Hammond Louisiana has a great band named Invisible Cowboy. They will be playing a three piece version of their band at Benny's Saturday night, December 14th, 2019 from 9 until....
Benny's is right on W. Thomas Street right in town one and a half blocks west of the railroad tracks.
Singer Patrick Catania is one of my favorite performers with a unique voice. His guitar player, Chris Zimmer plays guitar unlike anyone else I have seen and sometimes he "bends" notes in a way that makes me have the "frizzons." Chris Tucker will be on drums. I went to see them Friday after Thanksgiving and saw how Tucker has incorporated some cool South American drumming into his sets. Their song writing is matched with carefully chosen covers that have not been overplayed.
Check them out if you can. Here is a video I made of them quite a while back at Cate Street Pub,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtGtq0fsQVM
Here is a cool promo photo I took of Patrick Catania:
Friday, December 13, 2019
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
Jimbo Mathus Residency in NOLA Feburaru 2019 "My Darlin' New 'Awlins"
Jimbo Mathus has been doing a residency at three spots in New Orleans all February: The High Ho Lounge on Monday Nights, the Spotted Cat Tuesday night with The Little Big Horns, and Chickie Wah Wah on Wednesday nights. Dan and I have been out to almost all of them.
I missed Monday the 11th because I was working on getting Ponchatoula Louisiana to pass a smoke free ordinance and gave a speech before the city council. We did it! Ponchatoula, Louisiana is now smoke free, a plus for musicians. No more breathing second hand smoke in Ponchatoula establishments.
Jimbo did a request type of show at High Ho Lounge on the 4th. I asked him to play "Blue Jumped a Rabbit" and he delivered using a slide to perform the best version I have ever seen him do of it.
The High Ho show on the 11th was graced with having Doctor Sick sit in with his fiddle and saw. Jimbo also had another - unknown to Dan - guitarist with him.
Last night at The Spotted Cat, he delivered some interesting vocals to the Little Big Horns, revue. The list of Dixieland/ragtime songs was impressive and fun. They tackled "My Darlin' New Awlins" - a song made famous by Ron Cuccia and Little Queenie back in the day. ( Dan and I happened to be at Tipitina's that night when Ron and Little Queenie launched that song. I think 1980???? It was a VERY memorable show, one that burned a memory in my brain that I hope I never forget.)
The version that Jimbo sang was amazingly good.
Come out to Chickie Wah Wah on Wednesdays 8:00 show, Monday at High Ho Lounge at 10:00 and see your listing for the Spotted Cat. I am not sure that gig is a regular thing. I will ask tonight and if it is, update this post.
I missed Monday the 11th because I was working on getting Ponchatoula Louisiana to pass a smoke free ordinance and gave a speech before the city council. We did it! Ponchatoula, Louisiana is now smoke free, a plus for musicians. No more breathing second hand smoke in Ponchatoula establishments.
Jimbo did a request type of show at High Ho Lounge on the 4th. I asked him to play "Blue Jumped a Rabbit" and he delivered using a slide to perform the best version I have ever seen him do of it.
The High Ho show on the 11th was graced with having Doctor Sick sit in with his fiddle and saw. Jimbo also had another - unknown to Dan - guitarist with him.
Last night at The Spotted Cat, he delivered some interesting vocals to the Little Big Horns, revue. The list of Dixieland/ragtime songs was impressive and fun. They tackled "My Darlin' New Awlins" - a song made famous by Ron Cuccia and Little Queenie back in the day. ( Dan and I happened to be at Tipitina's that night when Ron and Little Queenie launched that song. I think 1980???? It was a VERY memorable show, one that burned a memory in my brain that I hope I never forget.)
The version that Jimbo sang was amazingly good.
Come out to Chickie Wah Wah on Wednesdays 8:00 show, Monday at High Ho Lounge at 10:00 and see your listing for the Spotted Cat. I am not sure that gig is a regular thing. I will ask tonight and if it is, update this post.
Monday, July 16, 2018
"No Money Down" at Sidney's Saloon NOLA
My favorite cut - No Money Down https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5rpWoJBuD8&feature=youtu.be
We drove into NOLA Sunday night to go see
"No Money Down" at Sidney's Saloon at
1200 Saint Bernard Ave.
The place is a comfortable three room joint with just enough patina to make it funky and not pretentious: a bar room, a pool room and a listening room. Clean restroom, good drinks, and pleasant people were there.
There was street food outside with lots of comfortable benches and lots of people milling about outside and inside.
There was a nice crowd for a Sunday night.
No Money Down is a four piece band shoveling out high powered original psychedelic music balancing a thin line between Surf rock and hard core smash rock, with hints of Americana thrown into the mix.
Since they were on a three band bill their slot allowed them time to throw down six original songs which impressed me.
This four piece band is made up of the following members:
Chuck Burns - Lead singer, guitar
Jake McGehee - Lead guitar
David Gilman - Bass
Karl Tear - Drums
This is my fifth time seeing them play and I am anxiously waiting to see them again.
I really dug Sidney's and I want to go back there again.
Check it out.
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Wednesday, November 9, 2016
The Guardian Angels within: A Memoir of my time with art therapist Ben Ploger
The Guardian Angels Within
By Patricia F. "Patty" McGehee
As a small child I sat many days along side my mother as she
painted many works of art. She always included me in her activities allowing me
to paint my childish paintings to keep me busy and out of her way. She was a
wonderful painter.
As an abused wife, most of Mother's works were destroyed by my abusive father in
rages he threw at her in the apartment. My mother's safe place was the Delgado
Museum of Art in New Orleans.
When I was very small and not in school
as of yet, she would walk with me to City Park
to heal emotionally and spiritually.
There in the cool, serene atmosphere, (yes, there was air condition!)
Mother would dream about becoming a great artist. Delgado calmed her nerves and distracted her
from the terrible life she had.
It was on one of those visits to the Delgado Museum of Art that
I discovered Dorothea Tanning's Guardian
Angels (1946), with the beds covered in crinkled linen, and with the
horrific but also beautiful angels above. I was mesmerized by it. I was both
afraid and comforted that the Angels existed.
Back home, night time brought terror to our home as my
father's demons possessed him. I would think about the Guardian Angels in the painting.
I knew they existed, even though no one
had ever admitted to seeing one, because Dorothea had painted
them. She was the visionary proof in my
life that I was protected.
My parents stayed together their entire lives. Daddy had to
work out issues that had affected him as
a result of being an abandoned child. At the age of 16, he had run away from
Milne' Boys home in New Orleans, changed his age on his birth certificate, and
joined the United States Army. He
became a One Hundred and First Airborne Paratrooper serving over Occupied Japan.
As the years went on Daddy and I became close. He had a huge influence on me
by exercising my intellectual side. He made me read and discuss current events
and National Geographic articles. He suggested books to read
and he selected some for me. Fortunately, I enjoyed reading and I
cherished our time discussing these things.
Mother! Oh Mother. I wish she were still here, for we were
bonded. I miss her every day and treasure the time we had as mother and
daughter. She still talks sense to me within
my own sensibilities. I hear her
voice though me when addressing my daughter with motherly advice.
During the 20th year of my life (1974) I was having
difficulty managing my life's plan. I had spent one year at Southeastern Louisiana
University. I spent another year waiting tables and sewing in a sailboat sail loft living by the
beach in California.
I had also endured two, back to back,
terrible relationships with men. The second relationship left be in a state of
bewilderment. I was living in fear with
the unrealistic belief that if I formed a relationship with a partner, it would
be a violent hell just like what Mother endured during the early years of her
marriage. I had struck out twice and was keeping everyone at arm's length.
Then one day while riding the City Park Avenue Bus in New Orleans I met Van
Seibert. Under his arm was an extraordinary oil painting. I asked him where he
had learned to paint so well. He said he was working with the art therapist Ben Ploger. Henry "Van" Seibert was painting
daily under Ploger's eye at Delgado
Junior College hoping to
heal from PTSD. He had become an amazing painter under Ben and had been
featured in a local magazine called The
Dixie Roto. In New Orleans everybody knew who Van was, but all
he really was interested in was fighting his PTSD in a personal war armed with a paint brush.
I visited Ploger, and
discussed the possibility of becoming his student. He insisted that I always
call him by his first name, Ben. Ben Ploger (1908-1993) was the first Art
Therapy Association's Professional Standards Chair and he was from New
Orleans. At the time Ploger was the Chair of the Art
department and a professor at Delgado Junior College.
At the suggestion of Ploger,
I signed up to be in his Art
Therapy group class at Delgado. He suggested that I give a go at spending a
school year working with him. I agreed.
I enrolled and padded my schedule with a few other courses. I wanted to
make it a worthwhile year. Mornings would be spent in the Art painting studio
with him..
I would get up every morning and go paint in the studio, after
setting up my easel next to Van. There
were others in the group, all of them have names that I can't recall these
days. There were beautiful, but deaf,
twin girls, two other vets, a battered divorcee, and a man whose face was
terribly burned in a car fire. In the late afternoon, I worked part time at a department store.
Ben hovered around us like a busy bee pointing out this and that, things that
had nothing to do with the quality of the work but of the symbolic associations he was able to pick up on. He
would tell me. "Go ahead! Push the paint into the canvas!!! Feel It!"
Then at other times, ask about the nature of the all brown painting I was
painting and why I chose such terrible colors. And he asked, "Why do you
paint the same landscape with a huge crack in the ground over and over?" Or,
"Why are you painting skeletons of dead animals? " I had no
idea why. I had selected a cow's skull off a shelf at random and painted it. He
insisted it was a symbol of the death of something hidden in my inner psyche.
Ben was sure of it. I did not think so.
Across campus, my Psychology professor (whose name escapes
these days) hired me to interview Viet Nam
Vets by asking them 50 questions and recording their answers for research on a book he was writing. He wanted
to know how well they were assimilating
back into civilian life after their war experiences. He paid me two dollars per
interview. At the time, nearly half of the men at school at Delgado were
veterans going to school on the G. I. Bill.
I was set up at a table in the cafeteria and at the end of
the first day there were more than fifty Vets wanting to talk. I was
overwhelmed by it all. I started making appointments to do the interviews and
that made the job more manageable. I needed the money.
It became problematic interviewing the Vets because someone
told one loudmouth where I lived. Suddenly, Vets started showing up at my
apartment just to talk about what had happened to them. It was not hard to find
me. They were all polite and came just to talk about the horrendous things they
had experienced. I found it emotionally impossible to turn them away. I would
bring out glasses of ice water and make them sit with me on the stoop while I
listened to their stories. I would offer verbal comfort, insist that some of the awful things they had to do were what one calls duty. That it was O.K. Some of the things they admitted to were horrible. What they endured was horrific. At the apartment, I was not able to ask the questions since the professor that hired me insisted that I work in the
cafeteria at a table. Instead, it became a time of just being there for the about 25 or so men who
needed someone to talk to.
It became too hard on me. Somehow, I had become The Talk Lady of Delgado and everyone
knew who I was. Van insisted that I go look for a new apartment and move for my
own peace of mind. Instead, I made a sign and posted it on the door warning
people not to disturb me when I was too overwhelmed to deal with it all. That
was the creation of my first healthy boundary. What a milestone! I decided to
move away in May at the end of the school year. My time listening and talking
to the Vets was coming come to an end.
Working with Ben had been amazing and I had made great emotional
progress. We delved into to the family dynamic that shaped the ways I perceived
how relationships should be. I decided to discuss Dorothea
Tanning's painting The Guardian Angels with Ben. Ben was a devout
Catholic. I told him what the painting
meant to me. Ben insisted that the guardian angels are within us and we must protect ourselves. The angels
are only there to lead the way during
our internal turmoil of deciding where our healthy boundaries lie. This was
Existentialism at work. Ben was so pleased with me.
Ben was all wrapped up in Sigmund Freud's ideas and Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche's book Beyond Good and Evil (1886.) I sincerely
tried to read it. Over and over I tried. I would bog down every time I felt Nietzsche
did not understand women. One day I got to a part that said something like
this: A woman should be taken as a possession and if she did not have sex frequently she will become mentally ill! I had reached an epiphany. I chunked Nietzsche's book into the nearest trash
can with force and vowed to NEVER let a man treat me any other way than with respect. In the anger that grew, I coincidentally
lost my fear. I
thought, what could a man from the 1880's know about a modern woman anyway? Ultimately, Ben was right. I had to be led to the right way to
protect myself. The missing key was, most men will treat a woman terribly if they can get away with it. Don't let them. There within me grew the
healthy boundaries that had been missing.
Ben and I discussed over and over the issues I needed to
work on and I was able to finally work out a life plan that was my own and I
felt I could be successful carrying it out. He also taught me how to make sure
the boundaries I was erecting were the ones emotionally healthy for me. At the
close of the school year in May of 1974 I knew my time working with Ben Ploger
had run its' course.
On May 28th, 1975, I quit my job working at the department store. I
packed up my entire belongings and fit them in my car, leaving my mattress
behind in the apartment. It did not fit. I left the key on the counter for the
landlord. I went to the The New Orleans Jazz and festival for the day with all my meager belongings stored in the
car. That evening I drove out of New Orleans to
stay with a friend in Hammond,
Louisiana.
One day a man I knew casually drove by the house where I was
staying in Hammond, Louisiana. I
was sitting on a porch. He turned his car around at the corner and came
back and stopped to visit a while. He was a different sort of man. He showed me
respect and seemed to have my best interests at heart. Today, forty one years
later, I can't imagine my life without
him, for he is my husband. I have never
had to put up boundaries towards him.
And what of Nietzsche, Dorothea's Angels, and Ben Ploger? I have fond memories of Ben. He still talks to me in my dreams, too, just
like Mother, with his white hair and steel grey eyes, piercing my sensibilities.
And the Angels? Metaphorically, they are
still inside me just as Ben had explained.
And the Angels? I visit Dorothea's image of them at NOMA frequently.
Nietzsche? Well Nietzsche, as far as I am concerned, he can
rot in hell.
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Ernest James Zydeco releases "Automatic Harvester"
Late July rolled around and my friend Ernest James shot me a line that he had wrapped up his latest CD "Automatic Harvester." This was just a shot in the arm to get me out of the end of summer funk. I sat around for two weeks waiting for it to come while nervously considering the huge changes in my job, which was about to unfold at the start of August.
The disc came in the mail just as I got wrapped up in getting ready for the opening of the school year. I tried popping into the CD deck on the way down the highway to LaPlace, La. where I teach, but I just could not focus on it while listening to the radio to see if there is a traffic jam up ahead. I like to take in a new CD in one fell swoop. So I shelved it for a couple of weeks and last weekend, having a three day break, I got to listen to it three times in a row, just long enough to feel the power of the drums, the rhythm of the riffs, and the element of a soulful vibrato Ernest has brought into his vocals.
So, this week, now that the school year is under way, I started slipping it into the CD deck during the ride home back up to Ponchatoula. One of the first things I notice right away is that Ernest James Zydeco is slowly losing that hint of California undertone and slipping into pure Zydeco (Except for the cut named "Bulldog.") And there is a tinge more Cajun influence slipping in. I think my favorite cut is "Bulldog," a rhythmic ditty rife with dobro, a funky groove, and a kick ass electric guitar riff that has a Hendrix-like tinge to it. Following slap dab behind it it the purist Cajun sounds on the CD, and possibly is one of my favorite Ernest James Zydeco cuts of all time. "Eh Catin" is a two step featuring the above said vibrato in Ernest's voice that is so captivating.
But what knocks me out about this band is the GENIUS psychic connection to NOLA Mardi Gras Indian Chant music found on a song named "YJ's" a song about drinking beer on Mardi Gras morning. As far as I know, this is ground breaking! Ernest James has taken the Brass Band sound, Mardi Gras Chant music and merged it with ZYDECO!!!
Ernest and I have had several discourses about the emergence of the Mardi Gras scene found in Kansas City, Missouri, where, get this, this band hails from. You can connect up with Ernest at his website: www.ejzydeco.com
Broaden your musical horizons and take the time to check it out. You will be glad you did.
"Automatic Harvester" is recorded by Jamrat records and can be purchased at http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/ErnestJamesZydeco
Patty McGehee
The disc came in the mail just as I got wrapped up in getting ready for the opening of the school year. I tried popping into the CD deck on the way down the highway to LaPlace, La. where I teach, but I just could not focus on it while listening to the radio to see if there is a traffic jam up ahead. I like to take in a new CD in one fell swoop. So I shelved it for a couple of weeks and last weekend, having a three day break, I got to listen to it three times in a row, just long enough to feel the power of the drums, the rhythm of the riffs, and the element of a soulful vibrato Ernest has brought into his vocals.
So, this week, now that the school year is under way, I started slipping it into the CD deck during the ride home back up to Ponchatoula. One of the first things I notice right away is that Ernest James Zydeco is slowly losing that hint of California undertone and slipping into pure Zydeco (Except for the cut named "Bulldog.") And there is a tinge more Cajun influence slipping in. I think my favorite cut is "Bulldog," a rhythmic ditty rife with dobro, a funky groove, and a kick ass electric guitar riff that has a Hendrix-like tinge to it. Following slap dab behind it it the purist Cajun sounds on the CD, and possibly is one of my favorite Ernest James Zydeco cuts of all time. "Eh Catin" is a two step featuring the above said vibrato in Ernest's voice that is so captivating.
But what knocks me out about this band is the GENIUS psychic connection to NOLA Mardi Gras Indian Chant music found on a song named "YJ's" a song about drinking beer on Mardi Gras morning. As far as I know, this is ground breaking! Ernest James has taken the Brass Band sound, Mardi Gras Chant music and merged it with ZYDECO!!!
Ernest and I have had several discourses about the emergence of the Mardi Gras scene found in Kansas City, Missouri, where, get this, this band hails from. You can connect up with Ernest at his website: www.ejzydeco.com
Broaden your musical horizons and take the time to check it out. You will be glad you did.
"Automatic Harvester" is recorded by Jamrat records and can be purchased at http://www.cdbaby.com/Artist/ErnestJamesZydeco
Patty McGehee
Sunday, April 28, 2013
2013 Festival Season
We kicked off our yearly Anniversary whirlwind of music by checking out Tab Benoit at Ruby's Roadhouse on April 22nd. Tab played a very energetic show, which I felt was a bit short and there were no encores which for Ruby's, is a rare event.
Tab said, "You know, a guitar is just a wooden box, so it is just like being inside a guitar here. Playing at Ruby's is like being inside a wooden box. Who does not love listening to music inside a wooden box.?"
Tab says ...we are in a wooden box...... |
Tab Benoit |
We had planned a Lil' Band of Gold gig for the following Saturday. I started looking around to see that there was a second LGB show that was cancelled. I was wondering what was up. I asked around and heard rumors that were hard to believe. I have decided to keep the stories to myself. There is no way to verify them.
Steve Riley |
Friday, April 12th, we went to Lafayette to see Black Bayou Construct at Downtown alive in Lafayette. It was a fun set, but we only saw part of it because we had tickets to see Zachary Richard at the Acadiana Center of the Arts Crossroads series.Roddie Romero was playing guitar for him and Dudley "Cruze" Fruge was on drums. I was excited because I love Dudley's drum style. Dave Torkanosky was on piano. I don't recall the bass player's name as he was a new face to me. It was a very good show. I especially loved to hear some new songs and some old ones also.
I was expecting to get the new CD autographed after the show, but Zack did not come out as he usually does. He was with the film crew. After the show we hung around in the Lobby long enough to greet Dudley and Roddie. Dudley was beaming with excitement to have that opportunity to perform with Zachary again. He had toured with Zack in the past. We had a great visit and planned to go over to Antlers on Jefferson street to catch Michael Juan Nunez play the last part of a set. I don't have photos because the center does not allow them.
Next: Michael Juan Nunez.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Ernest James Zydeo releases a new CD - 3 Steps from La La
I got another interesting message from my Zydeco friend Ernest James who lives up in Kansas City Missouri. (See my previous blog January 2010.) He wanted me to review his new CD -3 Steps from La La.
I had become interested in this band when Valcour records made their previous CD the CD of the month, EVEN THOUGH THEY WERE NOT RELEASED ON VALCOUR RECORDS! That's what got my attention in the first place.
I was checking post on the Facebook feed and saw an interesting thing. Ernest James posted he was playing an Octoberfest gig and I laughed to myself. Zydeco music is a far cry from German Polkas. Then a few days later Ernest posted a funny statement. He a said a man approached him in the middle of the gig and this is what was said: (Copied from his FB Page ....)
" Quote from Tulsa man: "Heard what chu boys was playing right dare an I said, "Them German boys been eatin' some crawfish!"
*firm handshake at Oktoberfest
I got a full belly laugh at that. I was ready for the new CD. After communicating with Ernest back and forth, he sent it to me. I have it in the car CD deck and have been digesting every note of it song by song. It is VERY GOOD.
The Zydeco influence is still strong, but this CD is very complex. Starting out with the lead cut, "Shake it Sugaree," each cut is strong and well thought out. As I stated in the previous review of his two previous CD's, there is an undercurrent of melodies that are California influenced, such as the guitar work on "Sugaree."
My favorite cut, "Supposed to do" is pure blues. This is a song about evading temptation. I love it, especially when he professes to the seductress, " If you knew what I had you would understand......"
The intro to this song starts out with clear as a bell guitar work, has a silent moment then spins into low down gutsy groove. There are sophisticated drums and lead guitar licks that knock me out. It is hard driving, in a slow gutteral way that hits home. It slows down and then builds up suspense over and over again. You can see the mental struggle the singer faces and -SNAP- you feel his dilemma. The chorus is sung with two part harmonies which is brilliant.
Ernest is very good at writing lyrics with some tongue in cheek witty sexual innuendo. On "Woa Sally" he sings about Sally taking him "into into the kitchen and turning out the lights, then "turning on the stove," then into the basement, going "underground," and other two meaning phrases that are a delight. The lyrics are sung in a very catchy pleasing way. The second song with innuendo that I like is "Janitor" which starts out with a clever statement after a ringing doorbell, "Did someone call for the janitor?" followed with some clever two meaning lyrics.
Jaisson Taylor vocals ramps it up on "Zydeco Mother's day" with some hard core blues. If you like the Blues, you will adore this cut.
The whole CD is filled with extremely good guitar work, well thought out lyrics and harmonies, and attention to detail.The song "Red cross People" is an example of story telling, emotional insight into the plight of the rail riders and homeless in America, and the fact that there is little consideration for these people. It is told with a hint of humor. The mean, psychedelic guitar work at the end highlights the cluster-funk of angst these people must go through. There are layers upon layers of guitar work towards the end that express the jumbled up feelings that these people must endure. Jaisson Taylor sings one soulful line that really hits home at the end "I didn't hurt nobody....."
Ernest ends the CD with the Gospel standard, "Glory Glory" ramped up with accordion that is complex, pleasing, and sure to be played over and over again if you pop it into you CD player. This is like a cross between Dixieland and Zydeco woven together in a way I have never heard before. It is delightful.
Their CD release party will be held on November 30th, 2012 with their first live performance with their fiddler:
BB's Lawnside BBQ
1205 E. 85th Street
Kansas V City, Mo
64131(816)
You can access this CD by going to
http://www.cdbaby.comArtist/ErnestJamesZydeco
the band's website is www.ejzydeco.com
Patty McGehee
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