ceremonial – pats on the back from the corporate overlords for being a good slave. But they also toss you credit in the straight world, so I don’t know. Not everything has to be art-damaged madness.

NS: In the book Cablog, you chronicle some of the racial prejudices, mental health issues and drug addictions that are very much in the news today in terms of police reform. What would you say you learned about law enforcement from the vantage point of a late night cab driver?

BD: Whew. Working nights, you’re right on the front lines of the craziest stuff that’s happening in your city on any given night, and cops are right up in it, so it’s not an easy job. I wouldn’t want to do it. And I don’t think most people that criticize cops would be up for doing it either. I’ve been roughed up by cops in the past, but maybe I had it coming, so fair play. But they definitely overreact a lot, probably as a result of getting burnt out and cynical, while cleaning up the mess that’s part of any system. I should remind people that I’m just a kooky artist and definitely don’t have all the answers.

NS: Do you think there’s another book in your future? What other topics could you see yourself delving into in book form?

BD: Yes. The plan is to do a series of books of the “LOG” variety. The next book in the series would be a ROADLOG book – about my experiences touring in rock & roll bands over the past 20 years. CABLOG covered 5 years on the job. ROADLOG encompasses 20 years of the kookiest, nuttiest, most absurd stories from the road, all of which I’ve been documenting in a massive Word document that will be a challenge to edit and revise, but it’ll be worth it. I may have to split into two ROADLOG books (Pt. 1 & 2). Musicians are pretty entertaining creatures when they’re not on a stage. After the ROADLOG book, I have another LOG-type book in mind. It’s still coming into focus. But that’ll make it a set of three in the LOG series. Hopefully, people will be able to buy them like a box-set of CDs, but it’ll be books, which will be cool, I think. It’ll look nice on a bookshelf, like a set of wacky encyclopedias.

NS: It’s hard to escape today’s politically-charged climate. As a writer/artist in the deep south, how are you absorbing our state of politics? Is it starting to seep into your work?

BD: Man, I’m so far in the rabbit hole that it’s almost impossible to have a healthy conversation with most people about politics. I’m 20 years in. I read a ton of books. Plus I know I’m kind of off the traditional grid of thinking, but this is my journey. So I don’t even bother – at least online where it’s ridiculously conservative and tribal on both sides. Like Church Ladies all ridiculing one another. Fuck off. What a waste. Quit being so square. Loosen up. Especially artists. Nobody’s going to you for political advice, dude. I try to look at everything as an exercise in abstract thought. It keeps me sane.

NS: The book CABLOG takes place in the early 2000s. So much has happened since then, it almost seems like a different era. Can you set the stage for us a little bit for the book? What were you going through personally then and looking back, what do you find significant about what was happening locally at that time?

BD: In 2003, I was broke, living in a motel, unemployed, and my band of ten years (Santeria) had just broken up. They all got jobs, married, or went back to school. I had no Plan B. But I still had the eye of the tiger, even though I was going nowhere. You’ve got to have a serious crazy bone in you to survive as a creative person down here. No question. Otherwise, the nerds and odds will just peck you to death. But I got lucky and found a job as a cabdriver. I try to turn everything into an art project – jobs, heartbreak, defeat, whatever – just to make it fun and ward off the humiliation of reality. It’s my survival mechanism. I knew I was going to write about this taxi stuff as soon as I walked in and met the boss and some of the other people that worked there. I was like, this is gold! But I also just needed a damn job, because I was broke. Sometimes I question the nonsensical trajectory of my own life, but I suspect that I was put here to turn this kind of shit into gold.

Festivals Acadiens et Creoles a no-go at park; pandemic pushes fete to Plan B and into the virtual world

By Dominick Cross

You probably saw it coming.

“We’re not going to hold an open, public event in Girard Park as we have in the past,” said Barry Ancelet. “We’re not going to do that this year.”

Festivals Acadiens et Creoles board president, Barry Ancelet (left), sits in with Balfa Toujours at Girard Park.
-DCross photo

And with that, Ancelet, president of the board of Festivals Acadiens et Creoles, confirmed the fears of many on a stormy Thursday, June 25, 2020, as the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic continued to rattle and spike in the Pelican State and across the country.

However, that’s not to say that the 40th celebration of all things Cajun and Creole, set for October 9-11 in Girard Park, is a wash. Call it Plan B.

“We’re exploring ways to have musical performances available virtually, and in very, very closed, limited context,” Ancelet said. “We want to support the musicians and we want to support the food vendors, so we’re exploring ways that we could do that while without putting large crowds together.”

Ancelet said he turned to folks at Festival International de Louisiane, who came up with a plan to salvage its annual April event online in just a matter of weeks.

“Festival International did a really good job of pioneering some ideas and they’re eager to work with us, to help us conceptualize things to do and we won’t vanish for a whole year,” said Ancelet.

Three locations have been scoped out for live streaming performances. In addition, though not confirmed, Ancelet is working with KRVS 88.7 FM, and others to stream the festival on the Internet, radio and other outlets.

“We’re also going to feature historic performances from our vast archives,” he said. Chris Segura, archivist at the Center for Louisiana Studies, is working on “identifying some memorable moments.”

Corey Ledet and His Zydeco Band. -DCross photo

So the show will go on, but in this case, the mantra is more of a mission.

“We are keenly mindful that the musicians and the restaurant people have been among the hardest hit by this economic shutdown,” said Ancelet. “So we’re desperate to do something for them, not to mention for all the other reasons we’d ordinarily do it. But especially in this case.

“We feel like we’re balancing social, cultural and economic concerns,” he said.
Securing bands for the Plan B concept should not be an issue.

“Our festival is almost exclusively bands from driving distance,” Ancelet said. “We’re not going to be able to have as many bands, but we’re going to try and involve as many bands as we can, and, who are willing to.”

In a way, culling the line-up may not be as difficult as one may think, based on a suggestion from a bandleader, according to Ancelet.

“He said, ‘Hey, man. If y’all got to cut some, prioritize the bands that are composed of people for whom gigging is a primary source of income,’” said Ancelet. “The musicians’ community has been absolutely remarkable in the sense of cooperation and support and thinking realistically about this.

“It shows a healthy sense of solidarity.”

Another aspect of Plan B concerns the food vendors. Think the food truck concept.

“And that’s the way the Food Festival looked and worked already, except they were all bundled together,” Ancelet said. “If we figure out a way to spread them apart and associate them with the venues that we’re exploring to do it, something will work. We’re going to be able to help out.”

And then there’s the festival goers.

Jon Bertrand, Pine Leaf Boys. -DCross photo

“The other aspect of this, the festival’s fans, the attendees, we’ve been all weathering this difficult period as well and everybody deserves an opportunity to celebrate, if we can figure out a way to celebrate in a responsible way,” said Ancelet.

Simply cutting and running was an option, too. In theory, anyway.

“The easiest thing for us to have done would be to say, ‘Hey, you know what? Pull the plug. Never mind. We’re not going to lose any money. We’ll be ok. We’ll just survive it until next year,’” Ancelet said. “But we don’t want to do that.

“We feel responsible. We feel like we owe it to the musicians, the restaurants and the fans to see if we can figure something out,” he said.

And while a second wave of the pandemic is expected in the fall, many states, our’s included, haven’t quite dealt with the first wave and the one-time flattened-ish virus infection curve is expanding.

It seems that the premature rush to return to normal at the behest of pandering politicians and ill-informed business owners, coupled with careless people tricks – like not wearing a mask in public and ignoring social distancing guidelines – have contributed to the unfortunate and precarious situation.

So much so that on June 22, Louisiana Governor John Bell Edwards announced the state will not move to Phase III of reopening for 28 more days because of the climbing cases of infections and hospitalizations.

“It would be callous and irresponsible of us to proceed as though nothing was wrong,” said Ancelet. “Last thing I would want is for a couple of weeks after the festival, if we did it the normal way this year, is to see a report about a huge spike in cases.”

‘Blacker Than the Devil’s Feet’ in the works and it has nothing to do with the pandemic

By Dominick Cross

It was the second week of June and after three unintentional phone calls to Sam Broussard over two days, I figured it was a sign that I should phone the musician straight away.

Besides, based on conversations with Sam Broussard that I’ve had since the mid-1990s, a call to him usually adds a necessary touch of levity.

At this juncture in June 2020, we’re currently looking at the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic, the mass demonstrations across the country over the death of George Floyd, an African American, at the knee of a white police officer, and, not surprisingly, the rising numbers of virus infections.

Sam Broussard with David Greely, left, and Steve Riley at Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys 25th Anniversary concert at Acadiana Center for the Arts in 2013. DCross photo

Nationally and politically, the feeling of real change mixes cautiously with the troubled air regarding minority relations and law enforcement and other U.S. race issues.

And if we zoom in, we can see that local demonstrations have been peaceful in Acadiana. If truth follows fiction, the statue of a confederate officer/slave owner in downtown Lafayette may soon come down from its pedestal.

Also at this time, since the late-March shutdown, the state is looking at going to Phase 3 in the overly optimistic drive to return to normal regarding the pandemic.

Already this month, Second Saturday ArtWalk returned, and it appears live music has returned to some venues, indoors/outdoors, in the region.

So when I called Broussard, we chatted a bit about the chaotic world that we’re all immersed in accompanied with the usual wit, sarcasm, frustration and maybe even hope that such calls have entailed over the years.

During the call, I learned Broussard is in the process of working on his and Barry Jean Ancelet’s follow-up to their “Broken Promised Land” recording some three years ago.

So we set time aside for an interview for Bayou Hack Press (www.bayouhackpress.com) two days hence.

In a nutshell, the 2017 recording is Broussard’s music put to Ancelet’s Cajun French poetry. It’s a concept that worked so well it received a Grammy nomination in the Best Regional Roots Album category.

The day arrived and before we got into the new recording, “Blacker Than the Devil’s Feet,” I had to ask Broussard if he’d play an indoor gig these days.

Nary a second passes.

“No,” said Broussard.

Not that I was surprised with his answer, but I asked him why, as the state stumbles through Phase II, while Lafayette plows straight into Phase V.

“The numbers are going up in the places where large gatherings are happening,” Broussard said. “I think Arizona has 7,000 new cases (‘question mark,’ he added). I just saw that. Indoors is too risky, especially for my age group.

“I think the chances of getting the virus are very, very slim, but that’s not good enough,” he said. “For me.”

“I don’t really want to do any gigs. Maybe at the beginning of August I’ll look around, but I don’t think anything’s going to change,” said Broussard. “I’m going to let the number of new cases decide when I work. And, again, that’s because of my age group.”

For the record, the multi-instrumentalist/singer songwriter is 68.

I told Broussard about local clubs offering live indoor music that coming weekend. And since then, I’ve seen social media posts of unmasked bands and unmasked dancers passing a good time over the weekend.

They’re some crazy souls in my book. Broussard has his own take on it.

“To me, there are two classes of people: People who don’t mind the risk of endangering the life of a healthcare worker; and those who do mind,” Broussard said. “It was just a couple of weeks ago that we thought they were so precious.

“And now, it’s kind of like, ‘Oh, well. I need my freedom,'” he said. “I just bear in mind how much we care about them.

Barry Ancelet, director, Festivals Acadiens et Creoles at Girard Park. DCross photo

“If I got sick, I’d have to think, ‘Oh, my God. Someone’s going to have to take care of me,'” Broussard continued. “I think that step right there is missing in the calculations of the ‘freedom-loving’ crowd.”

I mentioned that one of the reasons given for opening up cities and towns was that hospitals didn’t fill up like previously thought.

Broussard said Arizona apparently maxed out their ICU capabilities with the rise in new cases. I said it will be interesting to see what happens around here amid the rush to reopen.

“Nothing good,” Broussard dryly stated.

With that, we moved on to the original the reason I’d called.

Broussard said that all of the music and most of the poems (songs) for “Blacker Than the Devil’s Feet” were written specifically for the album. On the previous album, Broussard wrote the music to poetry already written by Ancelet, save one.

“The modus operandi is that I write music to his poetry. It doesn’t always fit, it seldom fits like a glove, so he and I get together and work on it,” Broussard said. “We worked on carving his poems to fit the music that I come up with.

“And we try to do that without soiling the integrity of the poetry,” he said. “It works really well. We have fun doing it. We’re not doing it in person now, but over the phone.”

“It’s a good process. It’s a good working relationship,” said Broussard. “We don’t refuse each other anything which definitely makes it easy. We make suggestions to each other about things.”

The collaboration works so well probably because the two men have known each other since they shared a first grade class as students in Lafayette.

“The process has never failed,” Broussard said.

Ancelet agrees.

“We have never had one moment of serious disagreement about anything,” said Ancelet. “It’s the easiest thing, ever. Now he’ll say, ‘I think you’re missing something here.’ Or, ‘We need to hit this harder or come up with a hook.’

“We do that kind of stuff,” he said. “We have this great relationship that is extremely productive and creative and respectful.

“When this process is working at its best, when it’s hitting on all eight cylinders, what it does is it uses the past to construct something new,” Ancelet said. “It’s not prisoner to the past. It’s using the past as a deep, rich resource.”

“Blacker Than the Devil’s Feet” is a line in a couple of the songs on the album.

Still, not all is dark on the upcoming release, Ancelet said with a caveat.

“It’s got some light moments, too,” Ancelet said. “But an album that’s going to be entitled ‘Blacker Than the Devil’s Feet’ – it’s going to have some blues, man.”

The songs “weren’t written to order,” said Broussard. “It’s just from his body of work, some of which is published, some has not been.”

Broussard said the duo is “pretty far” along in the process for the album.

“About 80 percent,” he said. “We have twice as many songs as we need and we have a lot of recording to do from other musicians.”

Under current pandemic circumstances, that process is down the road.

“I don’t know how to arrange it. I can’t afford to get sick from the virus, so I’m not really sure how we’re going to do that,” said Broussard. “Meanwhile, I’m playing everything, but that’s not the ideal.”

A long pause.

“Let’s just say that’s hardly the ideal,” he chuckled. “I did it the first time (on ‘Broken Promise Land’).”

Broussard said he plans to call on “our usual suspects” who are musicians from the annual Gospel Brunch at Ancelet’s house, such as Gina Forsyth and David Greely, in addition to some other local players.

“And we’ll need real drums and percussion and a few other singers,” Broussard said, adding that he and Ancelet will “be singing most of it.”

Anna Laura Edmiston was a guest vocalist first time around and featured on “Coeur casse.”
“We will probably have some women singing on this one,” said Broussard. “Barry enjoys hearing certain poems of his sung by a woman.

“Sometimes a poignant poem can be more so if you change the gender – a point of view,” he said.

Broussard said he and Ancelet are still culling the herd of songs.

“We haven’t decided what songs will make the cut. They haven’t been in good enough shape to listen to,” Broussard said. “That will happen when I make the songs listenable enough. “

In other words: “I’m fleshing the songs out from the bare bones state that they were in,” he said.

“I would much prefer to work with him face to face. And also I need him to sing,” said Broussard. “It’s not as much fun this way. We have a great working relationship and I miss it.”

The upcoming release, like the previous one, isn’t what one would call Cajun music in the way, say, Steve Riley & the Mamou Playboys (of which Broussard is a member) may play.

“The way I look at it for myself, there’s two kinds of Cajun musicians,” said Broussard. “There’s the kind that pretty much plays Cajun music most of the time. And then there are musicians who are Cajun.

“We’re just doing what we want,” he said. “And, in that, we have a lot in common with the old guard of Cajun musicians. They certainly did whatever they wanted to do.”

Another pause and the pachyderm in the room raised its trunk regarding gigs since the pandemic was finally acknowledged in this country in March.

“We lost all of them,” said Broussard. That would include Strawberry Park Festival, Rhythm and Roots, the Lincoln Center, Balfa Camp and lots of other festivals and gigs. “These are gigs that other Louisiana bands lost as well.”

All local touring bands and those who gig locally were in the same boat and everyone took a hit.

“Music has always had a low profit margin, except for the old style record company,” Broussard said. “So, you worry about which venues will have to shut down forever, like some restaurants have had to do.”

Lots of bands sell their recordings at shows, but if there are no shows, well…

“So, you can’t sell records, and often money from that goes to transportation expenses,” said Broussard. “But nobody’s flying and there’s no place to fly to because there’s no gig when you get there.”

And even back in the pre-pandemic era, profit on recorded music sales were minimal.

“The only way to make money with recordings is to perform, or get them licensed within movies or commercials,” Broussard said. “You don’t make money selling records anymore unless you have sole ownership of them.”

All good things must end, and, so, too, all bad things. Right?

The day will dawn when social distancing and masks and ventilators follow the pandemic out of town and live music safely returns.

“I think it will be healthy when it cranks back up. I think it’ll be really good because audiences will have a renewed appreciation,” said Broussard. “But to me, the words, ‘crank back up,’ that means a vaccine. A vaccine is what it’s all about.”

Then again, there’s the bleach and ultraviolet light cure as proposed by a certain U.S. president.

“There’s that,” Broussard said. “Swallow an ultraviolet light bulb and then chase it with bleach.”

Oh, the levity.