Laissez les bons temps rouler! It's wonderful having old friends back! This time we're pulling out the pews in the Jaqua and doing a dance! Set up like The Shedd's popular jazz parties (without the tables), the main floor will be 21 and over only with a bar. Kids upstairs only. If you don't dance, don't worry! Balcony seating is reserved if you want a special seat, and if you are 21+, you can come down and get a drink and hang out on the main floor as much or as little as you want! There will be a few pews in the back of the hall for anyone who doesn't dance and or wants to take a break.
Every genre has its defining figureheads. Folk has its Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan; country has the Carter Family, Bob Wills and Hank Williams. Rock has its Elvis, Chuck Berry, and the Beatles. In blues, it’s Bessie Smith, Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters, and in jazz, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, and Miles Davis. When it comes to contemporary traditional Cajun music, there is BeauSoleil avec Michael Doucet. For the past 34 years Lafayette, Louisiana’s BeauSoleil has carried the torch of tradition while continuing to chart uncharted waters with ingenuity and innovation. Since their inception in 1975, BeauSoleil has not only spearheaded a cultural Renaissance but has elevated Cajun music to one of domestic and international acclaim. Along the way, they have appeared regularly on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion and garnered ten Grammy nominations. In 1998, they became the first Cajun band to win a Grammy for their L’Amour Ou La Folie effort in the traditional folk category. While they’ve introduced their sources of inspiration, Dennis McGee, Canray Fontenot, Varise Connor, Wade Fruge, Dewey Balfa, Amédéé Ardoin and Freeman Fontenot, to new audiences, they’ve also daringly blended zydeco, Tex-Mex, western swing, blues, New Orleans traditional jazz and Caribbean calypso into their framework.