From Brooklyn Vegan

Bones of Evil Army, RIP

by Black Bubblegum

EA

According to the Goner Records message boards, bassist Bones of Evil Army has passed away. This has not been confirmed by the band, nor their management, but people seem to have concrete information…

arrangements are being made by his mom’s friend for saturday, (valentine’s day.)

It will be held in oakland. at peeble’s funeral home
times may change, so far visitation at 3 funeral at 4.

peepstemple is right on.

Matt and his out of this world energy are infamous

The Infanigamous

SpazzMattic DownTown Matt Brown with the devil’s handshake

Memphis music ain’t the same without ya
hell, nothin in memphis is the same,
you’re sadly missed [Shawna Graves]

Evil Army are scheduled to perform at the Scion Rock Fest on Feb 28th. As more information comes available, we’ll get it to you. Evil Army was also recently mentioned in an article that ran on BestOfNewOrleans.com that profiled Heavy Music in New Orleans. Although the band hails from Memphis, they had recently signed to Phil Anselmo’s Housecore imprint. Last month it was announced Evil Army and Down were touring together. That announcement was quickly followed with news that the tour was postponed. Video below…


Tags: Bones (Evil Army), Evil Army, RIP

 

Mardi Gras in Eunice

About the Boucherie

A traditional old time Boucherie (hog butchering) and cochon de lait (a suckling pig, now often used to refer in general to a pig roast) is held downtown. It begins in front of City Hall at 10 a.m. the Sunday before Mardi Gras.
Visitors can see and enjoy the products of a Cajun tradition that is still common at many family gatherings. A hog is slaughtered and then made into a variety of dishes such as backbone stew, boudin, gratins (cracklings – pork skin with fat and some meat deep fried), and other delicacies.  By 11:30, the first dishes are ready for tasting. Music and fun for the family all day long.


About the Courir de Mardi Gras (Mardi Gras Run)

Mardi Gras draws on traditions which are centuries old. Revelers go from house to house, begging to obtain the ingredients for a gumbo. The capitaine (captain) of the “Courir de Mardi Gras” (Mardi Gras Run) first must obtain permission from thepeople at the house for the group to go onto their property. Once permission is given, the Mardi Gras riders may charge toward the house where they will sing, dance and beg for “cinqsou” (5 cents) until the owner offers them  ingredients for the gumbo. The owner will throw a live chicken into the air and the Mardi Gras group will give chase, running, falling, and fumbling over each other for the honor of being the one to catch their dinner.

City of Eunice

 

Exile Flips – Milli http://Myspace.com/M_TEN

Or, as one comment read:

” anybody who says this isnt music, but a bunch of button pushing, should be beheaded before the queen.”

… which is a little weird, but whatever

 


Robbie Vitrano, CEO of Trumpet has asked people from the design and creative industry to come to his office to listen to James talk about his plan for the city. He invites you to participate in this discussion.

“We’ve learned a few important things over the last 3+ years.Civic engagement is a muscle.  Use it, it gets stronger.  Ignore it, it atrophies.  There is a mayor’s race coming up.  Now is a good time to begin the process of ACTIVELY choosing the next elected leader of New Orleans.  It is important.This is not an endorsement.  I plan to do this with other candidates.  Research first. James Perry has announced his candidacy for Mayor.  His campaign asked me to host an introduction.  On Tuesday February 10, 6:30 at Trumpet (2803 St. Philip St   NOLA 70119   504.561.7487 google map /  ) he’ll talk about his platform.  Very informal – under an hour.  “

Urgency of Now

In New Orleans, the birthplace of jazz, innovative solutions to old problems have become a reality. Since the failure of the levees in August of 2005, the entire world turned its attention to our great city. As we fought the emotional and financial pain to return, we did not wait while the federal, state and local government failed to act as the safety net we needed. Instead, citizens, along with the business, non-profit and faith-based communities responded to the crisis.

Now, we have a chance to take that energy from the Recovery Sector and move it into a position of municipal leadership. One of the most inspirational leaders in the recovery sector is now running for mayor. He is a New Orleans native, an African American leader committed to bringing all communities together, a passionate advocate for affordable and equal housing and an accomplished manager.

His name is James Perry and his election as mayor of New Orleans will be a statement that the kinds of changes we are seeing on a national level, can also take place on a local level.  A rejuvenated New Orleans, with strong leadership, accountable government and an engaged citizenry can be a model for how we can make this country a better place, even when facing some of its greatest challenges.

James Perry Biography

james_bio

A native son and life-long resident of New Orleans, James Perry learned core values early in life, thanks to the up-bringing provided by his parents, James and Corlis Perry. Both career educators, the Perrys taught James and his two brothers the importance of community, service, education and social justice.

The Perry family lived in New Orleans East, where young James witnessed first hand the decline of his beloved neighborhood even before Hurricane Katrina swamped it with floodwater. His early experience and the values instilled by his parents shaped James’ ethic of community service and laid the foundation for his life’s work.
After graduating from McMain High School and then the University of New Orleans, James began working for the Preservation Resource Center (PRC), a non profit organization dedicated to preserving the diverse neighborhoods that make New Orleans unique.

While at the PRC, James learned in depth about the problems of urban blight and neighborhood disinvestment through his work in educating the public about how to acquire and rehab blighted properties. He became intimately familiar with the credit and lending challenges faced by first-time homebuyers by developing and teaching the PRC’s certified First-Time Homebuyer Training Program. His advocacy work made him a friend to dozens of neighborhood organizations stretching from Carrollton to the Lower Ninth Ward. He learned lasting lessons about coalition building and organizing in the struggle over the demolition of the St. Thomas Housing Complex and its reinvention as River Gardens.

In 2000, James became the Director of the Gulf Coast Fair Housing Center in Gulfport, MS, where discriminatory rental practices were denying residents access to safe, affordable housing. He put to use the leadership, managerial, and advocacy skills he had developed over the years to serve the twin causes of social justice and fair housing access in the Gulfport community, even at a time when some advocates were receiving death threats for pursuing cases against landlords embracing illegal practices.

In spite of long days commuting from New Orleans to the Gulf Coast, James enrolled in night classes at Loyola Law School to gain the legal knowledge necessary to become the most effective advocate possible for advancing community causes.

After completing his law degree in 2004, James became the Executive Director of the Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center (GNOFHAC), a private, non-profit organization created to promote equal housing opportunity. Under James’ leadership and management, GNOFHAC has tripled in size, served thousands of residents  and protected their housing rights. James led the GNOFHAC in battles over other rights-oriented community issues, such as fighting for fairer payouts by the Road Home Program.

Since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, James has been a strong voice and a constant presence in the city’s revitalization efforts, working tirelessly to ensure fair housing opportunities for all returning residents. Recently, on behalf of residents displaced by Hurricane Katrina, James led his organization’s successful lawsuit against St. Bernard Parish, which passed an illegal ordinance mandating that landlords rent solely to blood relatives.

In recent years, James has testified before Congress six times about the critical importance of Gulf Coast recovery, a cause that he took up again in presentations to both the Democratic and Republican conventions in the summer of 2008.

James counts among his many activities former and current positions on boards such as the National Low Income Housing Coalition, the National Fair Housing Alliance, the Historic District Landmarks Commission, and the Louisiana Housing Alliance. He has been invited to speak about community issues by groups as diverse as Columbia Law School and the American Jewish Committee.

Finally, James is a homeowner who has struggled like many in the region to rebuild his hurricane-damaged home.

JamesPerry2010

 

Cool Hunting features KK Projects

“Starting with a converted bakery in St. Roch, one of New Orleans’ most neglected neighborhoods, KK Projects reimagines buildings ravaged by time and Katrina as site-specific artworks, one at a time. This video tours several of the sites and checks in with founder Kirsha Kaechele to learn about her experiences integrating art into one of the roughest ghettos of the city and what it’s like to actually live in a gallery.”

 

So the typesetting is still awful, but with such a short lifespan for this flier, not sure if it really matters…

The bad news is that Chris Mcmillian is leaving town tomorrow. He’s doing some Smithsonian Inst. event in, we assume, DC, and won’t be able to make it.

Still going to have good drinks, though without the celebrity bartender factor.

 

Drew Stubbs took one look at this one and said, “No. There’s no way you’re going to put that leopard print on something that says “Defend New Orleans”. No.”

And he’s right… but we’re just in the middle of trying to piece together something with more info for this party on Thursday.

Just really want to make sure everyone knows Chris Mcmillan’s tending bar.

 

Master mixologist Chris McMillian walks us through the history and preparation of New Orleans classic cocktails.

 

Amazon.com
The producers of The Big Ol’ Box of New Orleans claim it to be the first box set to cover the full range of music from the Crescent City—from R&B to jazz, from zydeco to funk. Indeed, this handsome four-disc collection ranges through the decades and the neighborhoods of America’s first city of music, which has both pluses and minuses. Yes, it’s a joy to bask in the diversity of the New Orleans sound. From Louis Armstrong to the Meters, Little Richard to Pete Fountain, Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens scrambles to include a little something from a whole lot of native sons and daughters among its 85 selections. Problems, however, do arise. At times the sequencing can be jarring, as when Troy Andrews’s raucous take on “Ooh Poo Pah Doo” gives way to the modern blues-rock of Sonny Landreth’s “South of I-10.” The obscurities here are great fun, but, given the city’s rich history, they skew too heavily toward more recent releases. Still, there’s much to be enjoyed here, from the photo-packed 82-page booklet to the mix of classics and hidden treasures that populate the discs. Not definitive, perhaps, but definitely delightful. —Steven Stolder

Product Description
Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens: The Big Ol’ Box of New Orleans takes the music of the Big Easy and puts it in the context of that vibrant city in a way that has never been done before. The four CDs feature more than 80 hits—old and new—by such artists as Dr. John, Professor Longhair, Louis Armstrong, The Meters, Fats Domino, Buckwheat Zydeco and many others. The result is a spicy gumbo containing all of New Orleans’ musical styles and flavors: jazz and blues, Cajun and Zydeco, R&B and funk.

Also included is a gorgeous 84-page book that features essays and sidebars that completely explode the idea of what liner notes can be. They’ll take you by the hand through the narrow streets of the Quarter, through the Garden District and up through Bayou St. John—imparting the history alongside the colorful legends, while giving an insider’s-eye view of the city’s great (and notorious) bars and restaurants.

…Really good music, of course. Order it here