Little Queenie & the Percolators - Home - 2007
featuring Leigh “L’il Queenie” Harris, John Magnie, Tommy Malone and others (1977-1982)
By Grant Britt from nodepression.com
In New Orleans, she’s considered royalty. As Lil’ Queenie, she
fronted the Percolators, a rowdy, raucous amalgamation of bluesy rockers
with a jazzy side as well who rattled the Crescent City in the late
‘70s and early ‘80s. Today, under her commoner name of Leigh Harris, she
makes her home in Rural Hall, North Carolina, not far from Andy
Griffin’s hometown and Mayberry touchstone of Mt. Airy.
But just because Harris has chosen a quieter and drier setting to
live in doesn’t mean that she’s not still percolatin’. Ex- Percolator
partners and current Subdudes Tommy Malone and John Magnie may not be
with her when she plays this far south, but she’ll still bring a rowdy,
funky bunch of backers when she plays Papa Mojo’s Roadhouse this Friday
night.
Harris started singing before she could walk, and by her late teens
was standing shoulder to shoulder on stages with a who’s who of New
Orleans musical royalty including Professor Longhair, Dr. John and the
Nevilles. “It was just kind of neighborhood guys, and I was just too
young and stupid to be intimidated,” she says with a throaty chuckle. “ I
had too much hubris, or somethin’.”
Whatever you called it, the crowds who packed Tipitinas loved her
work, as did the artists, especially Fess. “Johnny and I did this duet
at Tipitinas every Monday night,” Harris recalls. “All the Nevilles
would come in, because it was a really neighborhoody thing, and Fess
would too, and George Landry, who was Art and them’s uncle, Big Chief
Jolly. And Fess would say, (she drops down into a gravely croak) “sang
that ’Ode To Billie Joe.’” Which I really didn’t do with Johnny, he had
heard me do it when I was even younger, doing a solo act, playing
guitar. He said one of his great lines ever, one of his great malaprops:
‘You sang that real nice, dahlin’- I likedted it.’ ”
The Percolators grew out of that duo, adding future Subdude Tommy
Malone as well as a rotating cast of characters that included some of
the city’s finest horn players and even slide guitar wizard Sonny
Landreth for a time. The band name came from a quote in clarinetist/
saxman/viper Mezz Mezrow’s book, Really The Blues. “Mezz is
describing this situation where all the musicians all one by one are all
achieving collective satori, and someone in the house screams out,
‘percolate you fool, percolate!” But she says few people got the
reference. “I’ve had people give me toy coffepots, with my face on these
appliances for years,” she says. I tell her it seems obvious that
anybody who heard the band and got caught up in the pulsating riddims
would realize that it was not something as common as caffeine but an
internal lava flow that was bubbling up to splash all over them. “No
shit, man,” she says with a sigh.
READ MORE HERE
01. I Gotta Song I Gotta Sing
02. My Dawlin New Orleans
03. Gumbo Heaven
04. Wild Natives
05. Inspiration
06. I Was Just Practicing
07. Cant Get Ridoma Smile
08. Surrender
09. Telephone Sleeping in My Bed
10. Hum Hum
11. It Will Be Me
12. Blackhaired Girl
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2 comentários :
gracias, fenómeno
Divirta-se, Maria
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