Thursday, May 28, 2009

PHJB's New Orleans Preservation, Vol.1 - Reviewed in Offbeat by Alex Rawls!

"By now, it can’t be a surprise that there’s a lot that is subtly smart about the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Like the best traditional jazz, little of what’s special about New Orleans Preservation, Vol. 1 is obvious, but a little contemplation reveals a lot. For instance, it’s not until you get to Walter Payton’s faux-Armstrong vocal on “I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate” that you hear the sort of voice you expect on the album. Otherwise, Clint Maedgen and Mark Braud’s vocals suggest that traditional jazz isn’t just music for tourists and older generations. The inclusion of Jimmie Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel #9” and “Choko Mo Feel No Hey” (minus second line drums) says that traditional jazz is an approach to music, not a narrow library of antique texts. The inclusion of Maedgen’s original “Halloween” implies that the music can handle new songs as well. The pleasures of New Orleans Preservation, Vol. 1 aren’t solely conceptual. The ensemble playing is often wonderful, particularly in the ecstatic conclusion to “Tiger Rag,” where Braud’s trumpet and Charlie Gabriel’s clarinet keep threatening to break away from the band and each other, but never stray for good. On the Hall band’s first album since John Brunious’ passing, it also includes a second line of sorts for him, with “Westlawn Dirge” followed by a joyful “What a Friend” near the end of the album.

If nothing else, New Orleans Preservation, Vol. 1 is a public service because it reminds the many young traditional jazz bands in town how it’s done. Many are all energy with accelerated tempos and sometimes manic energy, but the Hall band measures out the music more deliberately, saving the energy so that when it ramps up, it has more impact. “Wish I Could Shimmy …” also tells young bands that nobody, not even Preservation Hall, should engage in Satchmo impressions because they’re always going to be FTO—For Tourists Only—no matter how well the song is played."
-Alex Rawls

LINK TO ORIGINAL ARTICLE ON OFFBEAT.COM
BUY NEW ORLEANS PRESERVATION, VOLUME 1!

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Video Shenanigans: 8 BIT GIRL

A Charming Video We Found On The Interweb:

(Did We Mention That Music Is Everywhere?)

Friday, May 22, 2009

SUNDAY, MAY 31 @ ONE EYED JACKS!


CLICK THE PIC TO BUY YEH TIX!

Don't miss it, folks!
C'mon down and gitcha some Bingo!
And make sure you hangs onto yer card -
Starting Sunday, May 31: The Game Never Ends!
Wanna know more?
Good.
We'll see yeh there!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Help Madd Wikkid Further The NOLA Sound!

Earl Scioneaux, aka The Madd Wikkid, needs your help. Newest member of The New Orleans Bingo! Show, and frequent recording engineer for Preservation Hall Recordings, The Madd Wikkid wants you to visit Kickstarter and help fund his latest project.
Visit the site! Watch the video! Pledge some dough!

Friday, May 15, 2009

More Coverage from Clint's Jazz Fest interview on the Allison Miner Stage!

Jazz Fest leftovers from the Allison Miner interview stage

by Dave Walker, TV columnist, The Times-Picayune
Monday May 04, 2009, 3:22 PM


Alison Fensterstock, Clint Maedgen.

I've got Jazz Fest leftovers from two fascinating Saturday (May 2) interview sessions at the Allison Miner Music Heritage Stage.

The first is from Clint Maedgen, the everywhere man that day (in addition to the interview, he performed on different stages with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band and The New Orleans Bingo! Show).

The questioner was Alison Fensterstock, who got Maedgen talking about his affiliation with Preservation Hall.

Later in the day, Maedgen would sing "Blue Yodel No. 9" -- backed by just tuba and trumpet - with that band in the People's Health Economy Hall Tent. It's a gig he said he could see working for many years to come.

"It's felt like a dream from the very beginning," he said, of his time with the Preservation Hall band. "I feel like an astronaut, honestly. I feel like I've got another 40 years of that in me. Landing in a different reality. 'Oh, we're in Switzerland.'"

Photography is a diversion on the road (Maedgen says he does more than 150 road dates with the band each year). He specializes in pictures of fire alarms and elevator buttons, among other subject matter.

"I've sworn off doing it at the airport," Maedgen said. I've been in that interview room too many times. 'I know it's weird. I just really like buttons.'"

Maedgen also talked about moving away from New Orleans. He currently lives in Los Angeles, his wife's hometown, because it's easier for her there while he's on the road.

"We are moving back," he said. "I've got too much going on here.
"I love it here. This is home, honestly."

Maedgen admitted that practicality wasn't the only motivation for leaving.
"I feel like I ended up seeing a side of the city -- it weighed on me," he said. "It was hard for me to deal with. The things I love about this city aren't really what Bourbon Street is about. No disrespect. It's more about the spirit and soul of this town, the history, the architecture and its people.

"Having to fight through the frat party of it all was starting to weigh on me. I though moving would've helped me with that.

"I'm just going to start working during the day more..."

READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

A funny exchange at the Waffle House on Sunday

An actual exchange between Bingo! and a Waffle House waitress last Sunday:
Waitress: The gentleman at the end of the counter took care of your bill(referring to Ron)
Clint: (in Elvis) I've never met that man in my life man
Madd Wikkid to Clint: Looks like you're gonna have to put out again.
Waitress: I hate it when that happens.(walks away).

































Monday, May 11, 2009

Lake Eden Arts Festival, 05.09.09







Thursday, May 7, 2009

LEAF Festival May 8,9

We're off to North Carolina for a couple of days y'all.  Lake Eden Arts Festival in Black Mountain just outside of Asheville.  It's been a while since the troupe's been in a van together.  It's Quality TIme!  Stay tuned for updates from the road.  BTW-we're on Twitter now.  So?
http://twitter.com/thebingoshow

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

05.03.09

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Clint Maedgen, Jazz Fest MVP?

Clint Maedgen is Jazz Fest MVP?

by Dave Walker, TV columnist, The Times-Picayune
Saturday May 02, 2009, 2:53 PM

Alison Fensterstock, Clint Maedgen.

Lots of people could vie for the title of Hardest Working Person at Jazz Fest, but Clint Maedgen probably owns it Saturday (May 2).

He started his day with an interview on the Allison Miner Music Heritage Stage (Alison Fensterstock moderating).

Then comes a 4:25 p.m. performance with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band in the People's Health Economy Hall Tent.

Then a 5:50 p.m. performance with The New Orleans Bingo! Show on the Lagniappe Stage.

Saturday night, he'll play a CD release party at Preservation Hall.

Early Sunday (May 3), Maedgen and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band fly to New York to participate in Pete Seeger's 90th birthday celebration that night at Madison Square Garden.

How, Fensterstock asked in so many words, do you do it?

"Google Calendar," Maedgen said. "I'm a big, big fan of Google Calendar."

Maedgen's interview stop at the Miner stage was a treat for fans, who got to hear him tell stories about his many musical lives and see him perform (an amazing calliope impersonation using only a glass bottle, then a hypnotic song via toy megaphone).

He even gave tourists a tip: "I encourage everybody to ride around the French Quarter on a bike," said Maedgen, who before joining the Preservation Hall Jazz Band was a food-delivery bike messenger in the Quarter. "It's got a lot to give."

It gave him a YouTube hit, via the bicycle-born video he shot of his Preservation Hall version of The Kinks' "Complicated Life."

"Right after the storm, we did a week in London, and on a random Wednesday night, Ray Davies shows up," Maedgen. "And I'm a big fan of Ray Davies.

"Afterward I got to talk to Ray, and he was pretty cool."

Maedgen got to introduce Davies to John Brunious, the PHJB trumpeter who died in February 2008.

"John was getting off stage and he doesn't know the Kinks from anybody," said Maedgen, who explained to Brunious that Davies had written "Complicated Life."

"You wrote that song?" said Brunious, who appeared in the video. "Have you written any others?"

"And Ray was like, 'A few,'" Maedgen said.

"John leans in and says, 'Keep it up...'"

read the rest of the article

Can we see that video one more time???

Friday, May 1, 2009

04.28.09

from Clint Maedgen's FIREALARM w/Strings
@d.b.a., 04.28.09
Photo by Dino Perucci
(check out more of Dino's beautiful photography here!)