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Wardell Quezergue

 
Artist: Wardell Quezergue

Similar Artists:

Roderick Paulin, Joe Saulsbury, Jr., The Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Allen Toussaint, Eddie Bo

Worked With:

Allen Toussaint, James Stroud, Jamil Sharif, George Porter, Jr., Leo Nocentelli, Cyril Neville, Albert King, Fred Kemp, David Farrell, Carl Blouin, Art Neville, Aaron Neville, Dr. John
  • Active: '60s
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Arranger
  • Representative Albums: "Strung Out," "Sixty Smokin' Soul Senders," "Music for Children Ages 3 to 103"

Biography

The thronging masses will claim to have not heard of this man, will not be able to pronounce his name, and will have heard his music countless times. Among New Orleans musicians, Wardell Quezergue is known as the "Creole Beethoven," but the behind-the-scenes nature of his work means his name is invariably not the one that is out in front in big lights. As one of the first-choice arrangers on New Orleans recording sessions, Quezergue is the man who made classic records for performers such as Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, Dr. John, and many others. He could say he was busy without crossing his fingers for some 60 years in the music business. His most famous records include "Iko Iko" and "Chapel of Love," both originally cut by the Dixie Cups, and the entertaining "Barefootin'" by Robert Parker, the latter summer hit sporting a blasting horn arrangement that, like a piece of Mayan sculpture, might be described as "definitively Quezerguian." Other fine tracks in his discography include "Trick Bag" by Earl King, "Big Chief" by Professor Longhair, "It Ain't My Fault" by Smokey Johnson, "Mr. Big Stuff" by Jean Knight, "Groove Me" by King Floyd, "Mojo Hannah" by Tami Lynn, and the Grammy Award-winning Dr. John album Goin' Back to New Orleans. The strong respect for history and tradition in New Orleans has meant that this artist has not gone out of demand simply since his hair has gone gray.

He emerged as a bandleader in the mid-'50s with his Royal Dukes of Rhythm, and some 50 years later was finally presented with an opportunity to make recordings in front of his own aggregation entitled Wardell & His Slammin' Big Band. Much of his career was spent making arrangements for others and he was known for getting results. A good example would be his association with Malaco, a local studio and label that was a few cents short of going broke before Quezergue became involved. He borrowed a school bus in order to transport all the needed participants to a marathon recording session that resulted in two blockbuster hits, the demanding and relaxing "Groove Me" and the swaggering, self-important "Mr. Big Stuff." The next chapter is one typical of the record business. The Stax and Atlantic labels, constantly hyped as being crucial in the history of soul music, rejected these records as being uncommercial. Malaco had to put out King Floyd's "Groove Me" on its own Chimneyville label, but this was not a release that went up in smoke. Instead, Atlantic was forced to come begging when the record took off in one region of the country after another.

As a result of this and subsequent hits produced by Quezergue, Malaco's studio, production, and session musicians became the "in" thing. The Pointer Sisters, Rufus Thomas, and in 1973 Paul Simon all worked in the facility, the latter artist recording tunes for his popular There Goes Rhymin' Simon album. The following year, though, Quezergue was temporarily seen as having "lost it" and Malaco finally went under. For the label it was the grand finale indeed but for the producer it was only a few years before he was once again working in the studios with big names such as Willie Nelson, the Supremes, B.B. King, and the Staple Singers. Productions from the contemporary New Orleans perspective include the Orchid in the Storm album by Aaron Neville. He also was behind two excellent big-band albums by Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown. Quezergue has created an extended composition entitled "A Creole Mass." A much anticipated anthology of some of his work, Strung Out, was finally issued in 2006 by Grapevine Records. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
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Wardell Quezergue

Quezergue greets Gatemouth Brown at Tower Records, New Orleans
Background information
Birth name Wardell Quezergue
Born 1930
Origin New Orleans, Louisiana
Genre(s) Jazz, Rhythm and blues, Blues
Occupation(s) producer, arranger, conductor, band leader
Years active 1950 - present
Label(s) NOLA, etc.

Wardell Quezergue (b 1930) is an American music arranger, producer and bandleader, known among New Orleans musicians as the “Creole Beethoven”. Wardell was born into a musical family with his father, Sidney Quezergue Sr., being a guitar player. Wardell is the second youngest of three brothers: Sidney Quezergue Jr., Leo Quezergue, and Alden Quezergue. His oldest two brothers, Sidney (Trumpet) and Leo (Drums), were jazz musicians as well.

Contents

Career

After playing with Dave Bartholomew’s band from the late 1940s and serving as an army musician in Korea, he emerged as a bandleader in his own right in the mid-1950s with his Royal Dukes of Rhythm. He also worked as an arranger with the cream of New Orleans musicians, including Professor Longhair and Fats Domino.

In 1964 he formed Nola Records, and Robert Parker’s “Barefootin’” from the label reached number 2 on the R&B chart. Other artists on the label include Eddie Bo, Willie Tee and Smokey Johnson. Later on he recorded King Floyd’s “Groove Me” and Jean Knight’s “Mr. Big Stuff” and, when major labels including Stax and Atlantic initially rejected them as uncommercial, he took them to then-struggling Malaco Records, from where they became major national hits.

As a result of these successes, Quezergue’s skills as an arranger, and Malaco’s studios, became in demand in the 1970s, and were used by artists as diverse as Paul Simon, Willie Nelson, and B. B. King. He also worked with G.C. Cameron, former lead singer of The Spinners, who is presently a member of The Temptations.

He also produced and arranged the Grammy Award-winning Dr. John album “Goin' Back to New Orleans” in 1992. Already an award winning classical composer and conductor, in 2000 he created an extended composition entitled "A Creole Mass", drawing on his experiences in the Korean War.[1]

In 2005, by now legally blind, he lost most of his belongings as a result of Hurricane Katrina.[2] The following year, benefit concerts on his behalf were led by Dr John, with support including REM’s Mike Mills.[3]

References

External links


 
 
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Orchid in the Storm (1986 Album by Aaron Neville)

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