Deliver to Malaysia
IFor best experience Get the App
The musical traditions that New Orleans has nurtured are legendary, but music is not just the stuff of legend there. In the citys streets, it is a vibrant, ever-evolving art form. New artists regularly learn from their predecessors, and inject those lessons with fresh energy and ideas. For New Orleans, Putumayo founder Dan Storper researched traditional jazz and blues in forms both old and new after becoming a part time resident of New Orleans in 2003. The collection includes legends Louis Armstrong, Louis Prima, Doc Cheatham, Dr. John and The Preservation Hall Hot 4 with Duke Dejan alongside local favorites Nicholas Payton, Kermit Ruffins, Deacon John, Dr. Michael White, Topsy Chapman, Kevin Clark and Gregg Stafford. The descriptive liner notes, written by New Orleans musicologist Baty Landis, are in English, French and Spanish. They feature striking photographs by respected New Orleans photographer Michael Smith, as well as a resource guide for New Orleans music, travel and entertainment. Renowned New Orleans chef Paul Prudhomme has contributed a recipe for seafood gumbo.
G**L
Five Stars
great
M**A
Jazz Heaven!
Love New Orleans Jazz - great selection of artists and material! Wonderful vibrant music - really gets the toes tapping!
N**C
Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans?
A very nice intro to the sounds of New Orleans, a mixture of styles and genres,for these things one can always say - it could have been better, but I'm primarily a jazz fan, so you can guess that I have a special relationship to the music of New Orleans. Maybe Louis Armstron and Louis Prima are not very well represented, maybe Sidney Bechet or Wynton Marsalis could also have been there, etc., etc.But this is a very NICE jazz, jazzy, blues, bluesy, gumbo soul (etc.) compilation album.My favorite track is maybe the collaboration between Nicholas Payton (in his 20s) and Doc Cheatham (around 90, I believe)...BTWat the moment I'm posting this, the price is over 22 pounds on British amazon - that is too much IMHO...Compare to the US amazon if you will...