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NOLA Community Blog

New Orleans is the city that lives in you, no matter where you live. And this website is for all of us who don’t live in New Orleans to stay connected with the Big Easy. Welcome to Church of New Orleans!

 

Filtering by Category: brass band

Happy Birthday, Big Sam!

John Dunlop

Trombonist and band leader Sammie 'Big Sam' Williams was born in New Orleans on February 20, and in his youth, he studied at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts and with saxophonist Kidd Jordan, and was a founding member of the Stooges Brass Band in his teens. He joined the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, allowing him to perform with luminaries such as James Brown, Karl Denson, Dave Matthews, and Widespread Panic. A year after joining the Dirty Dozen, he began a side project broadening his musical ambitions, and in 2006, he played with Elvis Costello and Allen Toussaint on their album The River in Reverse and tour.

Big Sam's Funky Nation, a funk and rock band, became his main band, and incorporated elements of traditional jazz, contemporary jazz, acid jazz, dance, hard rock, and punk into their music. They performed at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, Voodoo Music Experience, Bonnaroo, South By Southwest, and Austin City Limits. Williams had a recurring role in the HBO series Tremé, and in 2014, he proposed to his wife on stage at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. He learned in adulthood that he is the great-grandson of cornetist Buddy Bolden. Happy birthday to this energetic and supremely talented musician!

Photo: bigsamsfunkynation.com

Photo: bigsamsfunkynation.com

Happy Birthday, Kirk Joseph!

John Dunlop

R&B and Jazz Sousaphone player Kirk Joseph was born in New Orleans on February 16, 1961, and is the son of trombonist Waldren "Frog" Joseph, Kirk Joseph began playing the sousaphone in middle school, and took part in his first professional gig at the age of fifteen when his brother Charles invited him to play a funeral with the Majestic Band. In 1977 he became one of the founding members of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, a group which is credited with reviving the brass band tradition in New Orleans. He has played with the Treme Brass Band and Forgotten Souls Brass Band, and currently leads his own group called Kirk Joseph's Backyard Groove.

Described as a "modern sousaphone pioneer", Joseph claims inspiration from renowned New Orleans tuba player Anthony "Tuba Fats" Lacen, who made it sound like bass. The style of playing created by Lacen and Joseph was instrumental in establishing the modern New Orleans brass band sound, which combines traditional marching band and Dixieland traditions with strong jazz and funk influences. Joseph developed his innovative approach to the sousaphone, replacing the instruments limits, as perceived by his predecessors, with a rich musical vocabulary. Never before had such a creative and stylistic range been demonstrated. But the new standards set by Kirk Joseph have prompted many since to follow his lead.

Kirk Joseph has earned his seat at the table of New Orleans’ greatest musicians and will surely claim his place in music history as perhaps the greatest innovator of his instrument, the sousaphone. Today we wish this innovative artist a very Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday, Kirk Joseph!

John Dunlop

R&B and Jazz Sousaphone player Kirk Joseph was born in New Orleans on February 16, 1961, and is the son of trombonist Waldren "Frog" Joseph, Kirk Joseph began playing the sousaphone in middle school, and took part in his first professional gig at the age of fifteen when his brother Charles invited him to play a funeral with the Majestic Band. In 1977 he became one of the founding members of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, a group which is credited with reviving the brass band tradition in New Orleans. He has played with the Treme Brass Band and Forgotten Souls Brass Band, and currently leads his own group called Kirk Joseph's Backyard Groove.

Described as a "modern sousaphone pioneer", Joseph claims inspiration from renowned New Orleans tuba player Anthony "Tuba Fats" Lacen, who made it sound like bass. The style of playing created by Lacen and Joseph was instrumental in establishing the modern New Orleans brass band sound, which combines traditional marching band and Dixieland traditions with strong jazz and funk influences. Joseph developed his innovative approach to the sousaphone, replacing the instruments limits, as perceived by his predecessors, with a rich musical vocabulary. Never before had such a creative and stylistic range been demonstrated. But the new standards set by Kirk Joseph have prompted many since to follow his lead.

Kirk Joseph has earned his seat at the table of New Orleans’ greatest musicians and will surely claim his place in music history as perhaps the greatest innovator of his instrument, the sousaphone. Today we wish this innovative artist a very Happy Birthday!