Text Only
Search

 
CD Celebrates Music Of New Orleans


14 April 2005
Levine report - Download 964k - Download (Real) audio clip
Levine report - Download 964k - Listen (Real) audio clip

While Mardis Gras has come and gone and the Jazz and Heritage Festival is weeks away, don't think the city of New Orleans, Louisiana is sitting still, not even for a minute. After all, this is the city where music fills the air day and night, 365 days a year. If you can't travel to New Orleans to enjoy the sights and sounds, don't despair. One new CD will make you feel as though you're standing on the corner of Bourbon Street and Orleans.

<i>Putumayo Presents: New Orleans</i>
Putumayo Presents: New Orleans
You don't have to be a spectator at Jazz Fest to experience great New Orleans music. Nor do you have to book an expensive hotel room overlooking the French Quarter. With the release of New Orleans, you don't even have to leave home. Just close your eyes and listen to this voice that's been delivering authentic New Orleans music for more than 30 years, Doctor John.

promo dr john 150
Doctor John
Doctor John, playing "Basin Street Blues," is one of the hearts and souls of New Orleans. Having grown up on the backside of the French Quarter, he absorbed everything from second-line jazz (brass-band street parade), Dixieland and southern blues to honky-tonk, swing, funky soul, and his own brand of voodoo music called "gris gris".

New Orleans was also home to Louis Armstrong.

As influential with his voice as he was with his trumpet, Louis Armstrong is so revered that a statue in his honor stands proudly in Louis Armstrong Park. Not a bad tribute for someone who spent his childhood singing for pennies on the streets of the notorious Storyville district.

Others like Louis Prima, the Preservation Hall Hot 4, Doctor Michael White, Topsy Chapman, Doc Cheatham and Nicholas Payton round out the new CD, New Orleans. The collection is one of five discs from Putumayo World Music dedicated to Louisiana's rich musical heritage: Zydeco, Cajun, Louisiana Gumbo, and a retrospective of songs from seven solo albums by 30-year-old New Orleans "trad" jazz trumpeter and vocalist Kermit Ruffins.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Dr. John's New CD Provides a Taste Of New Orleans
Kenny G Releases Long-Awaited Duets Album
George Benson's Still Breezin' Along
Jazz Saxophonist Mindi Abair Explores Early Musical Influences on Come As You Are
Jazz Vocalist Ann Hampton Callaway Goes Slow
2004 Another Solid Year for Jazz
 
  Top Story
Major European Interest Rate Cuts Fail to Rally World Markets  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
US Auto Companies Appeal to Congress for Help  Audio Clip Available
Rice Says Pakistan Committed to Mumbai Investigation
Israeli Soldiers Drag Jewish Settlers From House in Hebron  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Declares National Cholera Emergency  Audio Clip Available
Russia Set for Immediate Response to Positive US Signals  Audio Clip Available
Bombers Strike as Iraq Gives Final Approval of US Pact
Canadian PM Shuts Down Parliament to Avoid No-Confidence Vote
UN Security Council Has 'Cautious Optimism' for Afghanistan's Future  Audio Clip Available
Bangkok Airport Back in Operation, But Economic Pain May Linger  Audio Clip Available
S. Korean School Isolates N. Korean Defectors to Better Integrate Them  Audio Clip Available
Measles Deaths Worldwide Fall by 74 Percent  Audio Clip Available
NASA Delays 2009 Mars Mission Due to Technical Problems  Audio Clip Available