ARTVOICE
October 6, 2005
Submerged:
An Evacuee's Journal
by Michael Tisserand
I
love New Orleans. But after anchoring myself there for half my
life, I still don’t understand it all that well. If this
city has a soul, I think I’ve only caught fleeting glimpses
of it.
One
of these glimpses occurred in 1993, when I had the chance to
interview musician Danny Barker. He was 84. I was 30 and on assignment
for a local magazine. I knew that Barker had played with Cab
Calloway and wrote songs like “Don’t You Feel My
Leg,” for his wife, Blue Lu Barker, to sing.
I
arrived at Barker’s doorstep one Saturday, and he let me
in. I sat across from him while he pinned a microphone to his
collar. He spoke quietly to himself. “I’ll be using
my intelligent voice now,” he said.
He
continued, now looking up: “I have 10 different voices:
my intelligent voice, my jazz voice, my night-life voice, my
day-life voice, black Northern voice, black Southern voice. That’s
interesting, eh? All the various voices you have to have when
you have a brown or black paint job, you see?”
As
he talked, he would constantly check in to make sure I was still
with him: “You see?” “You understand?” He
talked about smiles. He listed them all: half-watermelon, two-cent,
nickel. He demonstrated each one, twisting his face, raising
his eyebrows. He learned that lesson in Hollywood in the 1930s,
when he’d been in a short with Stepin Fetchit. A smile,
he said, was “a weapon—you use that to get in, and
you use it to get out.”
There
are times in New Orleans when everything you think you know suddenly
shifts, or fades into the background, or gets turned upside down.
Danny could play those moments like no one else.
*******
Danny
Barker famously launched the brass band revival in New Orleans
when he founded the Fairview Baptist Church Christian Band in
the 1970s. Wynton Marsalis, who is now serving on Mayor Ray Nagin’s
17-member Bring Back New Orleans Commission, passed through Barker’s
band.
“Sure,
you get angry,” Marsalis told interviewer David Hinckley
about those days after Katrina when New Orleans slipped away. “But
no angrier than you get all your life about a system that uses
race, class and politics to keep us polarized.”
Kid
Merv Campbell also learned from Barker. Currently living in Tempe,
Ariz., with both his family and with the other members of the
great Treme Brass Band, he is well aware that his hometown has
never been a profitable place for working jazz musicians. He
doesn’t see things really changing. “The people in
power are going to do what they want to do,” he says. “The
people in the hood are going to do what they want to do.”
Whatever
the past relationship between government and artist, the music
played on. Now, nobody wants that music to end. That’s
why Marsalis was invited into the top tier of city planners.
And that’s why we’re all now talking about the culture.
The rescue of Fats Domino became national news, and deservedly
so. But the neighborhood that he chose to live in all his life
is now in ruins. What will sustain him? What will sustain all
of us who care about the cultural life of the city?
It
is now a time for politics. Rough, abrasive politics. Cultural
politics. Every home, every neighborhood, every social organization,
every artist, must be accounted for.
We
all know what it’s like to buy into the myth. We strutted
beside the brass band while the city planned an evacuation that
would fail to include even the very drummer who was setting our
tempo.
It’s
one thing to hear the music and feel like everything’s
all right. But most of us spent far too much time acting like
everything really was all right.
“Two-thirds
of what we call New Orleans culture is really myth-making,” says
the poet and commentator Andrei Codrescu. “People feed
myths of the city back to the city. These myths are now in pieces.”
It’s
about time.
*******
Sometime
in the mid-1980s, when I was a college dropout and knew few people
in New Orleans, I received a Thanksgiving dinner invitation to
the home of the Randels family. The father was a Baptist preacher.
His son, Jim, would become a public school teacher and his daughter;
Kathy, an actress and performance artist. Folding tables stretched
across the main rooms. We all played charades after dinner.
That
house is now lost to the flood. Jim went on to launch an inspiring
public school initiative called Students at the Center. Kathy
went on to use her theater skills with women prisoners, with
a theater group in Belgrade, and with high school kids in the
Lower Ninth Ward.
Kathy
and Jim are now getting ready to meet with a group that includes
poet and teacher Kalamu ya Salaam. Kalamu has worked with Jim
at Students at the Center, and is founding “The Neo-Griot
New Orleans Project” to collect stories from evacuees.
Other groups are talking about similar work, including The Neighborhood
Story Project, which earlier this summer published a series of
books written by New Orleans public school students.
“I
think there is going to be a lot of oral history and gathering
stories,” Kathy says. “The WPA idea is coming up
a lot.”
In
the mid-1990s, Kathy directed The Lower 9 Stories, a collaborative
play for which students interviewed about 50 survivors of Hurricane
Betsy, and then performed their memories. “Those students
are now in their 20s, and now they’ve lived through it,” Kathy
says. “I keep thinking that one of the lines in the play
was, ‘It was a once-in-a-hundred-years storm.’”
Kathy
thinks that post-Katrina art will resemble the work done by artists
during wartime. It might not all be great product, she says.
That’ll come later. “Art is going to be a process
of healing for our community.”
Every
New Orleanian now carries a piece of the grand narrative. In
the absence of the kind of civic-minded leadership that produced
the 1935 Works Projects Administration and the Federal Writers’ Project,
it’s likely going to fall on individual artists and writers
to hear the voices and assemble a better picture of New Orleans.
There’s
no doubt what Kathy and her husband, the musician Sean LaRocca,
will do. The city is her mother, says Kathy, and she’s
hurting. But that’s nothing new. “We’ve been
in a triage situation every day in New Orleans,” she says.
*******
 |
On
St. Claude Avenue, a cluster of items that sat for a week
in floodwaters in l'art Noir gallery and gallery owner Jeffrey
Holmes' house has now been assembled into a "Toxic Art" installation.
(photo: Scott Saltzman) |
The
creative impulse is scattered throughout post-Katrina New Orleans.
On St. Claude Avenue, a cluster of items that sat for a week
in floodwaters in l’art Noir gallery and gallery owner
Jeffrey Holmes’ house has now been assembled into a “Toxic
Art” installation. The gallery even sponsored an opening.
Elsewhere, “Radio Marigny” music blares near Frenchmen
Street and locals are wearing the new “Make levees, not
war” T-shirts. Everyone gathers at Molly’s at the
Market, the now-legendary French Quarter bar that never stopped
serving.
On
Tuesday, Sept. 27, Hank Staples, the owner of the New Orleans
music club The Maple Leaf Bar, was at Molly’s. He was talking
about how he wanted to bring live music back to the Leaf. He
called drummer Kevin O’Day. They contacted Walter “Wolfman” Washington,
who’s been playing at the Maple Leaf for more than two
decades.
Wolfman
had stayed in his New Orleans home for 13 days following Katrina,
living on liquor and steaks. But the mosquitoes were tearing
into him. When the waters went down, he drove off. Now, he was
in Ohio. On Thursday morning, he got in his car and drove through
the night, arriving in New Orleans 20 hours later.
Five
generators powered the show. The band played three and a half
hours past the 6 pm curfew. People spilled into the streets.
The cops came and shut them all down. Just like old times—even
if for just a few hours.
“By
that time, we’d made our point,” O’Day says. “Everyone
had a chance to feel normal again.”
*******
The
last time anyone heard from Larry Bannock was more than three
weeks ago. In an Oklahoma Daily article dated Sept. 10, reporter
David Zizzo described a “holdout” who said he’d
been ordered from his home by armed guardsmen. The water had
been up to the resident’s chest. Now, he said he was being
treated like a prisoner at an evacuation post six blocks from
his home.
The
reporter doesn’t mention that the holdout, Larry Bannock,
is the Big Chief of the Golden Star Hunters. In fact, Bannock
is a renowned Mardi Gras Indian, a standard-bearer, a legend.
He sews his own glass beads on his costume, goes out on Mardi
Gras morning with his gang, chanting songs that go back generations.
Bannock can tell you what lines like “Iko Iko” and “Hey
Pocky Way” really mean.
Mardi
Gras Indian culture is one of many New Orleans traditions that
are easy to appreciate and impossible to fully understand. The
Indians—actually African Americans, mostly men—come
from working-class neighborhoods with names like Gert Town, which
is where Bannock lives. Each year, Indians spend hundreds of
hours and thousands of dollars constructing beaded and feathered
suits to wear on Mardi Gras and a few other occasions. Chiefs
keep the color of their new suit a closely guarded secret. On
the street, they are guarded by Spy Boys and Wild Men, and announced
with tambourines and chanting. When they encounter another chief,
they lean back on their heels, open their arms, and display their
handiwork.
This
pageantry doesn’t take place in an auditorium or in a park.
These are unsanctioned meetings that occur in neighborhood streets
and beneath urban interstate overpasses. For years, Indians have
complained about being harassed by police, being shoved to the
sidewalks, even being forced to remove their suits. This past
summer, Big Chief Tootie Montana arose from his sick bed to address
the City Council to complain about this harassment. “This
must stop,” the frail man said, and then collapsed and
died. Bannock was at his side.
I
haven’t been inside Bannock’s house since I first
interviewed him about ten years ago, but I remember that the
rooms are extensions of his suit, filled with Indian likenesses
and statues. I know that he is a loner. A friend of his tells
me he is diabetic. This friend is trying to find Bannock. He’s
checked the Red Cross sites. He’s checked the morgues. “If
you can’t find the living, you start looking for the dead,” he
says.
I
started looking for Bannock, too. At first, I just wanted to
ask him the questions I keep hearing over and over, about the
future of New Orleans culture. If Bannock was going back onto
the streets, that would mean something.
I
asked radio hosts and folklorists and attorneys and fundraisers
who’d worked with Bannock. I talked to those few Indians
I could reach.
At
this writing, Big Chief Larry Bannock is missing. So are any
answers he might offer about the future of New Orleans.
Michael
Tisserand was editor of Gambit Weekly, a New Orleans alternative
newsweekly that temporarily suspended publication after Hurricane
Katrina. He can be reached at michaeltisserand@yahoo.com. To
read his other stories in this series, visit www.altweeklies.com. |