Michael Doucet
1 2017-11-28T16:34:35-08:00 Shalanda Plowden c04c2b753ec73bf64ffe19b89f4d09f62276c905 25630 1 plain 2017-11-28T16:34:35-08:00 Image courtesy of Johnnie Allan, Center for Louisiana Studies, and Special Collections at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Shalanda Plowden c04c2b753ec73bf64ffe19b89f4d09f62276c905This page is referenced by:
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Cajun Music
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The Founding Genre of Louisiana Music. Cajun and Creole music is responsible for the creation of Zydeco music. It is said that Cajun music owed a great deal of its style to Afro-Creole accordion and fiddle music. This music was extremely influential and because of the presence of the Afro-Creole style modern Cajun music and Zydeco was able to take form.
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Mouton, Todd. Way down in Louisiana: Clifton Chenier, Cajun, Zydeco, and Swamp Pop Music. University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press, 2015.
The University of Louisiana at Lafayette Dupre Library Cajun & Creole Music Collection
"I had played in house dances, family gatherings, maybe a dance hall where you might have seen as many as 200 people at once. In fact, I doubt I had ever seen 200 people at once. And in Newport, there were 17,000. Seventeen thousand people who wouldn't let us get off stage." -Dewey Balfa
Dewey Balfa is considered to be an ambassador for Cajun music and culture. He was a fiddler and singer who lived from 1927-1992 who was credited with being a driving force in the revival of traditional Cajun music. In 1964 Balfa gained great publicity and performed at the prestigious Newport Folk Festival. Balfa was originally supposed to be a regular guitarist at the festival but he ended up being a last minute replacement playing with famous Cajun musicians. He and the musicians assumed that their urban audience would not accept their Cajun music, but the audience thoroughly enjoyed their performance and responded with wild cheers and applause.
D.L. Menard is sometimes called the "Cajun Hank Williams." He made multiple hits and he recorded with other greats like himself including Dewey Balfa. Mr. Menard is from Erath, LA representing Vermilion Parish. He attributes his style to Hank Williams for he grew up listening to a great deal of country music. The Rolling Stone's list of 100 Greatest Country Songs of All Time placed the Cajun musician at No. 72 in 2014. He recently passed away in July 2017 and nationally known media outlets such as the New York Times, The Guardian, and Rolling Stone paid tribute to the iconic Cajun artist.
Michael Doucet is another artist who is credited with being a Cajun music revivalist. He is both a showman and a scholar and performs with famous Cajun group Beausoleil. In 1997 Doucet and Beausoleil performed on national television for the the Super Bowl pregame show. Doucet and Beausoleil definitely spread their Louisiana sounds across the country many times. They opened for famous Rock band The Grateful Dead and played for the Clinton and Carter presidential inaugurations. They've even played around the world and have performed in every state of the U.S. Michael Doucet and Beausoleil have won two Grammys and a fun fact about Mr. Doucet is that he was an adjunct professor at the University of Southwestern Louisiana known today as the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
- 1 media/license_plate_map_usa_60in_2012_ed3_lg.jpg 2017-11-28T18:02:56-08:00 Introduction 16 "You can find Louisiana in everything," Landreth once told me during an interview, after demonstrating how to play Jimi Hendrix's "Crosstown Traffic" as blistering Cajun blues. Here is more proof--a dozen dispatches from way down in the state, by a writer who has done the miles and vividly caught the people he's heard and met along the way. It is not the Louisiana in everything. But it's close."~ David Fricke -Rolling Stone July 14th 2015 image_header 2017-11-30T00:31:18-08:00 University of Louisiana Lafayette Dupre Library Special Collections Cajun and Creole Music Collection Mouton, Todd. Way down in Louisiana: Clifton Chenier, Cajun, Zydeco, and Swamp Pop Music. University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press, 2015. Many do not realize or often acknowledge the contributions to music that Louisiana has made. Four musical genres of Louisiana crossed Louisiana's state borders and were played in well-known cities such as Chicago, New York, and big states such as Texas and California. The artists being spotlighted from these genres are grouped accordingly. Louisiana Sounds Across the Country feature Zydeco artists like legendary Clifton Chenier and Buckwheat Zydeco; Jazz legends like Louis Armstrong and Wynton Marsalis; Swamp Pop stars like Warren Storm and Bobby Charles; Cajun music legends such as D.L. Mendard and Michael Doucet. These artists are only some of the many great musicians that spread Louisiana greatness across the United States.