TCM's Schmooze, Booze & Bites: 6:00pm
Showtime: 7:30pm
Tickets: $18/Adult, $16/Senior, $8/Youth
Location: Macey Center
About the Show
The Revelers rock and they honky tonk. Music lovers and dancers alike will crave this
energized performance. Put the Revelers in a hall full of people, and say, “hit it;"
hours later, people are still smiling and sweating, having been moved to groove to
what they were ‘hit’ with. Their diverse stylings include Western Swing, Cajun, Zydeco,
Tex-Mex, Swamp Pop; most of all, the Revelers define modern Honky Tonk.
"There has to be at least one band in the country that reveres the past and is unafraid
about dragging it into the future. Mark down the Revelers as that band, musicians
who aren’t afraid of mixing up accordion, fiddles, saxophones and guitars. Sometimes
the greasiest gumbo can also be the best, as anyone within earshot of this mess will
attest. Bon ton all night long."
-Bentley's Bandstand
“Groove bound and dance compelling …”
-Offbeat Magazine
The Revelers, founding members of the Red Stick Ramblers and The Pine Leaf Boys —
“unquestionably the two groups at the vanguard of the Louisiana cultural renaissance”
— have joined together to form a Louisiana supergroup which combines swamp-sop, Cajun,
country, blues and zydeco into a powerful tonic of roots music that could only come
from southwest Louisiana.
As individuals, they are each in high demand having performed and recorded with T-Bone
Burnett, Natalie Merchant, Linda Ronstadt, Preston Frank, Walter Mouton, Mamadou Diabate,
the Duhks, Cedric Watson, and Tim O’Brien, to name a few. As a group they play with
a sense of empathy and depth that can only be fostered after years of making music
together. They have all appeared on the 2011 season finale of Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations, and they also were handpicked by David Simon (producer/creator, The Wire) to be featured musicians for the third and fourth seasons of HBO’s Tremé.
Long-time fans of the Red Stick Ramblers may find themselves very familiar with The
Revelers: the powerful singing and songwriting of Chas Justus and Eric Frey, a mix
of traditional Cajun and zydeco dance music, some of the swing that was such a strong
focus of early RSR, the magical rhythm section chemistry of Glenn Fields and Eric
Frey, and impressive musical virtuosity across the board.
Take what you know about the Red Sticks, add into the mix the crooning vocals of Glenn
Fields, and the singing/songwriting of Blake Miller (founding member of the Pine Leaf
Boys and unarguably the most prolific French songwriter coming out of Louisiana right
now, the tightly arranged section of sax-fiddle-accordion, and you’ll start to get
The Revelers' picture.
The depth of this band has only developed from digging deeper into the dancehall traditions
of Southwest Louisiana and emerging with an arsenal we call Louisiana Jukebox Music.
Music critics are wont to categorize music into clear genre styles, but that’s not
really the way folk traditions develop — things are passed around, the lines are blurred
— and particularly in a culture as unique as that of SW Louisiana (we won’t use the
old gumbo cliché, but you get the idea … ). The Revelers have embraced that musical
truth in a way few bands have — the lines between traditional and original, Cajun,
country, zydeco, swamp-pop, and the blues, are blurred, and wide-ranging styles are
honed into an extremely cohesive performance.
The genre of swamp pop may bear some explanation. Little-known outside of Louisiana
(but still quite popular in the region) it’s a music that’s nearly confined to the
archives of the 50s and 60s, save for a handful of bands today. In short, swamp pop
is Southwest Louisiana’s answer to the R&B and rock ’n roll that came out of New Orleans,
Memphis and Detroit in the 50s. When that unstoppable sound reached Cajun and zydeco
musicians, they caught the bug and played their own versions the only way they knew
how — sometimes in French, and traded in their fiddles and accordions for horns and
electric guitars. It’s a perfect example of how everything that comes from Acadiana
is dripping with its own unique culture.
Equally at home on a festival main stage, a late night dance party, or a performing
arts hall, the Revelers have taken their mission coast to coast in the U.S. and around
the world from Ireland to Denmark, to their own Black Pot Festival in Lafayette, Louisiana.
The Black Pot festival is a celebration of the culture of food, music, and dance that’s
still thriving in Acadiana, along with the Revelers’ ties to the wider roots music
community. Attracting a who’s who of regional Louisiana dance bands along with folk,
bluegrass, Tex-mex, gospel, songwriters, and old-time from across North America, it’s
the annual culmination of the party that the band brings with them to every stage
they play on.
Our Partners & Sponsors
Tech Club Macey Social Hour Learn More About the Club
Schmooze, Booze & Bites - 6:00-7:30pm
Schmooze: Line Dancing with Melissa Begay
Booze: Hurricane (Dark Rum)
Bites: Nawlins
o Jambalaya with Chicken, Sausage & Shrimp Bites
o Corn Bread
Members & NMT Grad Students/Free; NMT Undergrads/$10; Non-Members/$15
Members May Bring Two Non-Member Guests at Non-Member Price