Avant dernier tour du Grand Jeu, aprés un thème polémique mais peut-être le plus riche entre tous, cette fois c'est La dernière séance et comme tout dans la vie est une dualité, j'ai pensé justement comme ça, donc au lieu de la dernière on aura la première, la première séance d'un génie de la musique. Dés le début Dr. John nous a montré, donné de son génie et l'a répandu dans toute son oeuvre, et il continue un aprés les autres à nous en gratifier!
Although he didn't become widely known until the 1970s, Dr. Johnhad been active in the music industry since the late '50s, when the teenager was still known as Mac Rebennack. A formidable boogie and blues pianist with a lovable growl of a voice, his most enduring achievements have fused New Orleans R&B, rock, and Mardi Gras craziness to come up with his own brand of "voodoo" music. He's also quite accomplished and enjoyable when sticking to purely traditional forms of blues and R&B. On record, he veers between the two approaches, making for an inconsistent and frequently frustrating legacy that often makes the listener feel as if "the Night Tripper" (as he's nicknamed himself) has been underachieving.
In the late '50s, Rebennack gained prominence in the New Orleans R&B scene as a session keyboardist and guitarist, contributing to records by Professor Longhair, Frankie Ford, and Joe Tex. He also did some overlooked singles of his own, and by the '60s had expanded into production and arranging. After a gun accident damaged his hand in the early '60s, he gave up the guitar to concentrate on keyboards exclusively. Skirting trouble with the law and drugs, he left the increasingly unwelcome environs of New Orleans in the mid-'60s for Los Angeles, where he found session work with the help of fellow New Orleans expatriate Harold Battiste.Rebennack renamed himself Dr. John, the Night Tripper when he recorded his first album, Gris-Gris. According to legend, this was hurriedly cut with leftover studio time from a Sonny & Cher session, but it never sounded hastily conceived. In fact, its mix of New Orleans R&B with voodoo sounds and a tinge of psychedelia was downright enthralling, and may have resulted in his greatest album.
He began building an underground following with both his music and his eccentric stage presence, which found him conducting ceremonial-type events in full Mardi Gras costume. Dr. John was nothing if not eclectic, and his next few albums were granted mixed critical receptions because of their unevenness and occasional excess. They certainly had their share of admirable moments, though, and Eric Clapton and Mick Jagger helped out on The Sun, Moon & Herbs in 1971. The following year's Gumbo, produced byJerry Wexler, proved Dr. John was a master of traditional New Orleans R&B styles, in the mold of one of his heroes, Professor Longhair. In 1973, he got his sole big hit, "In the Right Place," which was produced by Allen Toussaint, with backing by the Meters. In the same year, he also recorded with Mike Bloomfield and John Hammond, Jr. for the Triumvirate album.
The rest of the decade, unfortunately, was pretty much a waste musically. Dr. John could always count on returning to traditional styles for a good critical reception, and he did so constantly in the 1980s. There were solo piano albums, sessions with Chris Barber andJimmy Witherspoon, and In a Sentimental Mood (1989), a record of pop standards. These didn't sell all that well, though. A more important problem was that he's capable of much more than recastings of old styles and material. In fact, by this time he was usually bringing in the bacon not through his own music, but via vocals for numerous commercial jingles. It continued pretty much in the same vein throughout the 1990s: New Orleans super sessions for the Bluesiana albums, another outing with Chris Barber, an album of New Orleans standards, and another album of pop standards.
In 1994, Television did at least offer some original material. At this point he began to rely more upon cover versions for the bulk of his recorded work, though his interpretive skills will always ensure that these are more interesting than most such efforts. His autobiography, Under a Hoodoo Moon, was published by St. Martin's Press in 1994, and in 1998 he resurfaced with Anutha Zone, which featured collaborations with latter-day performers includingSpiritualized, Paul Weller, Supergrass, and Ocean Colour Scene.Duke Elegant followed in early 2000. Additional albums for Blue Note followed in 2001 (Creole Moon) and 2004 (N'Awlinz: Dis Dat or d'Udda). Sippiana Hericane, a four-song EP celebrating his beloved hometown of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, arrived in November of 2005. Mercernary, an album of covers of songs made famous by Johnny Mercer, appeared on Blue Note in 2006. City That Care Forgot followed in 2008. The Night Tripper persona was revived for 2010's Tribal, which featured guest spots from Derek Trucks,Allen Toussaint, Donald Harrison, and the late Bobby Charles. Dr. John also contributed to French electronic artist Féloche's international hit single "Gris Gris John" the same year.
The most exploratory and psychedelic outing of Dr. John's career, a one-of-a-kind fusion of New Orleans Mardi Gras R&B and voodoo mysticism. Great rasping, bluesy vocals, soulful backup singers, and eerie melodies on flute, sax, and clarinet, as well as odd Middle Eastern-like chanting and mandolin runs. It's got the setting of a strange religious ritual, but the mood is far more joyous than solemn. AMG.
listen here
merci ,muy bueno
ResponderEliminarHI Carlos, bien vu pour le contre post ! le premier et très certainement le dernier de cet deuxième édition du Grand Jeu.
ResponderEliminarLe Dr John incontournable ! J'adore ses 5 ou 6 premiers albums sur Atco. Contenants (quelles pochettes - tiens faudra qu'on fasse un thème pochette pour la troisième édition) psychédéliques pour contenus qui ne le sont pas moins et à la sauce bayou.
Oui j'ai remarqué, et un choix très bon ce End of the World, moi j'avais pensé tout au début à plusiurs bandes sonores, d'ailleurs je poste un de Vangelis qui est ecellent, j'avais pensé à Easy Rider, The Last Waltz, le Temps des Gitans et surtout Apocaplyse Now (qui est bien rempli de perles qui font partie de notre mémoire sonore).... mais je me suis dit... d'abord selon le thème ... les bandes sonores étaient admises... ce qui fait penser que celles qui ne le sont pas ... aussi, pour cela j'ai posté Morphine (leur dernier album enregistré avec Mark Sandeman avant sa mort) ou The Nice (qui est auusi une collection qui sert bien comme un aperçu vif et trés bon de leur travail)... et autres vont venir... puisque quand on réveille la bête il est des fois difficile à l'arrêter! bon en tout cas mon choix est comme on le sait tombé siur Dr. John, j'avais le link ptêt à m'en servir... eeheeeehehe! :)
ResponderEliminarHello .
ResponderEliminarGris-Gris Gumbo Ya-Ya est mon morceau favori du Doc, posté chez Jimmy sur un Absolute Beginners.
Ce disque, posté aussi lors de la dernière édition du Grand Jeu, est incandescent du début à la fin, au diable le hors-sujet contre-post ou je ne sais quoi .
Le Doc enregistre en ce moment son prochain album avec Dan Auerbach aux manettes, incandescence ...
EWG
Ah! Je savais pas qu'il avait été posté dans la 1ère edition du jeu, sinon j'aurais posté quelque chose ... en tout cas... moi aussi je l'ai posté à plusieurs reprises dans mes diverses versions de Musicology ... je peux pas m'en passr.... oui oui, merci pour ton commentaire.
ResponderEliminarTu as de la chance que j'adore le Doc, parce que là, on est joliment dans le hors-sujet total!!!
ResponderEliminarJimmy
Je viens de faire une longue prière à Zappa pour la chance que j'ai! Pardon par cette faute inexplicable... mais ça c'est ta faute tu m'as mis sous acide depuis David Bowie! Flashback aprés flashback voilá le résultat! :) à +
ResponderEliminarVoila un qui est digne d'intérêt! http://beyondmusicology.blogspot.com/2012/02/george-harrison-and-friends-concert-for.html.
ResponderEliminar