The Wild Tchoupitoulas | |
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Studio album by The Wild Tchoupitoulas | |
Released | 1976 |
Recorded | Sea-Saint Recording Studios, New Orleans |
Genre | Mardi Gras Indian music |
Length | 35:15 |
Label | Mango |
Producer | Allen Toussaint, Marshall Sehorn, Art Neville, Charles Neville |
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Robert Christgau | A |
The Wild Tchoupitoulas is a 1976 album by the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indian tribe The Wild Tchoupitoulas.
The album features the "call-and-response" style chants typical of Mardi Gras Indians. Vocals were provided by George Landry, as "Big Chief Jolly", as well as other members of his Mardi Gras tribe. Instrumentation was provided in part by members of the New Orleans band The Meters. The album also notably features Landry's nephews, the Neville Brothers, providing harmonies and some of the instrumentation. While not a commercial success, the effort was well received critically and the experience recording it encouraged the four Neville brothers to perform together for the first time as a group. Meaningful of the geographic location of New Orleans as a Caribbean city, "Meet de Boys on the Battlefront" is based on the melody and rhythm of Trinidadian calypso artist Lord Invader's 1943 "Rum and Coca Cola" made famous in the U.S. by The Andrew Sisters in 1944. In 2012 the album was added to the U.S. Library of Congress' National Registry, a designation of "cultural, artistic and historic importance to the nation's aural legacy."
All tracks composed by George Landry, except as noted.
Credits adapted from AllMusic and Discogs.