Dr. John - Gris-Gris

Dr. John: Gris-Gris

Album #90 - December 1968

Episode date - September 18, 2019

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    I am not qualified to claim that I am an expert regarding New Orleans music and culture, but I could certainly claim to be an avid student.

    Growing up, it was easy for me to recognize the New Orleans influence in hit records, and I loved those songs so much that the city took on an unnatural glow in my imagination. If ever a musical mecca existed on the planet earth, this was it. I was so obsessed that I studied maps and read both fiction and non-fiction about the city. I read about its architecture and longed to familiarize itself with its restaurants and music venues. In the late ‘80s, I travelled there for the first time and was so well prepared that I didn’t even need a street map. I had a schedule grid for every hour of every day, barely allowing myself 6-7 hours for sleep. I planned my travel around the Jazz Fest weekends, and so on average I saw 8-10 musical acts a day. The city was everything I expected and then some. I was (and still am) truly in love with the place, and I consider its prominent musicians to possess magical powers of rhythm and exoticism that exist nowhere but there.

    Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) was a crucially important figure in New Orleans, with a history that spanned decades, all the way back to the glorious hits of the ‘50s. I learned that he was a guitar player back then, but changed to piano after losing a finger to an accident with a gun. Having played with Professor Longhair for a good part of his stint, he switched to piano as his primary instrument, easily adapting the rolling style that defined the underlying rhythm of the city.

    In a city that labelled mixed race people as quadroons or octaroons, cultural miscegenation provided problems for musicians who mingled freely, especially those who sold and/or used drugs, so it wasn’t long before Rebennack found himself serving two years in a federal penitentiary. On release, it seemed unwise to return to his old habits, so he moved to Los Angeles just in time for the hippie explosion, where he quickly became an in-demand piano stylist. While there, Mac still reveled in the culture of his hometown, and developed a musical persona that combined psychedelia with mystical voodoo, perhaps the second most popular religion in New Orleans after Catholicism. Rebennack started to put a band together and asked his friend Ronnie Barron to be the lead vocalist under the pseudonym “Dr. John”, but when that didn’t work out, Rebennack simply took the name for himself.

    Recording songs that portrayed a cultural influence light years removed from anything else in the American experience, the newly christened Dr. John embodied a hippified voodoo master, invoking dark spirits with mysterious chants in exotically titled songs like “Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya”. “Danse Flambeaux” and “Croker Courtbullion.” To most people, this stuff wasn’t even pronounceable, but the dark atmospherics of the album were hypnotic and once heard, couldn’t be ignored. In short order, Dr. John was in demand as a representative for something that could barely have been imagined before. “Gris-Gris” scared the bejesus out of some listeners, but it also quite literally represented a rebirth of popularity for the music of his hometown. In the hands of Dr. John, New Orleans culture once again became venerated as a musical source unlike any other place on the planet.  

    Related Shows

    Miles Davis - In A Silent Way

    Miles Davis: In a Silent Way

    Album #111 - July 1969

      0:00
      0:00
      Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica

      Captain Beefheart: Trout Mask Replica (Part 2)

      Album #110 - June 1969

        0:00
        0:00
        Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica

        Captain Beefheart: Trout Mask Replica (Part 1)

        Album #110 - June 1969

          0:00
          0:00
          The Shaggs - Philosophy of the World

          The Shaggs

          Album #109 - June 1969

            0:00
            0:00
            The Meters - The Meters

            The Meters - The Meters

            Album #108 - May 1969

              0:00
              0:00
              The Sir Douglas Quintet: Mendocino

              The Sir Douglas Quintet: Mendocino

              Album #107 - April 1969

                0:00
                0:00
                The Velvet Underground: The Velvet Underground

                The Velvet Underground: The Velvet Underground

                Album #106 - March 1969

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  DUSTY SPRINGFIELD

                  Dusty Springfield: Dusty in Memphis

                  Album #105- March 1969

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    The Flying Burrito Bros. -The Gilded Palace of Sin

                    The Flying Burrito Bros.: The Gilded Palace of Sin

                    Album #104 - February 1969

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      The Monkees - Head

                      The Monkees: Head

                      Album #103 - December 1968

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        The Kinks: The Kinks Are The Village Preservation Society

                        The Kinks: The Kinks Are The Village Preservation Society

                        Album #102 - November 1968

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          Van Morrison: Astral Weeks

                          Van Morrison: Astral Weeks

                          Album #101 - November 1968

                            0:00
                            0:00