Clifton Chenier (June 25, 1925 – December 12, 1987), a Louisiana French-speaking native of Opelousas, Louisiana, was a Singer, guitarist, and harmonica and accordion player and known as the King of Zydeco music’. He was also billed as the King of the South.
The son of sharecropper and amateur accordion player, Joe
Chenier, and the nephew of a guitarist, fiddler, and dance club owner, Maurice
"Big" Chenier, Chenier found his earliest influences in the blues of
Muddy Waters, Peetie Wheatstraw, and Lightnin' Hopkins, the New Orleans R&B
of Fats Domino and Professor Longhair, the 1920s and '30s recordings by zydeco
accordionist Amede Ardoin and the playing of childhood friends Claude Faulk and
Jesse and Zozo Reynolds. Acquiring his first accordion from a neighbour, Isaie
"Easy" Blasa in 1947, Chenier was taught the basics of the
instruments by his father. By 1944, Chenier was performing, with his brother
Cleveland on frottoir (rub-board) in the dance halls of Lake Charles.
Moving to New Iberia in the mid-'40s, Chenier worked in
the sugar fields cutting sugar cane. After moving, to Port Arthur, TX, in 1947,
he divided his time between driving a refinery truck and hauling pipe for Gulf
and Texaco and playing with his brother. In 1954, Chenier signed with Elko
Records. His first recording session, at Lake Charles radio station KAOK,
yielded seven tunes including the regional hit single, "Cliston's
Blues" and "Louisiana Stomp."
Chenier's first national attention came with his first
single for the Specialty record label, "Ay Tete Fille (Hey, Little
Girl)," a cover of a Professor Longhair tune, released in May 1955. The
song was one of 12 that he recorded during two sessions produced by Bumps
Blackwell, best known for his work with Little Richard.
By 1956, Chenier had left his day job to devote his full-time attention to music, Touring with his band, the Zydeco Ramblers, which included blues guitarist Philip Walker.
By 1956, Chenier had left his day job to devote his full-time attention to music, Touring with his band, the Zydeco Ramblers, which included blues guitarist Philip Walker.
The following year, Chenier left Specialty and signed
with the Chess label in Chicago. Although he toured, along with Etta James,
throughout the United States, Chenier's career suffered when the popularity of
ethnic and regional music styles began to decline. Although he recorded 13
songs for the Crowley, LA-based Zynn label, between 1958 and 1960, none
charted.
In April 1966, Chenier appeared at the Berkeley Blues
Festival on the University of California campus and was subsequently described
by Ralph J. Gleason, jazz critic of the San Francisco Chronicle, as "...
one of the most surprising musicians I have heard in some time, with a
marvellously moving style of playing the accordion ... blues accordion, that's
right, blues accordion."
The turning point in Chenier's career came when Lightnin'
Hopkins' wife, who was a cousin, introduced Chris Strachwitz, owner of the
roots music label, Arhoolie, to his early recordings. Strachwitz quickly signed
Chenier, producing his first single, "Ay Yi Yi"/"Why Did You Go
Last Night?," in four years. Although they continued to work together
until the early '70s, Chenier and Strachwitz differed artistically.
Chenier was the first act to play at Antone's, a blues club
on Sixth Street in Austin, Texas. Later in 1976, he reached a national audience
when he appeared on the premiere season of the PBS music program Austin City
Limits. Also in 1976, Chenier recorded one of his best albums, Bogalusa Boogie,
and formed a new group, the Red Hot Louisiana Band, featuring tenor saxophonist
"Blind" John Hart and guitarist Paul Senegal. In 1979 he returned to
the Austin City Limits show with his new band.
Chenier reached the peak of his popularity in the '80s. In
1983, he received a Grammy award for his album, I'm Here!, recorded in eight
hours in Bogalusa, LA. The following year, he performed at the White House.
Although he suffered from kidney disease and a partially
amputated foot and was required to undergo dialysis treatment every three days,
Chenier continued to perform until one week before his death on December 12,
1987. Following his death, his son, C.J. Chenier, took over leadership of the
Red Hot Louisiana Band.
In 1989, Chenier was inducted posthumously into the Blues
Hall of Fame, and in 2011, was inducted into The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. In
2014, he was a recipient of the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
(Edited from Wikipedia & All Music bio by Craig
Harris)
ReplyDeleteFor “Clifton Chenier - King Of Zydeco
The Rhythm And Blues Years 1954-1960” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/10138724/Clifton_Chenier-1954-1960.rar.html
01 Louisiana Stomp
02 Clifton's Blues
03 Tell Me
04 Country Bred
05 Rockin' Hop
06 Eh, Petite Fille
07 Boppin' The Rock
08 Think It Over
09 The Things I Did For You
10 All Night Long
11 Yesterday (I Lost My Best Friend)
12 Squeeze Box Boogie
13 The Cat's Dreamin'
14 Baby Please
15 Where Can My Baby Be
16 The Big Wheel
17 My Soul
18 Bayou Drive
19 It Happened So Fast
20 Goodbye Baby
21 Hey Ma Ma
22 Worried Life Blues
23 Night And Day My Love
24 Rockin' Accordion
Born in Opelousas, Louisiana, Clifton Chenier was the most rocking squeeze box player who ever lived and it is no exaggeration to call him the 'King of Zydeco'. This collection draws together most of the recordings made during the first six years of his career.
Jukebox hits galore! Backed by washboard, drums, guitar and sometimes sax you won't believe the sound of these tracks. These are the authentic sounds of the bayous played, quite simply by the most popular zydeco artist of all time.
A big thank you to Mijas @ ACM2 blog for original post.
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you.
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