Categories
blog

Evan Oberla’s Art 4 All

Artist: EVAN OBERLA

Album: Art 4 All

Along with being an active member of Flow Tribe and the New Orleans scene, New Orleans-based Evan Oberla, a Jazz Studies University graduate, has Recorded at the Marigny studios in New Orleans to produce his latest release Art 4 All.

Its October in New Orleans as I am writing this review, and my favorite fall activity is to drive with the windows down, get some cool fall air, and listen to new music driving around Mid-City and Hollygrove. So, grab yourself a drink, snack, smoke and Saints coozy, and ride with me as we trip out on this album. 

The opening track “Art 4 All” brings me back to those golden days of the past at the Maple Leaf bar, headfirst into a book of gonzo journalism, and enjoying the Crescent City sounds of organ funk and progressive indie rock. Setting the tone for the rest of my experience, nostalgic and futuristic notions emanate with strength in all the instruments played. The recording is pleasing to the senses by offering an audio charcuterie of warmth and contemporary production. As I approach the stoplight by Canal and Carrolton, the next track on our voyage is “Connected”, a swinging downtrodden message of life, soul, and universe. It’s connected to a root deep seeded in trials and tribulations, a child-like inner intonation, and the beauty of living in the moment. A crisp nostalgic rhodes piano & swaying summer guitar sound washes over me as I am in an utter trance to hear more. Driving down on my way to Liuzza’s for a cigarette and a beer, the third track “Only” begins to play.

This song has the production and soothing soulful foundations of a Stevie Wonder-type Motown classic. A harmonious brass section and engaging rhythmic composition are alive in this upbeat song. Cinematic visualizations come to mind upon listening; a soundtrack to a street theater in the beginning, the middle transitioning into a ceremonious New Orleans dance that overflows into the CBD. As my drive continues, the sun is just right upon my face, a slight breeze brings all the joyous smells of restaurants and the daily business grind that is Poydras Street. Time to turn up the stereo a bit louder so the commuters can jam with me as they enjoy their lunch breaks nearby.

Next into our journey is the track “What We Needed”, a compelling piano-driven narrative to which the lyrics sing “We lucked out we lost ourselves”. Orchestral cymbal splashes and timpani-esque percussion drive the mood of this song, a call out for feeling and reconciliation. 

I park my car down St. Charles near Please You restaurant, move the album to my iPhone and put in my ear buds. Time to listen to the next song from Evan’s album titled, “Movin on”. While enjoying a gyro and a big shot cola, I stare into the Lower Garden District scenery while being serenaded by this song’s 70’s groove. A musical landscape of “All 4 Love” is present throughout my mind. Incredible vocal harmonies lather in rich warmth audio perfection. It is a suitable experience for vinyl audio consumption if I ever heard. I get into my car and head back up towards the Marigny. Next up on the album, and roaring on my car stereo, is the song “Pivotal”, which brings that electro drum swank and swagger feel into the center of the singer/songwriter genre and lyrical direction that I have come to love of Evan Oberla. 

“Pineapple Juice“ brings us to the latter half of Art 4 All. Summer-laden oracles of collective sounds, whilst on a island or inland, flood me ears. Picture yourself at a Tiki Bar, the music as the soundtrack, the conversation and moment as your own, guiding into nirvana as the midnight oil burns. Finally, I arrive at my destination, Webb’s Bywater Music. Time to park and grab some guitar strings, a cigar, and hang with friends; a perfect end to an engaging vibe from this album at its core.

Art 4 All brings the funk and sophistication, all the while keeping a voice of personal exploration and celebration. The sounds of New Orleans reverberate but also become the calming waves unto a shore of new development. The album is available on the band’s BandCamp page, and I highly encourage those who enjoy layered music to give it a try. As in the essence of the band’s album, they sing “…share your gift with the world”. Thank you for being my passenger on this audio journey through New Orleans. For neworleansmusicians.com I am Ryan McKern, see you soon Mon Ami!

Author: Ryan McKern

Editor: David Trahan

evan oberla – vocals, rhodes, piano, acoustic guitar, trombone

rob hinson – bass

george wilde – electric guitar

trenton o’neal – drums

andriu yanovski – b3 organ, rhodes (1, 2, 7)

aurelien barnes – trumpet (3)

ari kohn – tenor sax (3)

joey gurwin – congas (3)

becca duggan – bongos (4)

tracked by rick nelson on June 25, 2021@ Marigny Studios in New Orleans, La.

Additional tracking by Mack Major @ Major Studios in New Orleans, La.

Mixed by Mack Major

Mastered by Joe Berg @ Cherry Creek Music

Produced by Evan Oberla

www.evanoberla.com

Categories
blog

Tribute: Review of Brother Dege’s “Aurora”

In Lafayette during the late 90’s and early 2000’s, the alt-rock scene was bubbling. It had somehow cross-pollinated with the skater community, lending support to local band Santeria who were the bees bringing the buzz. The moody, melodic five-piece used Lafayette as a launchpad, going on to trapse the continental U.S. One member would spread this creative wave further into movies, television, and authorship. Dege Legg was a multi-instrumentalist, author, artist, pedagogue, and observer of raw life that reported his findings through emotional serenades, verses, and visual artistry. His impact was deeply felt by many across multiple generations; myself included. The likes of which will never be seen again.

I first saw Brother Dege in Baton Rouge in 2008. His creativity resonated with me, then and now. And his kindness and depth would help me out of the gutter many a time. To have been able to call him a friend is something that blessed me more than anyone will ever know. So, it is bittersweet that I review his new and final album. Light the fire and gather around, journey with me into the wilderness of souls and audio landscapes that is “Aurora”.

“Like the delta slide guitar stinging like a scorpion tail, the roar of the cicadas over a bayou dream. Like a cab ride out of purgatory, a psychedelic philosophy of hitchhikers’ dreams.”

We cross this bridge together, with Aurora’s opening self-titled song. With a warm, reverb-soaked slide guitar, Dege conjures up images of Louisiana swamps and deserted highways. Tribal, crisp serenity envelopes the listener in time, as syncopated strums are positioned around the resonating slide. They gradually increase their presence, and the full band joins lulling us all away to the next musical destination.

I first heard track two, “Where the Black Flowers Grow”, on Brother Dege’s WWOZ live-in-studio performance late last year. I found it to be a melancholy and beautifully sorrow-ridden song of joy and heartbreak. I got to talk with Dege about the manifestation of this song, and was really impressed how much was involved. The chorus has a powerful hook that delivers a sonic punch of chord progression, picking, and building, leading you from the darkness into the clearing of self-exploration.

“Climbing Ivy (Sleep Beside You)” is the third track on Aurora. Immediately, we are given a wild west feeling accompanied by a southern groove-styled percussion and a rich, smooth grand piano. Dege is in full swing here, showcasing his storyteller vibe with a line like “sleep beside you till the morning takes our tears away”. Journeyman vocals and open-tuning chord progression pair beautifully in this. 

The next song is titled “A Man Needs a Mommy”. Dege Legg always had this uncanny ability to show his Acadiana roots and love for music of all genres, all the while with a tint of darkness among the softness of touch. I can’t help but wonder if this song drew from his own experiences growing up, or perhaps from his experiences as a father. One thing that is present here is the fight to pick up when you’re down.

More than halfway through the journey of Aurora, we stoke the fire and raise our glasses. Because the next song, “Turn of the Screw”, kicks the tempo up and diverts the mood with a southern Cajun-rock ensemble of working-class lyrics. Motivational messages front as listeners are harkened to the sound of a south Louisiana fiddle.

“Ouroboros” gives us a hauntingly beautiful Celtic-influenced fiddle melody, followed by the Brother Dege Brethren full band sound. A crunchy electric guitar protrudes with distortion. Cymbals swoon to-and-fro. The soundscape organizes into a brief declaration of primitive, rustic rhythm and ends almost too soon. Dege always told me Dublin was like New Orleans in many ways and I can picture the Irish countryside when listening to this song. An ode to mourning, this one is an instrumental composition that had me wanting it to last forever.

The seventh song on Aurora is the Americana ballad “The Devil You Know”. A lap steel guitar twangs initially in this song. A piano soon accompanies as Brother Dege’s sandy voice walks us through his intentions and fears. And suddenly, I am transported    from the shores of Ireland to a smokey honkytonk in Tennessee. The bridge is commanded by a beautiful phrasing of piano while the band lines the free space.

“Losers Blues” is that rock and swag sound that can only be cultivated from the deep south, celebrated in true blues fashion. It isn’t about what we have, but what we do not. He speaks of the rat race and the loss of a loser, and how he couldn’t make it stop.

We come to our final track, appropriately titled, “The Longing”. A classic Dege resonator slide song structured with a catchy Lennon, McCartney and Tom York influenced piano progression. As I am listening to this song, I am flooded with emotion, chills, memories, tears, joy, and questions. But that is what we experience when someone is taken from us too soon. Rather than convolute this beautiful song with my own emotions, I choose to acknowledge what it means to me. It is a final goodbye. I will just quote a few of his lyrics for “The Longing”, direct from Dege himself. “I might not belong here, here, anywhere, caught in the way. I am so lost in the longing, such a sad, little day. All the time you’re away for so long.”

This review is in a lot of ways my version of A Love Song for Bobby Long, for it is a swan song letter to my friend. Writing this was an incredibly painful and long process. For doing so meant I finally had to say goodbye to Dege, my musical brother in life and incredible friend. For weeks, I was selfishly not ready to let go. But within this process I found myself excited to share this album experience. Much like David Bowie and Jim Morrison’s final albums, you just have to really think inside and say, what a fucking brilliant note to go out on! All of these songs have Brother Dege’s personal flavor. But they also leave pages open to apply to anyone’s struggles, hopes, dreams, and losses. We can make these songs our own. Much like the perspectives many great painters, the art is for your lens. I hope this review encourages you to seek out Dege’s discography and multi-media catalog. He always loved the folk tradition of passing on songs and stories. There is no doubt in my mind he will be celebrated throughout history. You can find out more about Brother Dege’s life and works at https://brotherdege.net/home.

Author: Ryan M. McKern

Editor: David Trahan

Neworleansmusicians.com

Categories
blog

Congo Square Suite

I began in the aftermath of the Krewe Du Vieux Parade on Decatur Street. Beaming with nightlife, the serenades of satire and counter-culture themes make it one of my favorite Mardi Gras events. Walking past Check Point Charlie’s down to Frenchmen Street, I was greeted by beautiful brass bands illuminating the Crescent City sky with sounds of dance, love, and laughter. As I walked further, I was enchanted by the music seeping through open doorways of nearby nightclubs. Out of a smokey haze, I was greeted by a stranger dressed in full Victorian costume who, unprovoked and without a word, handed me a CD. At first, I assumed he was looking to sell it to me, so I shook my head. But he persisted by saying, “It’s Carnaval brah. You need this blessing”. That CD was Donald Harrison Jr.’s “Congo Square Suite”, an album that came into my life at random, in a most mysterious and beautiful way.

Big Chief Donald Harrison brings us a three-part musical journey with this latest release. At just over thirty-seven minutes, the opus showcases the Big Chief’s conducting and instrumentational genius, blending European influences with tribal, bebop, classical, and jazz fusion genres. The album is from the perspective of a New Orleans native, the Chief of the Congo Square Nation Afro-New Orleans Cultural Group, and a performer in the iconic band, the Jazz Messengers. At a tenure of forty years and counting, his career also includes an honorary doctorate from the Berklee College of Music, and collaborations with artists such as Ron Carter, Billy Cobham, Miles Davis, Lena Horne, Eddie Palmieri, and the Notorious B.I.G. He is also a former tutor to his nephew, New Orleans native and critically acclaimed musician, Chief Xian aTunde Adjuah (Christian Scott).

Back home I sat with a cigar and a glass of Haitian rum accompanied with a lime wedge. Incredibly intrigued, I was ready to begin my journey with this magical gift from beyond. The album started to play, and the first track, “Movement I” (feat. Max Moran, Joe Dyson & The Congo Square Nation Afro-New Orleans Cultural Group) wisped me away to those Sunday afternoon drum circles in Congo Square. White dresses danced, sage burned, and ceremonies brought offerings for the ancestors. “Movement I” drew me into a trance with its pulsating percussion and repeated chants singing out “Congo, Congo, Congo, Congo Nation”. According to the description on Harrison’s Bandcamp page, “This movement is a chant composed by Donald Harrison for drums and voices. The drum and vocal performances showcase an example of the Afro-New Orleans offshoot culture, rhythms, and music forged in Congo Square. Harrison integrates elements of ancient African music kept alive in Congo Square with ideas he learned listening to tribal African field recordings. “

“Movement II”, originally written in 2015, is an epic orchestral performance by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra that was composed and orchestrated by Donald Harrison, Jr. I was quickly transported to another world by a revolutionary recording that completely changed pace with grace and complexity. A monumental achievement in fusion and classical music, it is a stunning cultural piece that implements chants and drum patterns. “Movement II” unifies Harrison’s experiences as the Big Chief of Congo Square with his sixty-plus years participating in Afro-New Orleans culture. I quickly jumped up from my chair, put my cigar down in the ashtray, and began miming conductor motions with my hand. I am not the most versed in classical theory, but the performance and direction given to me by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra was nothing short of robust. It delivered my imagination to a whirlwind of instrumentation, painting an energetic yet soothing picture. Sonically, it demonstrated some of the most innovative ways to incorporate genre mixing while remaining cohesive from start to finish.
With a freshly refilled cocktail, I paced around my apartment for a bit to reflect on my journey thus far. Then I returned to my stereo to finish this wonderful acousitcal quest. Rounding out “Congo Square Suite” is “Movement III”, a suitable closer that shapes together a hybrid of Congo Square tribal rhythms, contemporary Jazz, and classical orchestration. The foundation is set forth as a laid-back samba. Where Harrison’s saxophone dabbles a bit of attitude, Zaccai Curtis’ piano moves to-and-fro between several ostinato phrases, delivering a classic jazz civility. With the samba maintained and two-thirds of the track behind us, Harrison begins to break free with an improvisational style.

Both Harrison and the Congo Square Nation act as custodians of culture while pushing boundaries through experimentation. Harrison assumes the position of master of ceremonies for celebration and meaning. The entire album of “Congo Square Suite” is cinematic, reeling the listener in further with its ability to evolve and morph into a style all its own. Whether you’re exploring the rich history of jazz, classical, tribal, or experimental music, Big Chief Donald Harrison Jr.’s work will be a satisfying, educational delight to the senses. I highly recommend setting aside some time to get lost in the soon to be classic oeuvre that is “Congo Square Suite”.
With my drink empty and cigar extinguished, I closed my eyes and began to dream about the fortunes I have come to encounter in New Orleans. Talks with strangers, new live music experiences, eating and drinking with friends, and unexpected events have become the fortunes I desire. Finding this album amid Mardi Gras festivities seeded sentimental feelings of how lucky I am to live and grow in a very deep-rooted musical and cultural city. Reminding me of the past, grounding me in the present, and brightening my future, I hope the journey of “Congo Square Suite” gives you a similar experience.

Author: Ryan McKern

Editor: David Trahan

Neworleansmusicians.com

From Congo Square Suite, released April 28, 2023
Donald Harrison: composer, orchestration, producer, saxophonist, lead vocals, percussion

Joe Dyson, drums
Zaccai Curtis, piano
Max Moran, bass
The Moscow Symphony Orchestra
Gerald French, percussion
Howard “Smiley” Ricks, percussion
Antione “Tuba Fats”, percussion
Bruce “Action” Jackson, percussion

Categories
blog

Charlie Gabriel’s Album “89”

On a hot and humid New Orleans afternoon, we reminisce of seasons past; musical gatherings and triumphs of old seeping into the wonder and fantasy of young adventure and philosophical starscapes. A treasured plethora of moments recalled through sight, sound, and mind, perhaps delving into that of an older era known to many only through media nostalgia. A summer serenade among the dew drops in. And a perfect twilight ventures into the French Quarter; love and light guiding the way through stoic backdrops of jazz legacy. Preservation and rich tradition bellows from all corners of the Crescent City. With these roots forging into the new, Charlie Gabriel’s solo album, 89, is a trip back in tribute, but also a look forward into the noir and divine majesty of one of music’s most cherished legends in the genre. To further encapsulate the auditory experience that is 89, let us first look back into the mythos and iconic story of Mr. Gabriel.

Clarinetist, saxophonist, and flutist Charlie Gabriel is a fourth-generation jazz musician from New Orleans. Raised in a classically trained musical family that emigrated from Santo Domingo in the 1850’s, Gabriel began playing clarinet professionally with the Eureka Brass Band when he was eleven years old. During World War II his father, clarinetist and drummer Martin Manuel “Manny” Gabriel often sent his son on gigs. Charlie himself became a prominent member of the Preservation Hall Jazz Band in 2009. I would be remiss in my journalism if I did not mention that Mr. Gabriel is a very accomplished chess player and has a wonderful video with the Preservation Hall band leader Ben Jaffe. The two have a wonderful interview and casual conversation over a chess match, which is available on the Preservation Hall YouTube page.

The opening track, “Memories of You”, paints the rainy southern landscape of beauty in solitude. Guitar harmonies and saxophone jazz serenades sparkle this uplifting noir opus that is the album 89, capturing a mixture of crisp guitar jazz theoretics and perfect brass rings compels the mind and soul throughout the album.

Following this is “Chelsea Bridge”, a 1941 compositional Jazz standard classic by Billy Strayhorn. This rendition is celebratory of its creation and displays the range and vibrato of Mr. Gabriel’s voice.

The album’s single is accompanied by a music video. “I’m Confessin’” showcases a sharp-dressed Mr. Gabriel being chauffeured around New Orleans. It also depicts behind the scenes of the writing and recording of 89, and beautiful glimpses of chess games, and bandmates laughing and hanging out. It’s a wonderful glimpse into the creative life of one of music’s most treasured geniuses.

Following the slow, heavenly tones of “I’m Confessin’” is the soothing noir love letter sounds of “The Darker It Gets”, an original song written by Charlie. The tune opens with beautifully strummed jazz chords by the record’s guitarist Joshua Starkman, with Ben Jaffe adding some walking swing dynamics on the upright bass. Charlie Gabriel’s smooth and soothing vocals warm up the mix. As I sit and listen, I am transported mentally to another time; rainy gas lantern-lit streets of New Orleans’ historic district and music clubs with black tie dress codes. A tenor sax solo brings out the sun in our adventure through a wonderful world created by Mr. Gabriel. Heard in the lyrics Charlie sings, “the darker it gets the better I see, the hidden place that’s inside of me.”

The next song on the album is “Stardust”. The 1947 Hoagy Carmichael classic brings the feel and love of the original version while adding a bit of flavor that can only come from New Orleans. Charlie has stated that of the Jazz songs he picked for this album, he never plays them the same way twice. A seasoned player in the game, he exudes musical creativity in a natural and inspiring way.

“Three Little Words” is a shift in sound as we get vibes of flamenco Jazz, cuban beats, tiki lounge, and a beautiful brass solo that will get every fan of music to the dance floor. The song was written by Harry Ruby and Bert Kalmar, and published in 1930. The song would go on to receive fame when it was recorded by Duke Ellington on August 26th, 1930. The musicianship and arrangement on this cover puts further emphasis on how versatile and deep the love of the genre’s history remains. The production on 89 is bright and vibrant while also feeling intimate, and gives the listener a front row ticket to the show.

At 91, Charlie Gabriel is still touring, and playing at Preservation Hall. I had the opportunity to see his performance in Jackson Square for French Quarter Fest in 2023. And without a doubt, he is on top of his game. An in-depth, unique audio experience, 89 is a glimpse into the mind and joy of an artist like no other. Should you choose to listen, 89 will illustrate a stand-out moment in time, as well as cement Charlie as a staple in Jazz. Pick up the chess match and listen to 89 for an amazing adventure.

Author: Ryan McKern

Neworleansmusicians.com

Categories
blog

2022 Year in Review

With 2022 coming to a close, I figured it would be in good practice to reflect publicly how this first year has gone. I think it’s important that everyone consider doing this in their own lives. Taking inventory is a good step toward accountability and establishing goals. So, for the record, and in an effort to bolster transparency, here it goes…

2022 essentially began life for Neworleansmusicians.com, a website that networks and promotes Louisiana musicians for free. I launched publicly and began efforts to onboard Louisiana musicians. The number of possibilities seemed to mushroom exponentially in my mind. This is an exciting phase in the process of any new endeavor. Pure fantasy, where are all your hopes and dreams still reside protected in a bubble. And in that spirit, I was heavy on expanding features for users. I wanted to serve our independent musicians in as many ways as possible. It is within my nature to multi-task (a.k.a. ADHD). So, while site testing and refinement continued, I began interviewing musicians. I taught myself filming and editing basics, and on February 25th our Youtube Channel was born, with our first interview video being published. I also made things to where, when a member posts a video on my site’s video page, it automatically posts to this Youtube Channel. I also started a blog and published its first article on that same day, and linked the blog to our site menu. Two weeks later, I opened a donation page at buymeacoffee.com/neworleansmusic. And two weeks after that I started Neworleansmusicians.com Podcast, publishing NOM’s first podcast episode. For the next two months, I would teach myself where to source merchandise, how to build an e-commerce website, and how to create designs for apparel. In May of 2022, the e-commerce store was launched, eventually housing 112 pieces of clothing, all with original designs. This, too, would be linked in the site menu. Oh, and I created accounts on 12 music streaming platforms with 16 playlists named after genres. I began adding music from members to those playlists. All of these things required getting the word out. So, I taught myself how to create and publish advertisements in bulk.

In the background, my current programmer seemed to be lagging. Having “personal issues” to deal with meant he would be MIA for weeks at a time. And as with any new website, it had its fair share of bugs. So, I began the search for a new programmer. At any rate, between the old one and the new one, I believe I overwhelmed my programmers with so much expansion and inadvertently sacrificed functionality at some point. Technical errors begin to pop up. While I scrambled to get a hold on things site-wide, I was forced to take a look at what my life had become. Whether or not I would be able to keep pace with the demands of a podcast, a Youtube Channel, a blog, 16 Curated playlists on 12 platforms, and a networking website by myself remained to be seen. But media was the one thing in all of this that I could control. It was the one thing I could do myself. So, I felt I had no choice but to meet the demands placed upon myself. This, I decided would consist of a Youtube video every week, an article every two weeks, and a podcast every two weeks.

Halfway through the year I read The Lean Startup by Eric Reis. It explained that the best strategy to starting a business is to create a “minimum viable product”. It was then that I realized I was going about this all wrong. I had created too much too fast. But to withdraw in any form, even in-part, what existed, would in my eyes concede defeat. What already existed needed to remain and be improved upon. Shortly after the arrival of a new programmer, I halted all expansions and began to concentrate on one thing, “flawless operation”. I am still very much involved in this task.

Despite the exorbitant costs associated with NOM, I have adhered to forgoing financial opportunities here and there with the interest of putting the artist first. Instead of selling advertising slots on the Neworleansmusicians.com Podcast, I chose to recognize members of my site, one per episode, playing portions of their work and drawing from a questionnaire I sent to them. I also made graphics and included members on our Youtube videos. I avoided pitches for profit from influencer mills because I felt it muddled the integrity of the site’s purpose. And I resisted the idea of putting the whole site up for sale because I couldn’t let go of the vision; becoming THE resource for independent bands in Louisiana, for free. While preparing to write this piece, I had planned to go tally up all that I have spent creating this website and its tributaries; programming, paying for ads and promotional material, financing subscriptions to necessary services for transcription, editing, etc. But I honestly think I don’t even want to know that number. I can tell you that at this point, it has topped 20K. And this is money spent in order to DIY, because the typical corporate route is financially unattainable for a man raising a family. There are times when I feel as though I am becoming the Howard Hughes of Louisiana’s indie music scene. Whereby the pursuit of this vision is slowly consuming both me and my every resource. Yet seeing these parallels does not dissuade me from the quest. I must take a moment here to recognize something of the utmost importance. It is the way I feel. It’s the sense of accomplishment when I publish that video or that podcast. It’s the sense of camaraderie and the connection I feel with each and every one of my interview subjects. It’s the idea that these people deserve more attention than they are commonly given and that I want to be the one to depict them as human beings, not just juke boxes. And if all else were to fail, in the end, I feel as though the body of work in its wake will have accomplished that.

I also wanted to go dig up all the statistics associated with NOM in preparation for this article. But I feared that bogging one down with charts and graphs would steal light from the overall direction. If there’s one thing I’ve learned from obsessing over things of this sort, it’s this:  in order to get something of meaning from your endeavor, you must put in something of meaning. My time, my energy, my hopes and my vision make up the tokens in this pot. There aren’t statistics out there that narrate this. As for the traffic to the site, to the Facebook Page, and to the store, I learned that throwing money at it conflates numbers, and honest fans will come as long as what you produce is from the heart. But to quantify things, traffic at times has seen over 800 new visitors a month. Although stifled by technical difficulties in the registration process, I was still able to onboard 67 bands and music industry professionals this year. The podcast, launched at the end of March, has cataloged 15 episodes, garnering 750 downloads in 22 countries. The Youtube Channel, started February 25th, has received 1.7K views resulting in 86 hours of watch time and 47 new subscribers. And our Facebook page grew by 431 people, and increased in reach by over 47K people. These are modest beginnings in the grand scheme of things. But with enough support from fans, I know these numbers will grow. And not only do they house works that I can say I am proud to have produced. But they have resulted in increased exposure for deserving musicians at no cost to them.  

 Throughout year one, there have been some highlights that truly elated me along the way. Gaining fans like Cyril Neville, Russel Batiste, and Stanton Moore was a nice surprise. Tab Benoit becoming a site member really made me proud. Enjoying a lengthy phone call from Jan Ramsey was also something I really appreciated. And I can’t mention these things without also mentioning how humbled I’ve been by gracious efforts from people like Clarinetist Ben Redwine, friend Ryan McKern, photographer Charles Dye, and metal band members Jay Gracianette and Blake Lowery. Ben became a member and began sending countless references my way, introducing me to so many people in the music industry. Ryan McKern has written for me in the past and recently volunteered to pass out some advertisements to local venues. Charles, though heavily sought after and quite busy with his own, agreed to come with me on an interview, contributing his stunning work to my articles. And both Jay and Blake have essentially taken me in as one of their own, bringing me face to face with Pat Bruders (Down) and Vinnie LaBella (Exhorder).

All of these things leave me feeling fulfilled, even if it is in my nature to never be satisfied. And honestly, I believe that as long as I continue to put forth an all-out effort to display Louisiana’s music scene and the people that comprise it, recompense will come. Subscription numbers to the podcast and the Youtube channel will eventually result in a few bucks back in the pot. And traffic to the site will yield a few more through advertisements. And who knows, I may one day get a donation from someone to the buymeacoffee page. I have enjoyed creating merchandise designs and, as the word gets out, this site as a brand could become a popular fashion. One thing is for certain… I never want to charge a musician for anything, ever. In my eyes, the talent is the draw. And I would never do anything to take away from that. If you have read this to the end, I truly thank you from the bottom of my heart. Of course, I hope that you check out one of the links within these lines. But above all else, I hope that you support the musicians of Louisiana. Streams, show tickets, album and merch purchases, even likes and follows on social media mean the world to these people. Let’s do all that we possibly can as a community to keep them in our world.