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Nola Reporter

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Brass is back with the return of festival season

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Festival season is in full swing in New Orleans and if you’re in the  city, chances are you’ve caught some live music over the past few weeks.  The pandemic and its related health precautions cancelled almost all  concerts and festivals in the city over the past two years. The return  of the city’s soundtrack, and specifically New Orleans brass bands,  provides an opportunity to reflect on its impact on local culture and  what makes our music so unique.

“There’s actually a phrase that people use to describe the  uniqueness, which is called the New Orleans style. [The musicians] are  playing a song, it has a melody, but they’re open within the kind of  structures of that melody to add in something different every time.  That’s what makes New Orleans really unique,” explains Matt Sakakeeny, Tulane School of Liberal Arts associate professor of music. 

Sakakeeny is a conservatory-trained musician with a PhD in  Ethnomusicology and studies the intersections of music, race and power.  He initially planned to write his dissertation on New Orleans music and  all the genres that influenced it, but he quickly realized the topic was  too broad to fit into one research paper. Instead, he decided to focus  on brass bands. “If I focused on the brass band, I could almost sort of  gesture to all of the significance of New Orleans music through this one  tradition, of not just the horns and the drums, but the neighborhood  parades and the funeral tradition and the cultural economy of the city.  The way the city relies upon musicians for the tourist trade.”

Sakakeeny recently discussed New Orleans brass bands on Tulane University’s podcast On Good Authority.  His research touches on musical theory and expands to include questions  about how music affects the fabric of the city and the importance of  music education. When asked what the future holds for the next  generation of New Orleans musicians, Sakakeeny references The Roots of Music, a nonprofit that provides academic tutoring and music mentoring for at-risk middle school students.

“It’s been really gratifying to work with the program through the Center for Public Service at Tulane and to have my Tulane students volunteer as academic tutors  at Roots of Music. This band is a real contender. I mean, they’re 9 to  14-year-olds, but they’ll go up against even some of the high school  bands,” he said. 

While there is the talent and desire to enter into the musical  tradition on the part of students, Sakekeeny stresses the importance of  making sure the city’s musicians are able to thrive as the city changes  and evolves. “Everybody loves New Orleans as a musical city and loves  New Orleans music. Does the city love its musicians back?”

Sakakeeny highlights rising housing costs and changes in accessible  music education as challenges that have the potential to affect the  city’s musicians. “There’s some organizations like the Music and Culture  Coalition that are working with the City Council to try to protect the  livelihoods of musicians.”

In the meantime, Sakakeeny gives back by serving on the board of The  Roots of Music and reflects on the next generation of New Orleans  musicians: “Every time I walk into Roots of Music, I always walk out  feeling so good about life and so hopeful about our future. Those kids  and their teachers really give me life and make me proud to be a little  part of it.”

To hear the full discussion, listen below or click here.

Original source can be found here.

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