Connected

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 61:54

eMusic Features

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Scene: New Orleans Funk, 1960-1975

By Austin L. Ray, eMusic Contributor

For better or worse, New Orleans will always be known as a party city, thanks in no small part to the two-week celebration of parades, beads and general Bacchanalia known as Mardi Gras. And like any great party, NoLa has excellent food and music in spades. In fact, The Big Easy is an embarrassment of riches when it comes to recorded song. Widely celebrated as the birthplace of jazz, New Orleans introduced the world to… more »

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New Orleans Piano Professors

By John Morthland, eMusic Contributor

They played for (often lavish) tips in the bordello parlors of turn-of- the-century Storyville at the same time jazz was being born. They had huge repertoires and kept the music "hot" and rhythmic, to help make sure patrons stayed in the mood. Thanks to the "piano professors," as they were called, the 88's became the primary instrument in New Orleans music. Jelly Roll Morton, one of the fathers of jazz (he'll tell you he created… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Allen Toussaint’s name became synonymous with New Orleans music, even though he didn’t seem to “do” the records his name was on as producer, arranger, or writer on records by artists such as Ernie K-Doe or Irma Thomas. This is his first studio album in at least a decade, and it is a very worthy effort of all self-penned songs that seem to be a mix of old and new (if not in age, at least in feel). He is supported by an extremely worthy cast of the finest New Orleans musicians. Funky material like “Funky Bars,” “Ahya,” and the rolling gait of “Oh My” stands next to much softer pieces that require a more versatile voice. There are times when his voice doesn’t have that reaching pain, for instance, that Aaron Neville gave to “Wrong Number.” On most cuts, his easy delivery is just what is called for, and his rollicking piano is always perfectly matched to the song. This is not a disc of memories, though it may bring up a few, it is fresh new funk and roll from the city where American music has always stretched to new levels. – Bob Gottlieb

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