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Shout Factory's four-CD box set Doctors, Professors, King and Queens: The
Big Ol' Box of New
Orleans represents a perfect storm when it comes to reissues. This box set
is musically exciting, a
complete representation of its subject matter, and just plain fun to listen.
Not only that, it fulfills a
vacuum in the market, because until this collection, one would think that there
hasn't been any new
recording of music in New Orleans since the Meters in the early 1970's. In
fact, New Orleans has been
just as vibrant, diverse and productive during each and every era of recording
from 1923-2004 and this
collection proves it!
The collection takes a major risk that pays off, of not thematically organizing
each of the four compact
discs in this collection. Not bowing to the obvious track order solution of
chronological order or by
genre, the set weaves effortlessly from track to track without any other theme
than great performance
after great performance. Some ebb and flow exists between the more traditional
to the more up-
tempo, but it works and works brilliantly.
The package includes eighty-five recordings and a top of the line eighty-plus
page book that includes
beautiful photographs and insightful essay about the city and each artist and
their recordings and what
we at the Vault love the most detailed liner notes and credits. The Vault
appreciates when we know who
each instrumentalist is, the producer, engineer, studio and city, the date of
the recording, the original
record it was released on and the original recording company. It is this
attention to detail that makes a
good boxset an excellent boxset.
The set kicks off with current New Orleans jazz ambassador and great chef,
Kermit Ruffins informing us
of his wish Drop Me Off in New Orleans. From there the set visits recordings
from different era and
styles.
The first category of artists included comes from those that helped define dawn
of the recording
industry and jazz. Included are some of New Orleans favorite sons, Louis
Armstrong (with the Hot
Seven on Potato Head Blues and with his Dixieland Seven on the final track
Do You Know What It
Means To Miss New Orleans?), Jellyroll Morton, Sidney Bechet and His New
Orleans Feet Warmers and
Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band. All four and their various sidemen brought the
sounds of the Crescent City
out for the rest of the world to hear, appreciate and emulate.
The next major era represented comes from the independent record label
explosion in the late 1940's
and 1950's when New Orleans was a hot bed for so much recording, especially in
the fields of Rhythm
and Blues, Blues and Rock and Roll. This is where a tremendous breadth of
styles and artists are well
documented (from jazz to R&B, from Cajun to rock and roll) in this collection.
Artists with some major
national hits included are Fats Domino, Clarence Frogman Henry, Ernie K-Doe,
Huey Piano Smith,
Clarence Gatemouth Brown, Al Johnson, Frankie Ford, Chris Kenner, Little
Richard, Eddie Bo, and Lloyd
Price. Here the boxset focuses on these artists' big hits, except for Little
Richard (who while not from
New Orleans, developed his career and recorded his major hits within the city
limits), whose Rip It Up
represent his New Orleans feel better than perhaps Tutti Frutti or Good
Golly, Miss Molly. Other
artists of this era include The Hawketts, George Lewis' Ragtime Band, Shirley &
Lee, Smiley Lewis and
Benny Spellman.
Another set of artists and their recordings are culminated from the timeless
performers that are not
defined by hits, eras or genres that are/were the cornerstone of the Crescent
City. The types of
performers that as soon as you hear their name, images of the sites, sounds and
smells (you can almost
smell the jambalaya or pot of crawfish boiling) of the Big Easy come to mind.
This category includes
Professor Longhair, James Booker, Dr. John, Allan Toussaint, Kermit Ruffins,
Rebirth Brass Band, Dirty
Dozen Brass Band, The Meters, Irma Thomas, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, The
Neville Brothers, Dave
Bartholomew, The Wild Magnolias, Ellis Marsalis and Pete Fountain.
Also well represented here are today's lifeblood of the New Orleans scene that meld the funk and soul of yesteryear with the sounds from all over. These modern day New Orleans musical ambassadors include the super funky Galactic, Swedish roots rocker Anders Osborne, blues pianist all-star Marcia Ball, all star jam band The Radiators, jazz young lion James Andrews, brass band music for the new millennium from Coolbone, the soulful and excellent songwriting of Mem Shannon (probably the funniest song on the album, his take on the proliferation on our streets of SUV's) and the musical melting pot sounds of The New Orleans Klezmer All-Stars. While not hailing from the city limits of New Orleans, this collection pays serious attention to the sounds that come from a two-hour trip west of New Orleans to Southwest Louisiana; Cajun and Zydeco music. Yes, the boxset revolves around the music that came from within the Big Easy, but there is no doubt that the music, culture and cuisine from Cajun and Creole country are as part of the fabric of New Orleans than anything else. Therefore including music from artists such as Clifton Chenier, Beausoleil, Lil Queenie, Boozoo Chavis, Geno Delafose, Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys, Beau Jocque and the Zydeco Hi-Rollers (with the great 'Give Him Cornbread'), Bruce Daigrepont and The Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band completes the picture of the musical scene of New Orleans. While I could spend time pointing out some artists that the Vault feels deserves placement in the collection (Ok, for fun, we'll throw in a few: Los Hombres Caliente, King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, the Subdudes, Better Than Ezra, Victoria Williams (whose recent record has a stellar version of Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans?), Rockin Sidney, Keith Frank and the Soileau Zydeco Band, Tab Benoit, Juvenile, The Balfa Brothers, Astral Project, Nicholas Payton, Amede Ardoin, and the list goes on and should include the Swamp Pop genre). The Vault could go on, but this just illustrates the point that there is so much great music and artists that call New Orleans home and to include them all would be a cumbersome twenty disc collection, which could lose the impact and flavor this boxset so excellently achieves. The Vault cannot stress enough the great feel and class this collection has and the fact it encompasses so many styles, genres and eras and it flows so well from beginning to end - we have no higher praise. Maybe, the great folks at Shout Factory are just setting us up for an addendum release or a sequel; if that's the case bring them on, we love it! Track Listing: Disc 1
Disc 2
Disc 3
Disc 4
Personnel:
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