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THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS
For nearly seven decades, The Hackberry Ramblers have
played a toe-tapping blend of Cajun music and western
swing, with a dash of Gulf Coast swamp-pop, rock &
roll, and classic country. This exuberant sound burst's
forth from the band's Grammy-nominated album Deep
Water (The Hot Biscuits Recording Company, # HOTBI
5001.) Besides the core members of The Hackberry Ramblers,
Deep Water features several distinguished guests.
Marcia Ball shares lead vocals on "C. C. Rider"
and "Les blues de Bosco," a Cajun
classic that captures her debut recording in French.
Rodney Crowell shares lead vocals on "Frankie
and Johnny" and sings back-up on a truly unique
version of "Proud Mary." Michael
Doucet plays fiddle on several numbers including the
aptly-entitled "Steppin' Fast." And
Jimmie Dale Gilmore shares lead vocals on the title
track, the Bob Wills classic "Deep Water."
These guest performances are historic inter-generational
collaborations with a band whose history dates back
to 1933, when the group was founded by fiddler Luderin
Darbone and accordionist Edwin Duhon, the spry gentlemen
who still lead the band today. Beyond their appeal to
dancers, The Hackberry Ramblers brought two important
innovations to south Louisiana music. They blended the
Cajun repertoire with Anglo-American western swing and
country songs, and introduced electronic amplification
to area dance-halls via a sound-system powered by the
battery of Darbone's idling Model-T Ford. In 1935 The
Hackberry Ramblers signed with RCA Bluebird. Their hits,
released on 78 r.p.m. records, included "Jolie
Blonde" and "Wondering."
When Cajun music waned during the 1960s the Ramblers
contemplated retirement. But cultural crusader Chris
Strachwitz, the guiding force behind Arhoolie Records,
encouraged the band to stay active, recording them anew
in 1963 and reissuing some of their Bluebird classics.
The pace picked up with the advent of the Cajun music
and zydeco renaissance. Since 1988 The Hackberry Ramblers
have performed annually at The New Orleans Jazz &
Heritage Festival and appeared at diverse events nationwide
including Superbowl '96, The Grand Ole Opry, and The
Newport Folk Festival. The Ramblers also play weekly,
at home, in Lake Charles, LA. Their string-band sound
has evolved over the years as electric guitarist Glen
Croker adds a swaggering honky-tonk tinge that includes
blues, R & B, and rockabilly. The current line-up
also includes bassist Johnny Faulk and drummer/producer
Ben Sandmel.
By the early 1990s The Hackberry Ramblers' rich history
and undiminished vitality began to pique media interest.
Cashbox stated flat out that "The Hackberry
Ramblers has to be one of the coolest bands in the world,"
while the Dallas Morning News called the band
"party animals" who "traffic in jubilation."
The French journal Big Bear echoed such sentiments
with "ils sont irrestisitibles." This groundswell
inspired The Hackberry Ramblers to record their first
album in thirty years. Cajun Boogie (released
in 1993 by Flying Fish Records) generated national TV
and radio profiles on Entertainment Tonight,
Music City Tonight, NPR's Weekend Edition,
Fresh Air, and World Café,
plus acclaim from The New York Times, Rolling
Stone, and Musician. New Country astutely
commented that "the Ramblers rock like nobody's
business" and Goldmine raved that "these
guys just tear into it all with a fervor unmatched by
few bands even half, or a third, their age!!"
Deep Water, released in 1997 on Hot Biscuits,
sparked equal enthusiasm. The Ramblers were featured
on global television on CNN Showbiz Today,
and The New Yorker succinctly described them
with "One word: hot." The New York Times
previewed a date at The Bottom Line by calling the Ramblers
"expert purveyors of a good time." No
Depression speculated that "Maybe Ponce de
Leon was just a state too far east when he went looking
for the fountain of youth." USA Today
praised the band's ability to "still kick out the
jams." "So joyous that it sounds like Bourbon
Street after closing time on Saturday night," raved
the Chicago Tribune, while Musician
extolled Deep Water's "vitality and folksy
charm," and CMJ echoed that "Sixty
years of setting skirts a-twirling might make The Hackberry
Ramblers the longest-running band in the country, but
they're also one of the best, too." Men's Journal
lauded Deep Water as "the definition of
ragged-but-absolutely-right," and Gambit Weekly
dubbed it "a raucous sampler, brimming with more
energy than many recordings from today's young pop stars."
1998 was highlighted by the Grammy nomination and an
appearance on MTV Live, a Memorial Day performance
at The Kennedy Center in Washington, and a feature article
in the annual Southern Music Issue of The Oxford
American. 1999 saw The Hackberry Ramblers' long-awaited
debut on The Grand Ole Opry, along with a ceremony celebrating
the donation of historic instruments to The Country
Music Hall of Fame. The new century began auspiciously
with performances at Festival International de Louisiane,
in Lafayette, LA; The Southern Foodways Symposium in
Oxford, MS; a co-billing with The Flatlanders; and the
Ramblers' appearance in the documentary film Rhythm'
n' Bayous, directed by Robert Mugge. Highlights
for 2001 included The Double Decker Festival in Oxford,
MS; The Ft. Lauderdale Cajun/Zydeco Crawfish Festival;
and Taste of Chicago.
In 2002 the band debuted in Europe at The International
Cajun & Zydeco Festival in Raamsdonksveer, Holland
(with support from The Fund for U.S. Artists at International
Festivals and Exhibitions); squeezed in an "Accordion
Kings" concert in Houston, produced by Texas Folklife
Resouces; returned to Europe for The Country Rendez-vous
in Craponne-sur-Arzon, France; and debuted at The Newport
Folk Festival, in Newport, R.I. (with support from The
Southwest Louisiana Convention & Visitors Bureau.)
On September 18th, Luderin Darbone and Edwin Duhon received
a National Heritage Fellowship from The National Endowment
for the Arts, in Washington, DC, followed by a full-band
performance at a concert by the diverse assemblage of
award recipients. The Ramblers finished this banner
year by appearing at The Lake Eden Arts Festival in
Black Mountain, NC.
On Friday, February 21, 2003, NBC's Today Show broadcast
a feature a story on The Hackberry Ramblers, shot on
location in Louisiana, with a guest appearance by Marcia
Ball. The Ramblers appear on the new CD anthology Thacker
Mountain Radio, a live album recorded in the literary
confines of Square Books, in Oxford, MS; such noted
authors as Larry Brown and William Gay also appear on
the compilation, reading from their work. Arhoolie Records
has just released the CD Luderin Darbone's Hackberry
Ramblers: Early Recordings, 1935 - 1950. In addition,
the Ramblers contribute two songs to Boozoo Hoodoo,
an upcoming tribute album to the late zydeco accordionist
Boozoo Chavis, slated for release in February on the
Fuel 2000 label. The Hackberry Ramblers will perform
at The French Quarter Festival, in New Orleans, on Sat.,
April 12, at The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival
on Thursday, April 24, with additional dates TBA. 2003
will also see the debut of Make 'Em Dance,
a full-length documentary about the Ramblers, directed
by film-maker John Whitehead. And The Hackberry Ramblers'
critically acclaimed Cajun Boogie has just
been re-released on Hot Biscuits (HOTBI-5002-2).
The Hackberry Ramblers are having big fun on Deep
Water - so dive on in with them! (March, 2003)
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