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Mardi Gras Indian Music

From: 90.9 WBUR - Boston's NPR News Station
Length: 06:44

The Musical Tradition of New Orleans' Black Indians Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-0 On Mardi Gras Day, tourists line New Orleans' wide avenues to watch the grand parade floats. The celebration tourists rarely see takes place on the strrets and stoops of the Treme, Black Pearl and the Ninth Ward, some of the neighborhoods hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina. Those are the parade grounds of New Orleans Black or Mardi Gras Indians. The Wild Magnolias, the Fi Yi Yi, altogether about 40 tribes march in elaborate costumes inspired by the noble Native Americans who were not enslaved by whites. , Some say the tradition reflects West African masking and dance rituals. While their numbers have diminished since Katrina, a number of tribes have recorded music through the years. Producer Virginia Prescott dusts off the stacks to hear the music of the Mardi Gras Indians.

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Piece Description

On Mardi Gras Day, tourists line New Orleans' wide avenues to watch the grand parade floats. The celebration tourists rarely see takes place on the strrets and stoops of the Treme, Black Pearl and the Ninth Ward, some of the neighborhoods hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina. Those are the parade grounds of New Orleans Black or Mardi Gras Indians. The Wild Magnolias, the Fi Yi Yi, altogether about 40 tribes march in elaborate costumes inspired by the noble Native Americans who were not enslaved by whites. , Some say the tradition reflects West African masking and dance rituals. While their numbers have diminished since Katrina, a number of tribes have recorded music through the years. Producer Virginia Prescott dusts off the stacks to hear the music of the Mardi Gras Indians.

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Review of Mardi Gras Indian Music

Songs and stories of the fusion of African and Indian traditions in New Orleans' Mardi Gras, including musical influences on the Dixie Cups and the Neville Brothers.

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Review of Mardi Gras Indian Music

Compact history of Mardi Gras Indians, with music and short narratives from Indians and muscians.
Very professionally done, the sound is good, well-produced, with a good selection of song clips.
Narrative moves along quickly, never drags.

A threatened New Orleans tradition that many Mardi Gras Indians have stubbornly continued to create.