1. "Just a Closer Walk With Thee" - Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Man, this puts me right in the French Quarter! Doesn't get much more Nawlins than this.
2. "All the Time in the World" - The Subdudes
Mmm...this is greasy rock-n-roll. It's got a real "Honky Tonk Women" groove to it.
3. "Dirty Lives" - Love as Laughter
My favorite song of 2005! Fits perfectly, though I could just as easily see "Canal Street" on this mix.
4. "Coulee Radair" - The Bluerunners
I'm a sucker for that Zydeco sound, but it's something I need to limit to small doses. This really scratches me right where I itch.
5. "I Walk on Gilded Splinters" - Dr. John
It's a big Mac Rebennack attack! This sounds like it comes from his early Gris-Gris days. Very spooky and voodoo-tinged. I could easliy picture Yaphet Kotto rockin' this during Live and Let Die, while Geoffrey Holder dances around in a skirt made entirely from shrunken heads. Definite Big Easy flavor.
6. "The Clock" - Johnny Ace
Boy, this is oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooold school Bourbon Street right here. My dad used to LOVE this stuff! I inherited a lot of his taste in music, and this is no exception.
7. "I'm a Ram" - Al Green
To the best of my knowledge, this would be our first trip outside Luzianne on this mix, though Memphis ain't but an oyster's throw to the north. What can be said about this legend that hasn't already been said thousands of times before. This is the master at his smoldering funkiest.
8. "Parties in the U.S.A." - Jonathan Richman
Boston's a lot more than a mere oyster's throw to the north, but Richman's good time music is right at home both here on this mix and in the Crescent City. Heck, this would work anywhere people are drinking and dancing, including the oft-referenced Huntington Beach. Hey, isn't that where billy g lived when he hired Dave Wakeling to play a gig in his backyard? Perfect!
9. "Party" - Wild Magnolias
The production on this track is a little too slick. That's the same problem I had with the Robert Randolph album. This type of music is supposed to sound a lot more raw and spontaneous than this. It'll still keep the dance floor shakin', though.
10. "Hey Baby, Quoi Ca Dit?" - Beausoleil
A Texas Tornadoes cover! AWESOME!!! One of the few bands my wife and I mutually enjoy. This is a great cajun reimagining.
11. "Watch It Burn" - Lucero
Great song from a solid band. Thanks to E. Fu for turning me on to these guys. This is what I imagine The Replacements might have sounded like, had they been from the South.
12. "The Thing" - The Dirtbombs
Like Richman, though they may be yankees (Detroit, in this case), they know how to bring the par-tay rock and/or roll! I can't ever get enough of their fuzz-drenched goodness.
13. "Detroit Swing 66" - Gomez
Other than the seedy nature of some of the lyrical content, this track is just REALLY out of place on this mix. The horns at the end might have saved things had they surfaced much earlier.
14. "Taint it the Truth?" - Ernie K-Doe
One of the main reasons my dad became such a die-hard New Orleans R&B fan was his infatuation with Ernie K-Doe's biggest hit, "Mother In-Law." This guy really is one of the standard bearers for the entire genre.
15. "Meet the Boys on the Battlefront" - Wild Tchipitoulas
This is a tasty hybrid of cajun and reggae. It actually works a lot better than you might expect.
16. "Cry to Me" - Professor Longhair
Long before Dr. John ever started tickling the ivories, Professor Longhair reigned as N.O.'s premier piano man. A true original. Great voice, too.
17. "Take Your Drunken Ass Home" - Big Al Carson
A bluesy ball-buster, which is the perfect way to close this mix. I love how it ends with him going, "Man, I'm tired!"
Great job on capsulizing the sound of your region, Tanner! This is exactly what I tried (and failed) to do with my ill-fated Fractured Texas! mixes. You really nailed it, man. I really enjoyed everything here, except for that Gomez track. You've got me craving crawfish etoufee with red beans and rice. I gotsta give you an A.
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