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Bayou Seco

Presented by: Four Rivers Productions for Freeman College
0SHEFFIELD: The Greystones
PFriday 20th April, 2012
N7:30pm

Event information

Ken Keppeler and Jeanie McLerie, otherwise known as ‘Bayou Seco’, are lovers. That’s not an attempt to describe the way they feel about each other, although after a close relationship of thirty years standing it may be very apt, but rather the nature of their bond with the people’s music of Louisiana, New Mexico, Arizona and the entire southwest of the United States, from the Mississippi River to the coast of California.

On first sight, the pair look like they might have stepped straight of the set of the Cohen Brothers’ ‘Oh Brother Where Art Thou?’ but those prairie threads, that venerable facial rug, are no prop department pretence. They’re outward symbols of a life lived in the service of roots Americana in its many guises. Their shows are a journey through time, an odyssey into the outback of the deep South West, with its shifting populations of Native American, French, Mexican, Polish, German, Irish migrant adventurers, each with their own particular flavour to add to the rich musical sauce.

Inspired by listening to The Carter Family on the radio in her native New Jersey, Jeanie spent her early adult life in Europe, busking, archiving, researching and performing traditional music. In the 1960s, she hung out with Bert Lloyd, The Watersons and Peggy and Ewan McColl during the salad days of the UK’s bourgeoning folk club scene. “It was a neat time to be there,” she remembers. “It was so alive.”

Ken grew up in California surround by Mexicans and other south westerners. His early love of traditional Hispanic music, country and blues survived a tour of duty in Vietnam, and solidified into an early mastery of the violin and the banjo. “I was never into the likes of Joan Baez,” Ken admits, “because I was so close to other traditions, living where I did. There’s a feeling about traditional musicians that comes from human experience. I’m very attached to that.”

It was when Ken went to Louisiana in 1973 and met the great Dennis McGee, the Balfa Brothers, Marc Savoy and D L Menard that he began to focus on Cajun and Zydeco. Folk was derided in Louisiana at that time, but that didn’t deter Ken. His fascination transcended the tawdry two-step of fashion, and it still does. Ken followed his nose and his passions, hitchhiking all over the USA, soaking up the forgotten music of marginal people.

Jeanie and Ken met down at the Savoy Family’s music store in Louisiana in the mid 1970s. They started performing and busking together, especially in and around the Cajun music mecca of Eunice. Eventually Jeanie’s respiratory illness forced her to leave and so she and Ken moved to New Mexico, with their belongings in a truck and their mattress on the roof, like a pair of John Steinbeck soul adventurers.

Jeanie and Ken ended up in Albuquerque, and started to learn Spanish colonial songs and fiddle music from singer Antonia Apodaca and the violinist Cleofes Ortiz amongst others. It was music on the verge of extinction and Ken and Jeanie were determined to keep it alive. Later they also turned the heat of their indefatigable curiosity on the fiddle music of Arizona’s Native American Tohono O’odham people…’The People of the Desert’.

Eventually they formed a band, christened by grafting the name of Bonnie Apodaca’s hometown, Arroyo Seco, with the swamp pools or ‘bayous’ of their beloved Louisiana. That’s how ‘Bayou Seco’ was born.

Since then Jeanie and Ken have been singing, playing, researching and archiving the music they love, sticking to a simple unadorned line-up of diatonic accordions, fiddles, guitar, mandolin, banjo, harmonica and voices, spreading their knowledge of the rough-hewn musical expression of a continent in front of audiences all over the world, on concert stages, in schools, bars, folk clubs, community and old people’s centres.

Jeanie and Ken took their music from forgotten people and they’ve spent most of their professional lives giving it back, with added verve, warmth and style.

Venue information

SHEFFIELD: The Greystones
0Greystones Road
Sheffield
S11 7BS
> www.rmet.org.uk/freeman
! 07835966810
` Live music begins 30 minutes after doors.

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