LeRoux - Nobody Said It Was Easy

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Uploaded by on Aug 4, 2010

With a new label, a new album, "Last Safe Place", and a new sense of confidence and vitality, LeRoux is certain to surpass the considerable achievements of their first three albums. Last Safe Place is the sum total of six talents. Like the rich Creole gravy base—roux — from which the band took its name, many musical flavors such as Southern Boogie, Rock, R&B, and Pop are readily identifiable on Last Safe Place.
Leon Medica, the group's bass player and producer, attributes part of the group's current enthusiasm to their connection with RCA: "These people understand our music." That enthusiasm is reflected in Last Safe Place's high spirits.
The album focuses on driving, yet melodic, Rock tunes propelled by blistering guitar lines and direct, no-nonsense keyboard playing, Songs such as "You Know How Those Boys Are", "Nobody Said It Was Easy", and the title song ("Last Safe Place") have the power and the accessibility that put hits over the top. Lead singer (and lead guitarist) Jeff Pollard's vocals and the band's soaring five-part harmonies add sweetening throughout the record as evidenced on their fresh rendition of Buffalo Springfield's "Rock And Roll Woman." While the cut bears the LeRoux Stamp, it adheres closely to the classic original because, according to Pollard, "There's something about the song that doesn't le you stray far."
Pollard, Medica, Rod Roddy (keyboards), David Peters (drums, percussion), and Bobby Campo (horns, flute, percussion) got to know each other as the primary in-house rhythm section at Studio In The Country, a major recording studio in Bogalusa, Louisiana. Staff producer Medica led them in backing up artists such as Clifton Chenier and Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown. For a while, they would work with Gatemouth half the week and devote the other half to their own music. They also spent a lot of time on the road (as the Jeff Pollard Band). In 1977, they backed Gatemouth on a State Department-sponsored goodwill tour of Africa.
Tony Haselden (guitarist) joined the group soon after their signing by Capitol Records in 1977. Changing their name to Louisiana's LeRoux ( the state name was appended for legal reasons but was later dropped), the band released their first album, Louisiana's LeRoux, in the spring of 1978, it yielded a top 40 single, "New Orleans Ladies," which hit #1 in several markets around the country. The release of LeRoux's following albums Keep The Fire Burnin' and Up fueled their popularity with the AOR crowd and audiences alike.
Much of LeRoux's popularity around the country is due to their years of extensive touring: currently, the band is on the road 250-280 days a year. While they do many 2000-seat dates, they have also done numerous major shows with acts such as Bob Seger, Kansas, The Marshall Tucker Band, The Dirt Band, Heart, Journey, The Doobie Brothers, and other top-rank bands. Pollard credits their "live strength" to the fact that they "record and then learn the songs again—really relearn them."
Appearances of special note have included "Mardi Gras in the Superdome" in New Orleans in 1979, Charlie Daniels Volunteer Jam in Nashville in 1980 (the band can be heard on the Volunteer Jam 6 album), and also in 1980, incoming Governor Dave Treen's Inaugural Ball in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The extent of their popularity in the Louisiana area is such that in 1979, LeRoux swept the reader' poll in the Louisiana Rock magazine, "Gris Gris."
Last Safe Place will be the next chapter in the "grassroots bands make good" saga wherein LeRoux is destined to become "The Band In '82."

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  • Jeff Pollard has led countless souls to Jesus Christ...No amount of money and fame can compare to that...ask Phil Keaggy what he thinks!

  • @DMVawter I have to say to all of you that I am a big fan of LeRoux and although I think Jeff Pollard was a wonderful singer, I heard from a friend of the band that Jeff was not a bad boy, but the wild sex and drugs life of the road got to him. So he mustered up the courage to go with the religious calling he always had. Gotta respect the man's choice of his faith over money.

  • @crazyfingers58 I'm gonna go out on a limb and guess that he was a very bad boy before he changed his ways. Oh well, too bad for the rest of the band. I never paid much attention to them back in the day but they could really play.

  • @DMVawter

    When they had a good contract Louisiana's LeRoux ,Pollard got "saved". He dumped his band leaving them holding a contract that became worthless after he left.

    After screwing his fellow musicians out of potential millions of bucks on the new album (which was never released sadly) he became a street preacher that condemns others for living as he had. .

  • @crazyfingers58 Tell us more. The guy had everything to be a major star. Interesting that he chose a different path.

  • Good fucking music brothers, I wish I was around during those golden years. It makes me yearn for it to come back.

  • Somebody said you ate meat loaf...

  • Sadly Jeff Pollard became an A ho.

    Said Jesus told him that he would burn in Hell if he stayed in the band. Ruined the big deal for the others and turned him into a complete jelly head.

    Why did he listen to my yard man anyhow? How did the hired hand know his eternal future?

    Even though I am usually a loving man I grew to despise Jeff over the years. Living down the road from his pious little enclave turned into a nightmare.

  • Living in Phila. Pa., I recall hearing this tune only get played on Wilmington,DE's 93.7 WSTW FM. Great song but none of the Philly stations played it. Always enjoyed listening tothe rimshot stations here. They tend to play stuff the big Philly ones didn't.

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