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Post new topic Cajun vs C&W and Cajun won...
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Author Topic:  Cajun vs C&W and Cajun won...
Tom Quinn


Post  Posted 13 Oct 2005 11:28 am    
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Had a strange/sad conversation a few weeks back at the West Sacramento Moose Lodge. This is a great place, once way out in the country along the Sacramento River. But urban sprawl is closing in fast.

I went to see some guys up from Lousiana playing a Cajun gig -- a 10-button accordion, a fiddle and an acoustic guitar. Period. They had the crowd -- admittedly Cajun music fans -- up and dancing all night long.

It was good music for sure, simple and very danceable. The guy who books gigs for the club came over and asked if I was playing these days. I guess my reputation preceeded me... -L-

I said I played accordion and had bought a pedal steel to play some C&W, and would be happy to get a guaranteed good band in for him. He said Cajun was fine but don't bring a country band around. I was completely surprised and asked why? He said C&W brought the wrong kind of crowd and "those bands" were too loud and hard to dance to.

Now go figure...

In the late 60s, 70s and early 80s, I played most nights in some crowded honkytonk. The music was a mix of hard country, country rock and the odd rock 'n roll. What we lacked in harmonies, we made up in raw energy.

People danced til they puked! -L- Bobby Lee would be at Marty's Top-of-the-Hill one weekend and I'd be up there the next. Must have been a dozen decent Country-ish bands in Mendocino/Sonoma Counties back then, and maybe four or five steel players north of San Francisco.

I never thought I'd see the day a C&W band was turned down because "they bring the wrong crowd." Admittedly, I am no spring chicken, but can still pick and I can pull a bender Tele just fine, and getting people to drink beer and dance was always job one. But to think I have a better shot at getting gigs playing an instrument I have only been working on a few years is pretty sobering...

Course I could tune the bottom neck to open G and play steel in a Cajun band, but that would be cheating! :- )

[This message was edited by Tom Quinn on 13 October 2005 at 12:31 PM.]

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Billy Wilson

 

From:
El Cerrito, California, USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2005 12:15 pm    
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Tom, I've been involved in the Northern Calif. Cajun and Zydeco scene for over 20 years and nothing in your post surprizes me in the least. The folks in Sacramento and down here in the Bay Area who cajun dance are comfortable dancing only to that type of music. The first time I played a dance on accordion I knew 3 tunes. I played 'em over and over and the folks just kept right on dancing! So go on ahead and get you a 10 button windjammer and go over to that West Sac. Moose Lodge and play to a packed dance floor. Oh, and don't forget to bring your steel tuned to an open G with the root on top.

Once I even brought Vance Terry to one of those things and had him sit in on a couple of Western Swing type of things. The dancers just couldn't get him out of there fast enough. When the band was playing one of their typical one chord jams Vance had this to say: S##T!! One chord!!! Let me play some of that. I could play the s##t out of that. I wouldn't have to think about the chords!!
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Tom Quinn


Post  Posted 13 Oct 2005 1:17 pm    
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Hey Billy, how are ya? :- ) I already have five of those boogers in the keys of Bb, C and D. Ya know, I don't think it is so much the one chord thing as the propulsive beat in Cajun/Creole music.

A bit back when Ed played down at the Eagle's hall in Alameda -- you were in the band -- the place was rockin' to simple two-steps and waltzes. And that joint is basically a Zydeco haunt.

I love C&W. Back in the day, my hippie friends thought I was nuts, but I got WAAAAAY more out of playing biker bars, logger joints, bayside fishermen dives -- the whole works. I didn't care if I played the Caspar Inn again. And forget those outside love-in gigs with the 20-minute bongo solos... -L-

But something got lost along the way. Face it, the chops to play current Nashville music are pretty trick. You need some tight harmonies, superior pickin' and the ability to pump a live feel into music now unfortunately on the fringes of the FM dial, at least in these parts.

Cajun/Creole/Zydoco aka Louisiana French music has its own chops parameters. But underneath, it is still a blue-collar music for blue-collar people to go out and dance, drink and have a party.

Man, I would give anything to bring a dance-hall country band to any of these places, and play hardcore -- I'm thinking DeRailers here -- C&W for the folks. But if they won't even let me in, then bon ton roulet!

You and I need to get a band together and switch off between steel and accordion. Get Maureen to sing and play too!

Tq
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