| Biography |
Steve Riley grew up in the prairie town of Mamou
where French is spoken on the street, the national holiday is
Mardi Gras, and a poor family is one without a fiddler or accordion
player. American popular culture was stealing Mamou’s children
away when Steve took up the accordion and became his hometown’s
favorite son. He plays a single-row diatonic instrument made by
his cousin, famed accordionist Marc Savoy. Steve concentrated
on learning Savoy’s fiery, intricate style and the music
of the Balfa Brothers. At age 15, this young prodigy was noticed
by Dewey Balfa, who invited Steve to join his band. Under Dewey’s
guidance, he grew as a performer, learning hundreds of French
songs and how to sing them in Balfa’s singular hurts-so-good
style, and taking up the fiddle as well. In 1988, he and David
Greely formed the Mamou Playboys, which rapidly gained prominence
on the international folk scene without sacrificing the allegiance
of Louisiana fans. In a land where accordion is king, Steve has
inspired countless young men and women to follow him and keep
Cajun music’s royal instrument alive.
David
Greely's Cajun heritage simmered on the back burner
while he was growing up near Baton Rouge. But after years of fiddling
in other styles, he woke up to the music and language of his ancestors
and was completely consumed. Apprenticed to Dewey Balfa, he received
firsthand wisdom in Cajun music that has earned him acclaim as
an eloquent Cajun French songwriter, fiddler, singer, and researcher
of nearly forgotten tunes, ballads, and stories. Fascinated with
Acadian history, he has traveled through France, Acadia, and Louisiana
to find all the
ancestral homes of his mother’s family, the Thériots.
He is also actively involved in community campaigns to preserve
the Cajun French language and archival Cajun recordings. In 2004,
he received an “Artist Fellowship Award in Folklife”
by the Louisiana Division of the Arts.
Sam Broussard grew up a city Cajun in South Louisiana,
only to pick up his guitar and leave at age 19 to travel and live
far and wide. A year later, he was signed to Capitol Records
as part of the Louisiana group Manchild. The following years saw
him touring, writing, arranging, and recording with artists such
as Michael Martin Murphy, Jimmy Buffett, and European rock star
Stephan Eicher, after which he returned to his birthplace to be
with family. Since joining the Mamou Playboys in 2001, Sam has
become an integral part of the creative team, contributing his
skills in songwriting and arranging as well as his prodigious
guitar virtuosity.
Brazos
Huval, of Breaux Bridge, is the bassist and the youngest
and newest Mamou Playboy. The eleventh in a family of fourteen
children, he came up as a fiddler and saxophonist in the Huval
Family Band, as well as bassist for Zydeco artist Horace Trahan.
Although still in his early twenties, he has an unusually deep
knowledge of the songs, styles and feel of Cajun and Zydeco
music. He is a quiet, friendly young man, but a serious threat
to fish everywhere.
Kevin
Dugas
began drumming at the age of sixteen with the famed Cajun
accordionist and vocalist Belton Richard. He refined his craft
during five years with Walter Mouton and the Scott Playboys,
playing every Saturday night at La Poussière in Breaux Bridge,
Louisiana. Kevin's playing is sure and full in heart and tone--
the soul of the Lafayette dancehall sound. He is the Mamou
Playboys’ center of gravity and the safety net for their acrobatics.
Jimmy Domengeaux (1954-1999)
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