Free festival shows off New Orleans’ French side

Home > Culture > Arts & Design

print dictionary print

Free festival shows off New Orleans’ French side

NEW ORLEANS - In another city, 10 a.m. might seem early for a celebration, but this is Bourbon Street in New Orleans and a brass band is ambling down the street blaring a jazzy tune.

French Quarter resident Lisa Linscott said she didn’t have to think twice about coming out for the Friday parade that is part of the annual French Quarter Festival. “It woke me up,” she said with a laugh.

Linscott also came because the procession kicks off the second day of her favorite event: an eruption of indigenous music and food that continues through Sunday in one of the country’s most historic neighborhoods. In a city synonymous with partying, festivals range from weekend celebrations of local foods to blockbuster events such as the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival or the biggest of them all, Mardi Gras. During its 29 years of existence, the annual French Quarter Festival - which began Thursday - has carved a role somewhere in between. As it has grown into a four-day event that draws an estimated 500,000 people, the festival has not only maintained its focus on homegrown music, but has also retained one of its most attractive features - it is free.

Karen King and her daughter Courtney traveled from Perth, Australia, to see New Orleans and attend the event. Courtney King said music festivals she has attended in Australia are not as large or as long as this one. “They might be two days long, if you’re lucky, and they’re not free,” she said.

The roughly 100 square blocks of the Quarter mark the area along the Mississippi River where New Orleans was established by the French almost 300 years ago. During one weekend each April, the narrow streets, lined with wooden-shuttered buildings and lacy iron balconies, become the backdrop for an increasingly large musical celebration.

From late morning until 9 p.m. each day, nearly two dozen music stages scattered from Bourbon Street to the riverfront promenade known as Woldenberg Riverfront Park offer Louisiana music, ranging from jazz, blues, Dixieland and R&B to Cajun, zydeco and swing.

Among the stages are tents where the city’s finest restaurants offer sampler menus - a plate of Oysters Bonne Femme from Antoine’s, for instance. Cold drinks run the gamut from lemonade to daiquiris and the locally famous rum drinks called “hurricanes.”

But music is the centerpiece of the French Quarter Festival, and this year’s lineup includes Cyril Neville, “Trombone Shorty” Andrews, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Irvin Mayfield, Deacon John, George Porter Jr., and 2012 Grammy-winning Rebirth Brass Band, along with dozens of other popular homegrown groups. Festival organizers are committed to keeping the music local and free, said Marci Schramm, the executive director of the nonprofit French Quarter Festival.

Schramm said finding enough performers to fill the stages is not a problem in talent-rich New Orleans, but offering the music at no cost to the public is a challenge. The nonprofit organization spends considerable time lining up sponsors who kick in as much as $20,000 to keep the music playing. “It’s not easy, but our sponsorships are growing,” Schramm said. Reuters
Log in to Twitter or Facebook account to connect
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
help-image Social comment?
s
lock icon

To write comments, please log in to one of the accounts.

Standards Board Policy (0/250자)