Showing posts with label John Boutté. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Boutté. Show all posts

Friday, July 2, 2021

Doc Houlind With John Boutté - Doc Houlind Ragtime Band meets John Boutté

Styles: Post Bop, Vocal
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:56
Size: 171,8 MB
Art: Front

( 5:13) 1. Shake Rattle and Roll
( 7:46) 2. The Gypsy
( 5:36) 3. Climax Rag
( 4:06) 4. Gloryland
( 4:18) 5. You can depend on me
( 5:05) 6. This Little Light of Mine
( 6:47) 7. West end blues
( 7:27) 8. Move the Body Over
( 4:35) 9. Mean to Me
( 5:42) 10. If I Had my Life to Live Over
( 5:54) 11. Sensation Rag
(10:23) 12. Just a closer walk

Søren "Doc" Houlind - Drums and Vocals, also band leader. Born in Lemvig, and began playing drums in high school in 1964. Soren travelled in 1971 for the first time, out of many, to New Orleans, the birthplace of jazz, where he studied drumming at the legendary Cie Frazier. After returning home, was Søren quickly became known as one of the finest and most respected drummers, and this gave him the drum chair with famous Papa Bue & his Viking Jazz Band, and also at Lillian BouJé & her music friends. After 40 years as a top revival drummer shaped Doc Houlind. So in 2002 its current All Stars Band, where he has fulfilled an ambition to stand in front of the orchestra as a trumpeter. Doc Houlind have attracted attention all over Europe, with its hot and lyrical trumpet playing, inspired by Bunk Johnson, Kid Howard, H. Red Allen, and of course Louis Armstrong. Doc Houlind has been selected as trumpeter touring with the European all Stars in 2005. https://www.colchesterjazzclub.co.uk/about-colchester-jazz-club/musician-profile/?name=Soren%20Doc%20Houlind&id=540

Personnel: Drums – Doc Houlind; Vocals – John Boutté; Bass – Annie Hawkins; Clarinet – Jesper Larsen; Piano – Andy Finch; Trombone – Bjarne Emilo; Trumpet – Søren Fechtenberg; Vocals – John Boutté

Doc Houlind Ragtime Band meets John Boutté

Thursday, June 24, 2021

John Boutte' & Paul Sanchez - Stew Called New Orleans

Styles: Vocal, Guitar
Year: 2009
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:03
Size: 110,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:31) 1. Stew Called New Orleans
(4:23) 2. Two-five-one
(3:23) 3. Hey God
(3:33) 4. I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say
(4:39) 5. Call Me Superstitious
(6:03) 6. An Empty Chair
(4:04) 7. Don't Smoke Around Susie
(5:02) 8. Wakes Me Up to Say Good-bye
(3:15) 9. A Meaning or a Message
(4:00) 10. Be a Threadhead
(4:04) 11. American Tune

Friendship has its privileges, and in the case of singer John Boutte and Paul Sanchez, that means getting together and knocking out a record in a single session. What you hear on this well-played, extremely well-sung yet laid back session of singer-songwritery, blues jazz is not ambition so much as confidence in each other’s abilities and the easy grace that comes from music making in a town and in a “stew” of genres you love and understand. An engaging, one-two meld of Sanchez’ songwriting and Boutte’s reedy, Sam Cooke-like voice, this varied collection waggles back and forth from “Two-Five-One, (a Sanchez send-up of the jazzman’s chords) through a not-done-to-death Jelly Roll Morton cover, “I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say,” to a beautifully realized version of Paul Simon’s “American Tune,” with let’s git legit!“harmonies by J.S. Bach.”

Both players outdo themselves in the singing department with Boutte delightfully wending his way through lyrical tangles like those in the Todd Duke/Paul Sanchez tune, “Don’t Smoke Around Suzie,” easily this set’s strongest number. He kills funny, angular couplets like, “You can huff glue ’til you’re comatose / eat fried chicken and Oreos you can clog your arteries ’til you stop your heart / but smokin’ ’round Suzie will tear you apart.” For support the pair took no chances, booking top shelf trumpeter Leroy Jones, who began music as a teenager with Danny Barker and went on to star with Harry Connick, Jr.’s band. His horn’s dance with Boutte’s vocals on “Call Me Superstitious,” is a highlight. Boutte’s longtime guitar player Todd Duke and bassist Peter Harris complete the quintet.

The missteps here are not fatal. Whether the world, let alone Louisiana needs another stab at an iconic New Orleans song like the title cut, one that piles on the well-worn NOLA clichés while encouraging listeners to “brings your greens” to the town “where the good times roll,” is debatable. And it’s easy to understand how “Be a Threadhead,” an advertisement for the non-profit label putting out the record made the cut, but it’s still a sop. But those quibbles aside, the connection between Boutte and Sanchez is real. The piquant blend of their simpatico philosophies on life and music, so charmingly mixed in these 11 cuts, is the kind of splendid soul that speaks best for itself. By Robert Baird https://www.offbeat.com/music/john-boutte-and-paul-sanchez-stew-called-new-orleans-threadhead/

Line-up/Musicians: John Boutte - vocals, tambourines; Paul Sanchez - vocals, acoustic guitar; Leroy Jones - trumpet; Todd Duke - electric guitar; Peter Harris - bass

Stew Called New Orleans

Monday, June 21, 2021

John Boutté - At the Foot of Canal Street

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 51:20
Size: 119,1 MB
Art: Front + Back

(3:27) 1. Sisters
(4:49) 2. At the Foot of Canal Street
(4:22) 3. A Change is Gonna Come
(5:05) 4. Battle Hymn of the Republic
(6:22) 5. Black Orpheus
(5:10) 6. Someone to Watch Over Me
(3:05) 7. Didn't it Rain
(7:39) 8. This Masquerade is Over
(3:31) 9. Just a Little While to Stay Here
(3:29) 10. All These Things
(4:16) 11. If I Had My Life to Live Over

The Canal Street that John Boutté is referring to in this album's title isn't the one that runs through Lower Manhattan it is the Canal Street of New Orleans, where he grew up. Boutté is not an easy singer to categorize; parts of this superb CD (which was recorded in 1998 and released in 2001) are pure Crescent City soul, but other parts of it are vocal jazz or African-American gospel. Boutté, whose influences range from Sam Cooke and Aaron Neville to Little Jimmy Scott, is a convincing soul singer on "Sisters," the title song, and Cooke's "A Change Is Gonna Come." But he is equally believable and equally expressive as a torchy jazz singer on "The Masquerade Is Over," the Gershwin standard "Someone to Watch Over Me," and Luiz Bonfa's "Manha de Carnaval" (which is listed as "Black Orpheus" in the credits and is also known as "A Day in the Life of a Fool").

Meanwhile, Boutté favors African-American gospel (as opposed to white country-gospel or modern Christian R&B) on "Didn't It Rain" and "Just a Little While to Stay Here." As unpredictable as this album is, Boutté never comes across as unfocused or confused. Boutté genuinely appreciates a variety of music, and his eclectic nature serves him well on this impressive, consistently rewarding CD. ~ Alex Henderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/at-the-foot-of-canal-street-mw0000119758

Personnel: John Boutte – Vocals; Loren Pickford – Piano, Alto Sax; Bill Huntington – Bass; John Bagnato – Guitar; Joe Vinnittell – Drums

At the Foot of Canal Street

Sunday, June 13, 2021

John Boutté - Good Neighbor

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:52
Size: 97,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:13)  1. Door Poppin
(2:26)  2. Good Neighbor
(2:48)  3. Showing Up For The Party
(2:21)  4. The Eternal Now
(4:08)  5. Southern Man
(3:51)  6. Wake Up
(2:07)  7. Cutting Heads
(4:38)  8. Sisters
(4:41)  9. Broke Down The Door/Thetreme Song
(3:30) 10. Love Ya Mean It
(3:00) 11. My Life
(3:38) 12. Foot Of Canal Street
(2:24) 13. Accentuate The Positive

At a club called d.b.a., along a boisterous strip of Frenchmen Street, singer John Boutté regularly silences the Saturday-night tourist conversations. For the locals who press up close to the stage, these weekly gigs are cathartic ritual. In performance, Mr. Boutté moves like a flyweight boxer: hanging back, shifting his weight, thrusting forward without warning. Even on CD, he conveys that sense bouncing silkily along until he delivers a stinging high note or devastating flurry of melismata. Born into a large and musical Creole family, Mr. Boutté has roots in gospel and traditional jazz. He frequently taps out syncopated beats on a tambourine. But he fits no convention. On "Good Neighbor," the sweetness and grit of his tenor voice is supported by an enviable list of New Orleans musicians. Trumpeter Leroy Jones, a frequent collaborator and local hero, adds subtle, pungent counterpoint to several tracks. "Foot of Canal Street" owes its revival-tent energy in part to the growls and purrs of brothers James and Troy Andrews on, respectively, trumpet and trombone. And when Mr. Boutté laments a loss of innocence on "Wake Up," the drama is unforced. Beneath his formidable musical talents lies a gift for elegantly telling the truth. Singing His Heart Out for the City of New Orleans ..."there was both authority and magnetism in his version of Steve Goodman’s “City of New Orleans.” Mr. Boutté recorded it several years ago with a bluegrass band called Uptown Okra, and his arrangement with Mr. Duke preserves a similar rollicking feel." Nate Chinen, NY Times, June 8, 2007 ..More https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/boutteworks2

Personnel: Vocals – Dave Pirner, Debbie Davis, John Boutté, Paul Sanchez; Bass – Peter Harris ; Bass Drum, Tambourine, Congas – Herlin Riley; Drums – Herman Lebeaux; Electric Piano – Ian Neville; Guitar – Todd Duke; Pedal Steel Guitar – Dave Easley; Piano, Shaker – David Torkanowsky; Trombone – Craig Klein, Troy "Trombone Shorty" Andrews; Trumpet – Leroy Jones; Trumpet, Vocals – James Andrews

Good Neighbor

Saturday, June 12, 2021

John Boutté - John Boutte With Conspirare

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2007
File: MP3@128K/s
Time: 29:19
Size: 27,1 MB
Art: Front

(1:39) 1. Wayfarin' Stranger
(6:48) 2. A Change Is Gonna Come
(2:55) 3. Please Send Me Someone To Love
(3:27) 4. A Thousand Beautiful Things
(4:20) 5. How I Got Over
(2:40) 6. Go Tell It On The Mountain
(3:36) 7. Home
(3:49) 8. I Could Have Danced All Night

John Boutté sings for all those in New Orleans and everywhere, that don't have a voice, were forgotten, denied, neglected...you get the idea. His singing exalts feelings and emotions few can express much less convey. He is that soul singer that only comes around once in a generation, this is his time!! John Boutté was born by the river, on November 3, 1958, the eighth of 10 children; and grew up in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans. It was a rich musical environment in those days. During his school days John played coronet and trumpet, those clarions of life in New Orleans, in his junior high and high school marching bands; he was a section leader, no less, in a town where marching bands duel like decked-out demons in the street. School also gave John the chance to sing, first at talent shows and then with street acapella groups, with names as, “Spirit,” and then “Remnant.” Street bands singing on the bricks of a town where “street singer” is still a respectable job title. Stir in the spices of the music of his older brothers and sisters, the music that ruled the street and raised the spirits. During these years traditional jazzmen like Paul Babarin, Louis “Big Eye” Nelson and Danny Barker became both John's friends and mentors. John's sister, Lillian Boutte, introduces the young singer to local legends like Dr. John, Allen Toussaint and James Booker.

After high school, John studied at Xavier University, a black Catholic institution. Upon graduating John was commissioned as officer in the U. S. Army, and provided with the opportunity to direct and sing in the Army gospel choirs in Virginia, Texas and, eventually, Korea. It was in Korea, ironically, when singing gospel and deep, deep blues after hours in restaurants he'd only accidentally entered, that he began to know himself as an American, an artist and a person. Not long after his return to the States, John was invited to tour Europe with his sister Lillian. Europe was a set of lessons in languages and cultures and customs, which gave John a chance to meditate on the very idea of a life led as a jazz singer. When John eventually got back home to New Orleans he continued singing. But now there was a new generation, a new breed of musicians available; musicians like Herlin Riley, Shannon Powell, Nicholas Payton and Bryan Blade. He began to open shows for the likes of Mel Torme, Lou Rawls, Rosemary Clooney and, Herbie Hancock. He struck out on his own and quickly acquired a reputation as a premier singer, and an unabashed front man. Through many gigs, and on many bandstands, he has built up a repertoire of quality material. Boutté can carry a song like it’s the end of the world. His voice is the perfect blend of gospel, soul and jazz with just enough blues to make it real.

Boutté has recorded some true gems. “Through the Eyes of A Child,” (1993) “ Scotch and Soda,” (1997) “Mardi Gras Mambo,” Cubanisimo in New Orleans (2000) is a critically acclaimed and award-winning Cubanismo album; a collaboration between Cuba and New Orleans; featuring the classic “Mother In Law” as a cha-cha cha and John's duet with Topsy Chapman “It Do Me Good.” “At the Foot of Canal Street,” (2001) “Carry Me Home,” (2003) and in 2003 again, the remarkable “Jambalaya,” offering sixteen helpings of John Boutte's mix of bayou- blended soul, backed by a band of seasoned New Orleans musicians. This record is John Boutté at his best.Yet another CD entitled “Gospel United,” a concert recording arranged in Denmark, contains his remarkable solo arrangement of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”, which has achieved Gold Record status in several European markets

He is the recipient of the Best Male Vocalist Award, in the Offbeat Best of the Beat balloting. This is a big deal in New Orleans, and John is the perennial winner in this category. His performances are a crowd favorite at the yearly Jazz Fest, and he has traveled to Europe and South America with assorted bands of New Orleans musicians. He appeared on several Katrina Benefit shows and on recordings for the cause, as the New Orleans Social Club, “Sing Me Back Home,” featuring Ivan Neville, George Porter, Leo Nocentelli, Henry Butler, and Raymond Weber. In the aftermath of Katrina, John Boutté stepped up and became a strong voice in the reconstruction and rebuilding of New Orleans. This was his city and damn if he was going to let it be washed away. This writer was in New Orleans for Disaster Relief, and I met John in a record shop. He invited me down to Frenchman’s Street to check out his show.

In a sparse stage setting accompanied by an upright bass, a jazz box guitar and then Trombone Shorty on his ‘bone, he began to testify. His command of the stage and room spilled out onto the street where a crowd had gathered. For that one night, he owned that whole block down there, rolled it up and tucked it into his back pocket, then went into Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come” and brought us all back home. Amen! It was a performance I will never forget! Singing his heart out amidst the Katrina experience and the overwhelming sorrow of a whole city, this guy shone a light on us. Even if it was for those few hours we all forgot that there was still darkness just around the corner, sadness up the street, and despair on the other side of town. There really is magical healing possible through the power of music. If the performer turns shaman and channels his energy, a transformation happens. On the banks of the river, the whisper of a spiritual with original intentions of possible redemption, brought laughter in a room where tears fell yesterday. “I’ve always performed with drama,” he says, “but since the levees failed, I’ve had to dig a little deeper. It takes a little more meditation and preparation than it did before. I have to connect with people’s suffering and find a way to bring them up. You don’t do that by putting on an act. You do it by being yourself, by being honest about your own suffering and finding some hope in the middle of all that. You do it by being as human as you can.”

John still lives in New Orleans, down in the French Quarter, a mile or so from the home in which he was raised. When he's in town he can be seen on his overgrown tropical balcony overlooking Rampart Street and Congo Square. Sometimes you can hear him singing, sometimes whistling, or sometimes you can hear him faintly from the street as he sits at his piano singing a Korean lullaby. John's job is to sing - to sing jazz, to sing it with such style and grace that no one ever mistakes him for anything other than a master. John is one of those remarkable cases where the art arises from the true heart. To know John is to hold onto the coattails of a butterfly. To hear him sing is to feel a brief touch of the wing. Though a lot of progress has been made since Katrina, there is still a lot of reconstruction and rebuilding which needs to be done. There are still a lot of relocated musicians. John Boutté is still very active in the Renewal of New Orleans and is spreading his message of hope wherever possible. He is a genuine talent, and a voice for his people back home, where he is loved, respected and admired and that is all that matters to him.

In December of 2007 John released “The Winter Solstice.” An extraordinary collection of 8 songs taken from the December 2006 performance of John Boutte with Conspirare for “Christmas at the Carillon” in Austin TX. Conspirare is a Grammy nominated professional chorale group from Austin directed by Craig Hella Johnson. The performance is an innovative and daring blending of sacred and secular, art music and popular music. The shared musical experiences are intended to bring us together in a spirit of unity, peace and hope, and to reflect upon the sacredness of all things. John in March of 2008 released his self produced recording entitled “Good Neighbor.” It received alot of airplay in the Big Easy, where he won the Best Male Vocalist award again from Best of the Beat. Not one to rest on his laurels John has just released in collaboration with guitarist Paul Sanchez,”Stew Called New Orleans.” On this record the two friends continue to roll along on a good time groove and take us with them for a musical journey through New Orleans.

Awards: John was selected as the "Best Male Vocalist" of the year at 2003 The Best of the Beat Awards, and also at the 2006 OffBeat Awards. On April 16, 2001 John Boutte was presented with the Big Easy Award for Best Male Vocalist. In addition John Boutte' & Cubanismo were selected for best Latin album for Mardi Gras Mambo.~ James Nadal https://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/johnboutte

John Boutte With Conspirare

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

John Boutté - All About Everything

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:26
Size: 114,3 MB
Art: Front

(4:09) 1. These Blue Days
(4:15) 2. Take Me To The River
(2:18) 3. No, No (The River)
(4:21) 4. The Grass Is Greener
(3:36) 5. War Is All Over
(3:01) 6. All Around The World
(2:56) 7. A Thousandfold
(3:09) 8. Heaven's Door
(3:23) 9. All About Everything
(5:53) 10. Lush Life
(7:07) 11. Hallelujah
(4:12) 12. See You On The Other SIde

Though a new season is on the horizon, we might consider ourselves residents of a post-Treme culture. Our central narratives, historic touchstones, and musical traditions are now common knowledge to millions of viewers. The world’s flame for New Orleans burns everlasting, but Mardi Gras Indians were on cable and the shadows of mystery recede accordingly. Documentation of the city perseveres, but the congealing effect of an HBO show places the onus on other voices to tell new stories about this old place.

As the man behind the show’s theme song, John Boutté is uniquely suited to speak at this crossroads. On All About Everything, produced by Treme musical supervisor Blake Leyh, the singer holds fast to his identity: a medium for the spirit, his voice shaped by pride and perspective. Hard to know if many revelations remain unturned in Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” or Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush Life.” Certainly we have traveled to the river quite often in 6-plus years of homegrown recordings. While Boutté masters all of the above, his treatments of original compositions by local artists are the heart of the album.

The Alex McMurray-penned “Heaven’s Door” boasts Jon Cleary on keys, Matt Perrine on sousaphone, and Dr. Michael White on clarinet. If anyone is worried about this city’s ability to foster new music with both traditional depth and mass appeal, send them McMurray. “War is All Over” is vintage but previously unreleased Allen Toussaint (“and everyone and nobody won”), while Paul Sanchez’s “A Thousandfold” is a solid reggae train ride. (Someone ought to launch a Kickstarter campaign to fund an album of Boutté performing Desmond Dekker songs.)

Sooner or later, the last episode of the last season of Treme will air and fade to DVD sales. There will be a musical montage and “See You on the Other Side” should be the backing track. Co-writers Boutté, Leyh, Tom McDermott and Sanchez wave goodbye masterfully. We live on the other side of the narrative’s wall, a good three to four years ahead of the story as told on television. Our tale was told; our tale still unfolds. Carried by a battalion of the city’s finest artists and confident in his role as clarion, John Boutté does a fine job of moving forward.~ Brian Boyles https://www.offbeat.com/music/john-boutte-all-about-everything-independent/

Personnel: John Boutte – Vocals; Jon Cleary – Piano, B3 Organ; Todd Duke – Guitar; Raymond Weber – Drums; Kirk Joseph – Sousaphone; Tony Jarvis – Sax; Nick Balaban – Sax; Roderick Paulin – Sax

All About Everything

Friday, June 4, 2021

John Boutté - Jambalaya

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2008
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:23
Size: 145,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:44) 1. Two Bands Rolling
(3:21) 2. It Don't Cost Very Much
(4:23) 3. A Change Is Gonna Come
(3:48) 4. Shake My Gate
(3:28) 5. Sisters
(3:31) 6. All These Things
(4:23) 7. Treme Song
(5:08) 8. Battle Hymn of the Republic
(3:31) 9. Thats My Desire
(3:59) 10. Hey That's No Way to Say Goodbye
(4:49) 11. At the Foot of Canal St
(3:12) 12. Didn't It Rain
(4:22) 13. Why
(2:22) 14. Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight
(4:18) 15. If I Had My Life to Live Over
(4:59) 16. I Washed My Hands in Muddy Water

A powerfully rhythmic, delightfully hypnotic representation of the resiliency of the Crescent City, John Boutte's Treme (perhaps the creative centerpiece of this diverse gumbo of a collection) is the perfect theme song for the popular HBO series about N'awlins people living in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. But the classic stomping vibe of that piece and a handful of others (including the opening romp "Two Bands Rolling") is just part of the diverse magical vibe created by a true native son who sounds a tad like Rod Stewart and whose two-decade career is infused with everything from jazz and gospel to R&B, blues, and Latin music. He uses his raspy soul voice to channel Sam Cooke on a restrained but emotionally searing version of "A Change Is Gonna Come," and finds a clever way to merge gospel with danceable upright bass-driven jazz swing on "Battle Hymn of the Republic." Other tunes, like the midtempo ballad "Shake My Gate," are pure blues-soul-pop that could have come from any region. A good example of how he blends his N'awlins soul and his gospel musical roots is "At the Foot of Canal Street," which paints its hometown imagery with a lighthearted, skipping gospel groove. The overall effect is like church-hopping through the gritty neighborhoods of New Orleans (he hails from the 7th Ward), looking beyond any sorrow and devastation to the call of a higher power that tells Boutte, yes, you and your fellow natives can overcome. ~Jonathan Widran https://www.allmusic.com/album/jambalaya-mw0002293629

Jambalaya

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

John Boutté - A 'Well Tempered' Boutté

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2019
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:03
Size: 130,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:07) 1. Nevertheless I'm in Love with You
(3:00) 2. Welcome Table
(5:22) 3. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans
(3:34) 4. My Indian Red
(3:36) 5. All the Things You Are
(3:45) 6. La Vie En Rose
(4:34) 7. Little Red Rooster
(5:57) 8. Let Them Talk
(5:06) 9. Must Be Right, Can't Be Wrong
(3:33) 10. Nature Boy
(4:54) 11. I Need Your Love so Bad
(3:49) 12. Fly Me to the Moon
(4:42) 13. The Very Thought of You

Let’s face it: if an album of John Boutté singing (mostly) standards with a jazz trio had turned out to be anything less than magnificent, anyone who knows the man’s music would have been surprised. His way with a standard is a calling card by now; most of these songs have been in his live repertoire for years, and they’re a large part of the reason people float out of his best shows instead of just walking.

So we’re glad to report that this is exactly the album you’d expect and hope for. Which is not to say there wasn’t some art involved in capturing these particular performances: The trick of making a standards album is to make the songs sound like they were written last week, and Boutté manages that here: it’s no small feat to put a thrill of discovery into songs this familiar. It’s the delight in his voice that makes “Fly Me to The Moon” fresh again, as he playfully stretches syllables and holds off on the “I love you” until the song’s very end. The Mardi Gras Indian anthem “My Indian Red” gets one of the subtler treatments it’s had; he finds the hymn within the marching song. On “The Very Thought of You” it’s the sound of his voice that delights; he becomes a muted trumped on the “my love” before the instrumental break. And on “Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans”perhaps the most oft-recorded of all the songs here his high-register glide on the line “Wish that I were there” says it all about yearning. (Notably he also pluralizes the last line“I miss the ones I care for”maintaining the post-Katrina content he gave it on the Treme soundtrack).

The gamble of recording the whole album with only three players pays off, as accompanists Christopher Todd Duke (guitar), Nobumasa Ozaki (bass) and Oscar Rossignoli (piano) know when to add subtle shadings and when to step forward and swing. Guitarist Duke, who passed away soon after the sessions, carried a lot of the percussive role with his strumming, and added in some standout solos. There’s some especially nice guitar/voice interplay on “Little Red Rooster” one of the few times here when Boutté calls on his funkier R&B side.

True, it would have been nice to hear an original song here, since Boutté’s written a local standard or two himself. But this is above all a singer’s album, and you’re unlikely to hear a better vocal disc this year. https://www.offbeat.com/music/john-boutte-a-well-tempered-boutte-independent/

Personnel: John Boutté – vocals; Christopher Todd Duke – electric guitar; Nobumasa Ozaki – bass; Oscar Rossignoli – piano

A Well Tempered Boutté