Every band needs its musical heroes
June Casagrande
In a time of turmoil, when there weren’t enough heroes to go
around, Michael Doucet needed to look no farther than his own back
yard.
In the early 1970s, the Louisiana native would visit the home of
Dennis McGee, a legendary Cajun fiddle player then in his 60s.
“I would go there and listen to him play these amazing songs that
I had heard on old 78 rpm records. I went there many times throughout
my 20s. It was this truly amazing experience,” said Doucet, who went
on to become founder and fiddler for the musical group BeauSoleil.
For Doucet, New Orleans and the surrounding parts of Louisiana
were filled with musical heroes whose influence has helped make
BeauSoleil one of the most popular and enduring Cajun bands of all
time.
On New Year’s Eve, this innovative group will show crowds at the
Irvine Barclay Theater why their sound has endured for 25 years,
earning them a Grammy Award and the unusual honor of being one of the
few, if not the only French-language band to play in all 50 states.
Anchored by songwriter Doucet, the group comprises his brother
guitarist David Doucet; accordionist Jimmy Breaux, who is a grandson
of pioneering Cajun accordion player Amedee Breaux; percussionist
Billy Ware; Tommy Alesi on drums and Al Tharp on banjo, bass and
second fiddle.
While holding true to their Cajun roots, this ensemble reaches out
to draw influences like zydeco, country, blues and New Orleans jazz
into their music.
Among the songs they play are ballads that go back 200 years,
first played in the swamps by musicians who never knew how long their
art might live on. Back then, such songs were ways of passing on the
stories of the lives of people whose French and Caribbean roots were
melding in a new world.
They also play the kind of upbeat dance songs that Cajun music is
known for, like their original tune “Zydeco Gris-Gris,” which was
used in the movie “The Big Easy.”
Even as they travel the country and the world, playing France and
experimenting with surf music, BeauSoleil always comes back to its
Louisiana roots, back to the place where an aspiring young musician
could find a world of musical wonder just waiting to be explored.
“I remember some of the magic of hearing an old-timer play,”
Doucet said. “When I would go some 40 miles away to the house of
Dennis McGee and he would say, ‘Why are you so interested in this
music?’
“I would tell him about listening to the old 78 rpm recordings,
like one he recorded in 1929,” he went on. “Then he would play these
songs in sort of different style than was 40 years before. And the
way he played the music, the way he dissected time, was just amazing.
“The music could transcend anything I had experienced. In the
‘60s, we had been going through a lot of turmoil -- Vietnam, the
assassination of Kennedy,” Doucet said. “It was a time when people
were in need of heroes, and what I did was just look in my own back
yard.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.