Sat, June 12, 2010 In the groove with Stanton Moore and Trombone Shorty
by Geoffrey Redick, producer
Stanton Moore shares his kitchen table with Geoffrey and BobAfter an easy ferry ride across the Mississippi River - from the French Quarter to Algiers - we met Stanton Moore in his kitchen on our first morning in New Orleans. Over the next few days we saw him play three times in three different venues. Man gets around. In person, he’s less fidgety than other drummers I’ve known, and he seems happy to talk at length about the history of music in his hometown, various techniques, and even politics and the environment.
Moore talked with Bob about his band Galactic, and their latest CD, Ya-Ka-May, his side project called Groove Alchemy (which includes a CD, a DVD and an instructional drumming book) and his trio, which is touring this summer. You can go here to find out if they’re headed toward you.
Troy “Trombone Shorty” Andrews talks with Bob at Cafe Rose NicaudThe same day we met Stanton Moore, Troy Andrews — Trombone Shorty — joined us at a coffee house to talk with Bob about his career, which already spans 20 years. Andrews is 24. He toured with Lenny Kravitz when he was 19, he’s in several episodes of the HBO program Treme, and his new CD, Backatown, is getting rave reviews everywhere. All that success hasn’t gone to his head though. And considering the sound that comes out of his horn, it’s surprising how quiet and mild-mannered he is in conversation. Andrews is also touring this summer, and you can check those dates here.
I think the worst thing that can happen to a city with a strong creative streak is to get stuck in what sells and stop listening to the youngsters. The success of Stanton Moore and Trombone Shorty shows there’s no danger of that happening in New Orleans.
Here’s a movie of the drumming demo Stanton Moore gave us before we caught the ferry back to the French Quarter.
Here’s a mini documentary about Trombone Shorty.
Click here to see more pictures of our New Orleans adventure.
Next week in part four of our series, another pairing of New Orleans musicians, this time two transplants from Sweden. First Bob talks with Anders Osborne about getting clean, the health of his adopted hometown, the fragility of the wetlands and about his latest CD called American Patchwork. Then we get a personal demo from one-woman-band Theresa Andersson. Below is a sneak peek of what she does, from her DVD “Live at Le Petit.”
Here’s the full schedule for our summer music series:
Dr. John - May 26 - click here to listen
Ben Jaffe - June 2 - click here to listen
Stanton Moore / Trombone Shorty - June 9 - click here to listen
Anders Osborne / Theresa Andersson - June 16
Allen Toussaint - June 23
Irma Thomas - June 30
Roger Lewis (of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band) - July 7
Jimmy Carter (of The Blind Boys of Alabama) - July 14
Keely Smith - July 21
Jon Cleary - July 28



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