I think the only one of these guys not from Louisiana is Kevin Wimmer. And maybe Chas Justice. And there are an awful lot of young new bands carrying the torch--with electric guitars and drums. And pretty awesome lineage. Check out the Pine Leaf Boys--their fiddle player is Dewey Balfa's nephew and their accordianiste is the son of Marc Savoy. Anyway, Lindzay Young's accent shouldn't be called into question--he's the real deal.
I saw these guys at the Festivals Acadiens Et Creoles 2008 in Lafayette, LA in October. What a party! It was around 85 degrees and people are dancing, sweating, and smiling to every song from every band. These guys, and most of the other great bands, were mainly young people carrying on Cajun music for the future. Ate an alligator Po Boy while there. Type in" Festivals Acadiens 2008" to see more. Cajun music should be prescribed as a remedy for depression.
I shared the stage with BeauSoleil (the group members are brothers Michael Doucet (fiddle, vocals) and David Doucet (guitar, vocals), Jimmy Breaux (accordion), Billy Ware (percussion), Tommy Alesi (percussion), and Mitchell Reed (bass, fiddle). Now tell us that they aren't Cajun; with their guitar and drums !?!
Red Stick = Baton Rouge. Grow up. New generation as life goes on.
@aammirr I know that the men themselves are Cadiens, but their music is only notionally Cadien insofar as they are diluting it by using Anglo-American instruments in order to appeal to a broader audience and 'innovate.' In innovating, they are merely leaving our Cadien legacy behind and hopping onto the maudit anglais bandwagon. There's a difference between evolution within a tradition and change from it.
What language is 'Baton Rouge' ? What language is 'Red Stick' ? 'Ramblers' ?
@Ultraroyaliste - er..so which groups met your culturally narrow definition of innovators? No cultures are pure. Cajun/Cadien culture is a mix of a whole load of influences - moving from France to Nova Scotia, down to Louisiana isn't exactly a process which is going to keep a group of people culturally "pure", now is it? A culture which grows and changes is a living culture. A culture which restricts itself isn't healthy, in many, many ways.
This is what they play to criminals to try to get them to confess--it works 80% of the time
iceaxe56 3 months ago
I think the only one of these guys not from Louisiana is Kevin Wimmer. And maybe Chas Justice. And there are an awful lot of young new bands carrying the torch--with electric guitars and drums. And pretty awesome lineage. Check out the Pine Leaf Boys--their fiddle player is Dewey Balfa's nephew and their accordianiste is the son of Marc Savoy. Anyway, Lindzay Young's accent shouldn't be called into question--he's the real deal.
pinkyrez 1 year ago
I saw these guys at the Festivals Acadiens Et Creoles 2008 in Lafayette, LA in October. What a party! It was around 85 degrees and people are dancing, sweating, and smiling to every song from every band. These guys, and most of the other great bands, were mainly young people carrying on Cajun music for the future. Ate an alligator Po Boy while there. Type in" Festivals Acadiens 2008" to see more. Cajun music should be prescribed as a remedy for depression.
td61753 3 years ago
@td61753 This isn't Cajun music, though, not with the drumset, electric guitar, and that awful accent.
Ultraroyaliste 1 year ago
@Ultraroyaliste
I shared the stage with BeauSoleil (the group members are brothers Michael Doucet (fiddle, vocals) and David Doucet (guitar, vocals), Jimmy Breaux (accordion), Billy Ware (percussion), Tommy Alesi (percussion), and Mitchell Reed (bass, fiddle). Now tell us that they aren't Cajun; with their guitar and drums !?!
Red Stick = Baton Rouge. Grow up. New generation as life goes on.
aammirr 1 year ago
@aammirr I know that the men themselves are Cadiens, but their music is only notionally Cadien insofar as they are diluting it by using Anglo-American instruments in order to appeal to a broader audience and 'innovate.' In innovating, they are merely leaving our Cadien legacy behind and hopping onto the maudit anglais bandwagon. There's a difference between evolution within a tradition and change from it.
What language is 'Baton Rouge' ? What language is 'Red Stick' ? 'Ramblers' ?
Ultraroyaliste 1 year ago
@Ultraroyaliste - er..so which groups met your culturally narrow definition of innovators? No cultures are pure. Cajun/Cadien culture is a mix of a whole load of influences - moving from France to Nova Scotia, down to Louisiana isn't exactly a process which is going to keep a group of people culturally "pure", now is it? A culture which grows and changes is a living culture. A culture which restricts itself isn't healthy, in many, many ways.
efsb 1 year ago
@efsb and @Ultraroyaliste
I think this is pretty good Cajun music , although i like more the traditional style .
Completely agree with " A culture which grows and changes is a living culture. A culture which restricts ..... " .
Instead of quarreling about "traditional " or modern style, people here need to read ( or re-read) the very first comment of td6 1753 below .
Music is made for pleasure , not for discussing the origin of the performers.
Enjoy please , and don't offend eachother.
182BEVERLEI 1 year ago 2
Comment removed
davidpeloquin 4 months ago