Day 24 – Jazz Fest (3)

. . . Your ways is like a crawfish You’ll get all you can an’ doodle back in your hole. —Bo Carter, “Ways Like A Crawfish,” 1938

Today’s weather is looking good. No rain, no humidity, and a cooling breeze. No problems getting to Jazz Fest. Brunch for me is Cajun Chicken over Creole Rice and a homemade Cherry Pie.

Jazz Fest Map

We head over to the Gentilly Stage as I thought the Honey Island Swamp Band would be playing. Jazz Fest looks after people who have mobility problems. There is a booth where you can get a wristband that allows you to sit in specially designated areas. Wendy was also able to get a wristband as “my carer”! We met a guy in the stand who picked my accent straight away. He proceeded to roll off the names of Australian bands that he loved, Men at Work, Little River Band, Crowded House, and Midnight Oil. He was astounded when I told him I knew Rob Hirst. The band playing is The Naughty Professor. A little too “jazzy” for me.

We then headed to the Fais Do Do stage for The Creole String Beans. The band is well-known to us. A New Orleans sextet playing NOLA rock ‘n’ roll from the glory days of J & M Studios plus their own originals. The band sure knows how to get the crowd dancing.

We move to the Blues Tent for Davell Crawford with special guest Benny Turner. Not sure what is happening this year with this stage as they are having a lot of technical issues. Davell is the Grandson of the late New Orleans R&B great James ‘Sugarboy’ Crawford. Benny Turner is an 83-year-old bassist/singer and is the brother of Freddie King. Benny was also the band leader for the legendary Marva Wright. Davell is a great entertainer, singer, and keyboard player. Flamboyantly dressed, he overcomes the technical difficulties and leads his terrific band of New Orleans musicians through a killer set. Benny comes on stage mid-set and sings a couple of songs including the Howlin’ Wolf version of ‘Goin Down Slow’. He told the back story of being a six-year-old and seeing ‘the Wolf’ perform this song. He said, ‘I never knew the meaning of the song until I read Howlin’ Wolf’s biography’. This song has always been a favorite of mine.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benny_Turner

You know I don't enjoy things that kings and queens will never have
And things kings and queens can never get
And they don't even know about
And good times, mmmmm

I have had my fun
If I never get well no more
I have had my fun
If I never get well no more
Oh my health is fading
Oh yes I'm going down slow

Now lookit here
I did not say I was a millionaire
But I said I have spent more money than a millionaire
'Cause if I had kept all the money then I already had spent
Then I would've been a millionaire a long time ago
And women, great googly moogly!

Please write my mother
Tell her the shape I'm in
Please write my mother
Tell her the shape I'm in
Tell her to pray for her son
Forgive me for my sins

Wendy has volunteered to head out of the Blues Tent to buy three frozen margaritas. Just as she returns our great friend and fellow adventure Gary Jones comes up for a chat. It was so good to catch up with Gary and hear firsthand what he has been up to.

Next up is the 66-year-old Kenny Neal. It will be hard now to get Wendy’s attention as Kenny is her ‘golden child’! Kenny’s band consists mostly of family members. He is the consummate frontman, a great singer. guitarist and harp player. He always has a beaming smile. Front row is his mother and other family members. It is always a joyous feeling at a Kenny Neal show.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenny_Neal

We then head back to the Allison Minor stage to see Andrew Duhon. I first saw Andrew perform many years ago at the French Quarter Festival and I have been a fan ever since. Andrew is a very good storyteller and, although his songs generally have a strong message, they are thoroughly entertaining as well. I had my first beer in some six months. I will need to hit the anti-inflammatories when I get home!

https://www.andrewduhon.com/about-andrew-duhon

There is a dilemma now. Three closing acts on three different stages. Los Lobos, Tedeschi Trucks Band and Marcus King. Who to see? We started with Los Lobos on the Fais Do Do stage. Again there was a delay in starting. The Fais Do Do stage has not got a big enough crowd area for this very popular legendary band out of L.A. We only stayed for a couple of songs before heading to the Blues Tent for Marcus King. I know I hear you say, ‘Why not Tedeschi Trucks’. My reason is I have seen them before and I have not seen Marcus King.

Marcus like ‘the Kingfish’ last evening is a new breed of bluesman that is keeping the flame burning. He is full-on energy and dazzling fretwork. It is good to see that there is a young crop of players keeping the blues alive for us oldies.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_King

We had no problem getting home. Leftover Pizza for tea and a couple of cooling beverages rounded out the first week of Jazz Fest.

We got word that our own beloved musician Broderick Smith has passed away. Such sad news for all of us. Brod was and will always remain one of our country’s best-ever vocalists and songwriters and harmonica players. He was an observer of life and people and his sense of humor always shined through. He never took himself too seriously and was a true friend of WOW. The Dingoes shows at our club as well as his duo performances with Shannon Bourne and Richard Tankard will forever be remembered. I know we will all have our memories of seeing Brod with the Adderley Smith Blues Band, Carson, the Dingoes, and Big Combo. Vale Broderick Smith (17 February 1948 – 30 April 2023)

Day 23 – Jazz Fest (2)

I was born in Algiers, twelve o’clock at night An’ the moon wasn’t shinin’, and it wasn’t a bit of light. —Charlie Spand, “Evil Woman Spell,” 1929

We awoke to a humid and overcast day and a strong possibility of rain in the forecast. We had no problems with getting an Uber. The driver gave us some very good advice about where to go to get an Uber at the end of the day’s music.

A different country’s cultural heritage is featured each year of Jazz Fest. This year it is Puerto Rico. So, I decided to try a traditional Puerto Rico meal (Trifondo) with pulled pork. It was delicious but, for $12, there was not a lot of it. As we sat and ate, we listened to Conduncto Tipico Samaritano.

Wendy and I again went to the Alison Minor stage and caught the last three songs of Anne Elise Hastings & her Revolving Cast of Characters. Pretty good. She must have had no luck in love as the songs we heard were all about unsavory past boyfriends.

At 12:35 local Lafayette singer/songwriter Lane Mack hits the stage. A strong Blues/Rock set. The weather is closing in and, being a Jazz Fest veteran, (this is my 10th.) we now move to the Blues Tent. The rest of the day’s artists in the Blues Tent are all worth a look and the added bonus is we will stay dry.

Photos: Lane Mack Band

We saw the closing songs of the Charmaine Neville band. Charmaine is always the entertainer.

Next up is Mitch Woods and his Rocket 88s. As can be read by the name, we are in for some “rocking delight”. He tore the house down with his New Orleans band which featured the mighty John Fohl on guitar. I loved the set. Boogie Woogie and Jump Blues at their very best.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitch_Woods

Mitch Woods

Bernie went out for a Ya Ka Mein run. He got back just as the downpour hit. So glad we have good seats as the tent quickly fills with people seeking shelter. This year the ushers are very strict and do not allow people to stand in the aisles.

Next up is Sonny Landreth. He played an awesome set. One of the most unique slide-guitarists in the world. Simply amazing. Bernie is having an epiphany next to me, I think I saw a tear roll down his cheek. To think that WOW almost had Sonny at Way Out West but his tour never got off the ground due to illness. Whatever music happens over the next days of Jazz Fest, this set will be hard to beat.

Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays. Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He is also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so that he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his finger-style technique for slide. (Wikipedia)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Landreth

Sonny Landreth

We decided to stay put and listen to the Campbell Brothers. The information blurb said they were a little like the Robert Randolph band as they are also a Sacred Steel band. I have to say their musicianship is first class and the female singer has a voice to behold. But they are so damn religious to the point of being annoying. I know this is “church music” but I don’t want to hear a sermon. We all get encouraged to chant “Hell No, Heaven Yes”, then “Don’t Let The Devil Ride, He Will Want To Drive”. Bernie has threatened to abandon the Campbell Brothers and go over with the younguns to see Ed Sheeran!

Campbell Brothers

We stuck with the religious fervor because next up is Christone “Kingfish” Ingram. A twenty-three-year-old blues singer/guitarist who is taking the world by storm. Kingfish has recently toured Australia so I know many of you reading this will know who he is. Buddy Guy is so impressed that he has become his mentor. What a show and what a band he has backing him. I thought of WOW stalwarts Tommy Backus and John Spice back home while the Kingfish was ripping off a killer solo and how I was sure they would have been ‘crying tears in their beers’.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christone_%22Kingfish%22_Ingram

The Kingfish

The good news is the rain has cleared as we head out to walk to the location where it will be easier to pick up an Uber. All good and we are on our way back to the apartment. Bad news for those that stayed to see the end of Ed Sheeran as it is pouring rain again.

We headed out to Freret St for Pizza at Midway. Great restaurant. We started with Pigs in a Blanket and then ordered three large pizzas to share. One of them is a Chicago-style deep pan. The waitress shook her head saying that three pizzas may be a little too many for the four of us. She was correct! (see Hoff’s food blog for full details)