Thursday, January 31, 2013

Gary State Bank Music Hall...





It's hard to believe it's almost been ten years since the release of "So Long" my debut album.  Donovan Guidry and I sat down reminiscing about those days in Brooklyn trying to pull something from deep inside.  I remember going home to Louisiana every four months to research and interview people from Grand Point.  I was finally appreciating my culture for the first time after years of running from it.  





Over the past few years Sean Delauneville(above) has been after me to play live over at his place and for whatever reason I never did it.  I was battling the bitterness of my split with the record industry along with moving on to my new projects and didn't really care much about playing live.  I've never wanted to be a big fish in a small pond or to be celebrated but something real has been happening with the folks back home with that record.  I've heard countless stories of people bonding over that record so I decided to sit down with my acoustic and play a few of those songs late one night and it hit me hard. All those cry's and pleas were now being directed back at me by my own culture who have embraced that strange sounding record over the years.  


Since starting to play live again, a peace has come over me about the whole thing.  I feel as if I was born to do it and I have a gift and it should be shared.  No more, no less.  

We met this week at the old Gary State Bank building, owned by Carl Monica.  This a storied building for him having rode out countless hurricanes in there with his Italian family.  He is a long time historian for the area and is really excited to have some other folks to bring some awareness to the culture. I'm so excited that they will be cleaning up this place for me to play a show in March.  



Donovan Guidry and I, along with my good friend Malik Baloney are planning to document everything with video, audio recording and portraits.  We all come from different paths and have arrived at the same place.  Donovan, the Frenchman from Lafayette and Malik, the creole intellect from Garyville.  We are all so excited to have an avenue to share our culture with the world.  Not New Orleans, but specifically a Creole/Cajun region that sits on the Mississippi River.  There will be no talks of alligators or other Louisiana corniness.  We will humbly distill this American life!




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