
 |
From left to right: Johnny Farque, Edwin Duhon, Ben Sandmel, Johnny Faulk, Luderin Darbone, Glen Croker. |
HACKBERRY RAMBLERS TO BE FEATURED IN A NEW BOOK
ABOUT CAJUN MUSIC
Along with many other Cajun musicians, past and present, The Hackberry Ramblers
are the focus of a chapter in the new anthology Accordions,
Fiddles, Two Steps and Swing : A Cajun Music Reader. Edited
by historians Ryan Brasseaux and Kevin Fontenot, Accordions, Fiddles, Two
Steps and Swing has just been published by the Center
for Louisiana Studies at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. In
addition to chapters by Ryan Brasseaux and Kevin Fontenot, contributors include
Barry Ancelet, John Broven, Erik Charpentier, Brenda Daigle, Mike Leadbitter,
Lauren C. Post, Ann Savoy, and Michael Tisserand, among many others.
The Hackberry Ramblers are featured in Accordions, Fiddles, Two Steps and
Swing via a history of the band written by fiddler Luderin Darbone in 1991.
Darbone speaks with considerable authority on this topic, since he co-founded
The Hackberry Ramblers in 1933 and has led the band ever since. Darbone's essay
follows a detailed introduction by the Ramblers' drummer and manager, Ben Sandmel. Sandmel's
previously-published work on Louisiana music includes Zydeco! , published
in 1999 by the University Press of Mississippi. He
is currently at work on a book about the New Orleans rhythm & blues singer
Ernie K-Doe.
Accordions, Fiddles, Two Steps and Swing: A Cajun Music Reader will
be the focus of a panel discussion at the Louisiana
Book Festival at 11:00 AM, on Saturday, October 28th, at the State Capitol
building in Baton Rouge, LA. Kevin Fontenot will moderate the panel, with participants
Barry Ancelet, André and Louie Michot, and Ben Sandmel.
THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS SAY "MANY THANKS!" TO THE NEW ORLEANS MUSICIANS
HURRICANE RELIEF FUND
The Hackberry Ramblers send a grateful "merci beaucoup" to the New
Orleans Musicians Hurricane Relief Fund for recent financial assistance to the Hot Biscuits Recording Company.
The funds help ensure that the Ramblers' albums Cajun Boogie and Deep Water will
remain in print.
Fourteen months after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, there is still much need for
relief in south Louisiana. Donors to the New Orleans Musicians Hurricane
Relief Fund and the New
Orleans Musicians Clinic can rest assured that their money will be used wisely.
HACKBERRY RAMBLERS DOCUMENTARY TO MAKE BIG-SCREEN
DEBUT IN GOTHAM ON FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15
The acclaimed documentary film Make
'Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers Story,
will make its New York big-screen debut on Friday,
September 15, at 7:00 PM, at the Lyceum, 227 4th
Avenue in Brooklyn. The screening of the hour-long
film will be followed by a Q & A session with
the film's director/co-producer, John Whitehead, www.fretlessfilms.com, and
co-producer Ben Sandmel.
The New York debut of Make 'Em
Dance is one of dozens
of happenings in a three-month multi-media arts event
known as SurgeFest: New Orleans In Higher Ground.
SurgeFest honors the artistic traditions of
hurricane-ravaged South Louisiana, where The Hackberry
Ramblers are revered as elder statesmen of the arts.
For additional information about the Surge Film Festival,
please visit www.myspace.com/surgeneworleans
and www.brooklynlyceum.com
Edwin Duhon, co-founder of The Hackberry Ramblers,
passed away on Sunday, February 26, 2006. He was
95. In 1933, Duhon formed The Hackberry Ramblers along
with fiddler Luderin Darbone, who survives him. Initially,
Duhon played acoustic guitar; he went on to play electric
guitar, piano, upright bass, harmonica, and accordion,
at various times, focusing solely on the accordion
in the mid-1990s. Duhon's last performance was in
November, 2005, at the Shaw Center for the Arts in
Baton Rouge. Although quite ill, he gave it one hundred
percent, as always.
In 2002, Edwin Duhon and Luderin Darbone were co-recipients
of a National Heritage Fellowship, awarded by the
Folk Arts Panel of the National Endowment for the
Arts.
Edwin Duhon will be sorely missed. Visitation will
begin at 11:00 AM, on Tuesday, February 28, at the
Hixson Funeral Home on Sampson Street in Westlake,
Louisiana ( 337-436-5507, Driving
Directions to Westlake Location ) with prayers
at 7:00 PM. The funeral will be held at 10 AM on Wednesday,
March 1.
DOCUMENTARY ON THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS WINS A
MAJOR AWARD AT SAVANNAH FILM FESTIVAL
On October 30, 2004, Make
'Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers' Story received
The 2004
Savannah Film Festival HBO Films Producer Award.
Make 'Em Dance was co-produced by John Whitehead
and Ben Sandmel, and directed by John Whitehead. The
award, which is the top honor bestowed at the Savannah
Film Festival, was presented by the festival's Executive
Director, Danny Filson.
The films in consideration were juried by a distinguished
panel of five judges: Bill Dawes, an actor whose roles
in New York theater premieres include Lord Alfred Douglas
in Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde
and whose credits include a dozen independent films;
Abe Gurko, playwright, actor and creator of ABE-NYC
Events, an event-planning venture; Sophia Karteris,
vice president of programming for the regional entertainment
network Turner Broadcasting System Inc.; Michael Mailer,
president of Bigel/Mailer Films, a New York-based company
specializing in star-driven films that bridge the gap
between Hollywood and independent productions; and Nancy
Spears, director of marketing for Warner Home Video,
the world's largest distributor of video entertainment.
The Awards ceremony capped off eight days of film fervor
in Savannah, with over 60 screenings, numerous panels
and workshops, and appearances by such luminaries as
actors Kathleen Turner and Peter O'Toole, director Norman
Jewison, and critic Roger Ebert. Established in 1998,
the festival is presented by The Savannah College of
Art and Design, and has quickly gained stature as a
prestigious event in cinematic circles.
Future screenings of Make 'Em Dance are forthcoming.
In other Hackberry Ramblers news, co-founders Luderin
Darbone and Edwin Duhon will jointly receive a Living
Legend Award from the Acadian
Museum in Erath, Louisiana, in a ceremony at 4:00
on Saturday, December 11, 2004.
Johnny Faulk, The Hackberry Ramblers' bass player since
1979, passed away on Sunday, October 17. He was 79.
Visitation will be held from 3:00 - 10:00 PM on Wednesday,
October 20, at the Johnson Funeral Home, 4321 Lake St.,
Lake Charles, LA, telephone 337-478-8687.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, October 21,
at 2:00 PM, also at the Johnson Funeral Home, and condolences
to the family may be sent there.
Johnny's final performances with the Ramblers took place
in New Orleans, on Sunday, October 10 at Tipitina's
and Monday, October 11 at the Prytania Theater, in conjunction
with the New Orleans Film Festival. As always, he radiated
joy and enthusiasm from the bandstand.
Johnny Faulk will be deeply missed. The Hackberry Ramblers
will remain active, and all future performances will
be dedicated to Johnny Faulk's memory.
THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS OCTOBER ODYSSEY: Performances
in New Orleans, Oxford MS, and Nashville, plus Film
Festival Screenings of the Acclaimed PBS Documentary
Make Em' Dance!
October, 2004, will be a busy month for The Hackberry
Ramblers, those venerable practitioners of Cajun music,
western swing, and timeless dance-floor fun. The band
will perform in New Orleans at 5 PM on Sunday, October
10, at Tipitina's weekly fais do-do dance, and play
a short set at 8:30 PM on Monday, October 11, at the
Prytania Theater. Thursday, October 28, at 5 PM finds
the boys playing in Oxford MS, on the live program
Thacker
Mountain Radio, presented by Square Books.
And on Saturday, October 30 the Ramblers will play
at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville (www.countrymusichalloffame.com)
at 1 PM. The Ramblers' trip to Nashville is made possible
with support from the Southwest Louisiana Convention
& Visitors Bureau, www.visitlakecharles.org.
The band's October 11 set at the Prytania Theater
will follow a New Orleans Film Festival screening
of the acclaimed documentary Make
'Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers' Story,
at 7 PM. In addition, music journalist Michael Tisserand
will interview the band; Tisserand wrote a memorable
profile of the Ramblers for the 1998 Southern Music
Issue of The Oxford American.
Accommodations for the Ramblers' trip to New Orleans
are provided courtesy of Maison St. Charles Hotel
& Suites, www.maisonstcharles.com.
The Austin, TX, Film Festival (www.austinfilmfestival.com)
will screen Make 'Em Dance on Thursday, October
14, at 7 PM at the Regal Arbor Theater and on Sunday,
October 17, at 4:45 PM at the Dobie Theater.
On Saturday, October 16 Make 'Em Dance will
be shown in Las Vegas, NV at the AARP
Life@50+ Event and Expo at 2 PM at the Sands Expo
& Convention Center.
The
Savannah, GA, Film Festival presents two screenings
of Make 'Em Dance: on Tuesday, October 26,
at 12:30 PM at the Trustees Theater, and on Saturday,
October 30, at 10 AM, at the Lucas Theatre.
And the Ramblers' performance at the Country Music
Hall of Fame will follow a screening of Make 'Em
Dance in the Ford Theater. Director and co-producer
John Whitehead will attend both screenings in Savannah;
co-producer Ben Sandmel will attend screenings in
New Orleans, Austin, Nashville, and October 26 in
Savannah.
In other Hackberry Ramblers news, the band contributes
a song to the upcoming album Christmas Gumbo, set
for November, 2004, release, on Flambeau Records (
www.christmasgumbocd.com)
Christmas Gumbo is a collection of original new songs
written by Greg Barnhill and Will Robinson, and performed
by such Louisiana luminaries as the Ramblers, Allen
Toussaint, the subdudes, Irma Thomas, Arts Neville,
BeauSoleil and Aaron Neville.
HACKBERRY RAMBLERS DOCUMENTARY TO SCREEN AT OXFORD,
MS., FILM FESTIVAL ON FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 2004
The acclaimed documentary, Make 'Em Dance: The
Hackberry Ramblers' Story, has been accepted
for screening at the Oxford
Film Festival in Oxford, MS . Oxford enjoys longstanding
renown as an inspirational gathering-place for writers,
and as a leading center for the study and celebration
of Southern regional culture. It's also a town that
has made The Hackberry Ramblers feel especially welcome. The
band has performed in Oxford at the Southern
Foodways Symposium, on the live radio program
Thacker
Mountain Radio and even in the seemingly
unlikely confines of a sushi restaurant known as Two
Stick. In addition, the Ramblers appear on the CD
anthology Thacker
Mountain Live , released by one of Oxford's
great cultural institutions, Square Books. Other
notable performers on Thacker Mountain Live
include writers Larry Brown, William Gay, and Beth
Ann Fennelly, who all do readings from their own work.
Make 'Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers' Story
will be screened at the Oxford
Film Festival on Friday, June 18, at 4:30 PM at Two
Stick, 1007 Harrison
Avenue, 662 - 236-6639.The film aired nationally during
January, 2004, on the PBS series Independent Lens
; please scroll
down for additional, detailed information.
HACKBERRY RAMBLERS DOCUMENTARY TO AIR NATIONALLY
ON PBS!
Next week, television viewers around America can pull
up a chair for the in-depth documentary Make 'Em
Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers Story. (Most PBS
stations will air Make 'Em Dance on Tuesday,
January 13, with some exceptions; check local listings
or visit pbs.org/independentlens/makethemdance.)
The one-hour film, which will air as part of the series
Independent Lens, was directed by John Whitehead.
It traces the Ramblers' rollicking seven-decade career
from the group's formation in the tiny town of Hackberry,
Louisiana, during the depths of the Depression, up
through their Grammy nomination for the 1997 album
Deep Water (on the Hot Biscuits label), and
footage from recent performances on MTV and in Europe.
Founded in 1933 by Luderin Darbone and Edwin Duhon
- the two spry gentlemen, now in their nineties, who
still lead the band today - The Hackberry Ramblers
brought many important innovations to the music of
South Louisiana. They were the first band to combine
Cajun music, sung in French, with Anglo-American country
music, sung in English; over time, they also incorporated
elements of jazz, blues, rockabilly and swamp pop.
In addition, the Ramblers were the first band to use
electronic amplification in southwest Louisiana, performing
through a Sears-Roebuck "public address"
system. Because few rural nightspots had electricity
back then, the P.A. was often powered by Luderin Darbone's
idling Model-A Ford. Then, as now, The Hackberry Ramblers
had one goal: make 'em dance!
More than a film about music and musicians, Make
'Em Dance chronicles the seventy-year friendship
of Darbone and Duhon - who make quite an unlikely
"odd couple" - and their varied interactions
with band-mates Glen Croker, Johnny Faulk, and Ben
Sandmel. There are poignant scenes, band tiffs, and
Spinal Tap moments. There are historic photos
from the Ramblers' earliest days, eight millimeter
film from a California concert in 1965, and contemporary
footage from the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival,
the Grand Ole Opry (both on stage and backstage),
and a backyard crawfish boil in the band's hometown
of Lake Charles, Louisiana. There are guest appearance
by band buddies and musical collaborators Marcia Ball,
Rodney Crowell, Michael Doucet and Jimmie Dale Gilmore;
expert commentaries by folklorists Barry Ancelet,
Ann Savoy, and Nick Spitzer. Outlaw-country icon Billy
Joe Shaver is the principal narrator, and there is
even a cameo appearance by New Orleans R&B singer
Ernie K-Doe.
Make 'Em Dance: The Hackberry Ramblers' Story
is fun and often funny, informative and insightful,
rowdy yet sentimental, visually rich, and full of
great music. It goes inside one of America's most
distinctive ethnic enclaves while celebrating the
universal joys and quirks of human nature. And it
will make you want to dance, too!
On Sunday, January 11, two events in New Orleans will
celebrate the national broadcast of Make 'Em Dance.
At 2 PM there will be a debut screening at the Ogden
Museum of Southern Art www.ogdenmuseum.org
including a brief performance by The Hackberry Ramblers
and Q & A with director John Whitehead. Then at
5 PM, the Ramblers will perform at Tipitina's www.tipitinas.com.
The Executive Producers of Make 'Em Dance
are Gabrielle Vetter, and Peggy Scott Laborde, for
WYES-TV. Funding was provided by: Vetter Communications
Corporation; The National Endowment for the Arts;
The Louisiana Division of the Arts; The New Orleans
Jazz and Heritage Festival Foundation; The Arts and
Humanities Council of Southwest Louisiana. Make
'Em Dance was produced in association with WYES-TV,
New Orleans; produced by Fretless Pictures, which
is solely responsible for its content; and presented
by the Independent Television Service (ITVS), with
funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS RETURN TO FRANCE FOR FESTIVAL
PERFORMANCES AND THEIR DOCUMENTARY DEBUT!
2003 has been a banner year for The Hackberry
Ramblers. The band kicked off its seventieth anniversary
with a feature story on NBC's Today Show
that aired on February 21. Following rave-review spring
appearances at the French Quarter Festival and the
New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, July finds
the Ramblers returning to France to for the Festival
des Nuits Cajun et Zydeco de Saulieu and the Louisiana
Film Festival in Saulieu, Burgundy ( www.bayouprod.com
).
On Thursday, July 31, at 9:00 PM, this multi-media,
music-and-film event will present the world premier
of Make 'Em Dance! The Hackberry Ramblers' Story.
Directed by John Whitehead of Saint Paul, MN -- whose
previous films include: Wannabe: Life and Death
in a Small Town Gang -- Make 'Em Dance!
traces the Ramblers' saga from the early 1930s through
today's excitement and accolades. Make 'Em Dance!
combines historic footage and photographs with recent
performances including the Grand Ole Opry, the New
Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, and a backyard
crawfish boil, along with some of the real-life, Spinal
Tap moments that are universal among all traveling
bands. In addition there are guest performances by
band buddies Marcia Ball, Rodney Crowell, and Jimmie
Dale Gilmore, with narration by Billy Joe Shaver.
John Whitehead will discuss Make 'Em Dance!
after the debut screening, followed by a brief performance
by the Ramblers. But you don't need to hop a plane
to France to see this fine film. Make 'Em Dance!
will air nationally on PBS, on the network's critically
acclaimed Independent Lens series. The exact
air date, anticipated for later this year or early
in 2004, will be announced soon. For additional information
on Make 'Em Dance!, please visit www.itvs.org
and www.vettercommunications.com.
Make 'Em Dance! was produced by Fretless
Pictures in association with WYES-TV, New Orleans,
and the Vetter Communications Corporation of Baton
Rouge, LA.
Then on Friday, August 1st, The Hackberry Ramblers
will headline the Festival des Nuits des Cajun et
Zydeco de Saulieu with a full-length concert performance.
(The band appears thanks to support from The Fund
for U.S. Artists at International Festivals and Exhibitions.)
If last year's tumultuous response in Craponne-sur-Arzon
is any indication, this year's return to France should
be memorable. Additional performance dates for 2003
include the Tall Stacks Festival in Cincinnati, Ohio,
on Saturday, October 18th ( www.tallstacks.com).
THE HACKBERRY RAMBLERS SPRING INTO 2003 ON NBC's TODAY
SHOW!
Marcia Ball joins in to celebrate the Ramblers'
seventieth anniversary

The Hackberry Ramblers. circa 1959
|
2003 marks The Hackberry Ramblers' seventieth
anniversary; this legendary Cajun/country band was
formed back in 1933, and still features the two founding
members -- fiddler Luderin Darbone, age 90, and accordionist
Edwin Duhon, age 92. Impressed by the Ramblers' rich
history and rambunctious, youthful vitality, Today
Show correspondent Bob Dotson traveled to Louisiana
recently and spent three days with the band filming
interviews and live performances. Dotson's feature
story on The Hackberry Ramblers aired on Today
on Friday morning, February 21. As Dotson astutely
noted, "These five guys together bring about
400 years of experience to the stage -- but they still
play with the enthusiasm of a teen-aged garage band!"
Live footage for the Today story was shot
at the weekly Rendez-vous des Cajuns program
in Eunice, LA, and at McGee's Landing, in the great
Atchafalaya swamp outside of Henderson, LA. Marcia
Ball made a special guest appearance with the band
at McGee's, as she did on their Grammy-nominated album,
Deep Water, released in 1997 by The Hot Biscuits
Recording Company (HOTBI-5001.) Marcia's connection
with the Ramblers goes back even further though --
her parents used to hire the band to play at dances
in Vinton, LA, in the early 1960s. For more info on
Marcia, visit www.marciaball.com
and www.alligator.com.
In addition to Marcia -- an honorary Rambler -- the
band's line-up also includes guitarist/emcee Glen
Croker, bassist Johnny Faulk, and drummer/producer
Ben Sandmel.
In other recent news, The Hackberry Ramblers appear
on the newly-released CD anthology Thacker Mountain
Radio, a live album recorded in the literary
confines of Square Books, in Oxford, MS (www.squarebooks.com);
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 anthology
Luderin Darbone's Hackberry Ramblers: Early Recordings
1935 - 1950 (www.arhoolie.com).
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 (www.fuel2000.com)
. The Hackberry Ramblers will perform at The French
Quarter Festival in New Orleans on Saturday, April
12 (www.fqfi.org)
and at The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival
(www.nojazzfest.com)
on Thursday, April 24. And 2003 will see the debut
of Make 'Em Dance!, a full-length documentary
about the Ramblers, directed by independent film-maker
John Whitehead, in association with Vetter Communications
of Baton Rouge, LA (www.vettercom.com).
These exciting events come on the heels of a big year
for the band in 2002, including debut performances
in Holland, France, and at The Newport Folk Festival;
a National Heritage Fellowship for Darbone and Duhon,
conferred by the National Endowment for the Arts;
and feature coverage in USA Today and on
National Public Radio's Weekend Edition.

The Hackberry Ramblers. circa 1935
|
Since 1933, 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. Seventy years later,
the Ramblers are thrilling audiences around the world
- from New York's Bottom Line to The Grand Ole Opry,
from The Broken Spoke in Austin to The New Orleans
Jazz & Heritage Festival, from The Kennedy Center
in Washington to The Strawberry Festival at Yosemite,
from Cajun-zydeco festivals in Holland to country
music extravaganzas in France, to The Newport Folk
Festival. This rollicking dance-hall feeling also
bursts forth from the Hackberry Ramblers' Grammy-nominated
Deep Water, with guest artists Marcia Ball,
Rodney Crowell (www.rodneycrowell.com),
Michael Doucet (www.rosebudus.com/beausoleil)
and Jimmie Dale Gilmore (www.jimmiegilmore.com).
"The Ramblers sound as spry and spicy as they
did back in '36." - Rolling Stone
"Think Dylan's return to Newport after 37 years
was historic? For pure musical joy, it couldn't compare
to The Hackberry Ramblers' first appearance at Newport
in their 69-year history." - The Boston Herald
"These agin' ragin' Cajuns are party
animals" who "traffic in jubilation."
- Dallas Morning News
"Ils sont irresistibles!" - Big Bear
(France)
"These guys just tear into it all with a fervor
unmatched by few bands even half, or a third, their
age!!" - Goldmine
"One word: hot." - The New Yorker
"...they refuse to stop playing until the entire
room is dancing... they party with an exuberance aggressive
enough to shame musicians 40 years younger."
- The Reader (Chicago)
"Expert purveyors of a good time..." - The
New York Times
"...the definition of ragged-but-absolutely-right."
- Men's Journal
Cajun Boogie, the Ramblers' acclaimed album
from 1993, has just been re-released by Hot Biscuits
(HOTBI-5002), and is co-released as Volume 10 of the
Louisiana Folklife Recording Series (www.crt.state.la.us/folklife)
.
|
 !
BUY
IT!
Grammy-nominated!
BUY IT!
Contact
The Hackberry Ramblers/
The Hot Biscuits Recording Company
c/o Ben Sandmel
221 Metairie Court
Metairie, LA, 70001
504 - 828-0461
hotbiscuits@att.net
Media
Karen Leipziger
KL Productions
615 - 297-4452
klpzgr@earthlink.net
photo credits:
Top Image, copyright Philip Gould, all rights reserved
Band Image, copyright Rick Olivier, all rights reserved |