Producer, songwriter, arranger, session pianist, solo artist --
Allen Toussaint wore all these hats over the course of his lengthy and prolific career, and his behind-the-scenes work alone would have been enough to make him a legend of New Orleans R&B. Thanks to his work with numerous other artists,
Toussaint bore an enormous amount of responsibility for the sound of R&B in the Crescent City from the '60s on into the '70s. His productions kept with the times, moving from rollicking, earthy soul in the '60s to gritty, rambunctious funk in the '70s. As a composer,
Toussaint proved himself a consistent hitmaker, penning more than a few gems that have since become R&B standards and been covered by countless artists working in many different styles. In keeping with that across-the-board appeal,
Toussaint worked in some supporting capacity for a wide variety of rock and blues legends, particularly from the '70s on. On top of all that,
Toussaint waxed his own records from time to time, enjoying a creative peak in the '70s with several albums that highlighted his laid-back vocals and elegantly funky piano work. Even if he wasn't always the most visible figure,
Toussaint's contributions to New Orleans music -- and to rock & roll in general -- were such that he earned induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.
Toussaint was born January 14, 1938, in New Orleans, and began learning piano at age seven, inspired by
Professor Longhair; his style later grew to include elements of
Fats Domino,
Huey "Piano" Smith, and
Ray Charles. As a teenager, he played in a band called the Flamingoes with bluesman
Snooks Eaglin.
Toussaint caught his first professional break at age 17, when
Earl King tapped him to fill in for
Smith at a live gig. Not long after, famed producer/songwriter
Dave Bartholomew -- whose role in New Orleans R&B during the '50s was fairly analogous to
Toussaint's later career -- hired him to lay down the piano parts at a
Fats Domino recording session for which
Domino himself was unavailable.
Bartholomew made regular use of
Toussaint, most notably on further sessions for
Domino and
Smiley Lewis, and demand for the young pianist's services grew quickly, especially after he first displayed his talent as an arranger on saxman
Lee Allen's biggest hit, "Walkin' with Mr. Lee." In 1958,
Toussaint recorded an instrumental album for RCA called The Wild Sound of New Orleans, under the alias
Tousan; one of his original compositions for the record, "Java," went on to become a smash hit for Dixieland jazz trumpeter
Al Hirt five years later.
Toussaint also began writing under the pseudonym Naomi Neville, after his mother's maiden name.
In 1960,
Toussaint was hired by Joe Banashak as an A&R man for the brand-new Minit label; in practice, he wound up masterminding most of the label's recording sessions. It was here that
Toussaint truly began to build his legend. His first national success as a producer came with
Jessie Hill's R&B Top Five smash "Ooh Poo Pah Doo" in 1960, and the classic hits came fast and furious after that:
Ernie K-Doe's pop and R&B number one "Mother-in-Law" (a
Toussaint composition),
Benny Spellman's "Fortune Teller," and "Lipstick Traces (On a Cigarette)" (both
Toussaint tunes written as Naomi Neville, with the former later covered by
the Rolling Stones),
Chris Kenner's original version of "Land of 1000 Dances,"
Lee Dorsey's "Ya Ya," and numerous sides with New Orleans soul queen
Irma Thomas.
Toussaint's singular touch on all these records redefined the sound of New Orleans R&B for a new decade. When Banashak left Minit to found another label, Instant,
Toussaint went with him to fulfill much the same duties; he also freelanced elsewhere, most prominently with
Dorsey's recordings for the Fury label, and cut a few low-profile singles of his own, mostly for Seville. In 1963,
Toussaint was drafted into the military, during which time he recorded with his backing band the Stokes while on leave; one of their tunes, the Naomi Neville credit "Whipped Cream," was covered by
Herb Alpert in 1965 for an instrumental hit, which was in turn later adopted as the theme for TV's The Dating Game.
Upon his discharge in 1965,
Toussaint teamed up with fellow producer
Marshall Sehorn to form a production company and record label, Sansu Enterprises. Sansu recorded the likes of
Betty Harris,
Earl King,
Chris Kenner, and
Lou Johnson, among others, often leasing their singles to larger labels for official release. Their most profitable association was with
Lee Dorsey, who returned to the upper reaches of the R&B charts with
Toussaint-penned hits like "Ride Your Pony," the oft-covered "Get Out of My Life Woman," the immortal "Working in a Coalmine," and "Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky (From Now On)" (covered by jazzman
Lou Donaldson). In 1966, Sansu also engaged the services of a house band dubbed
the Meters, who supplied backing for nearly all of the company's productions; after
the Meters started making their own records in 1969 (produced by
Toussaint), they developed into arguably the top instrumental funk ensemble of the '70s outside of
the J.B.'s.
In 1971,
Toussaint recorded his first solo album in over a decade for Scepter, calling it simply Toussaint (it was later reissued in the U.K. as From a Whisper to a Scream, after its best-known track). The following year, he moved up to
Reprise for
Life, Love and Faith, and he and
Sehorn opened a state-of-the-art recording studio in New Orleans called Sea-Saint, which became the site for most of his subsequent projects. In addition to his solo records,
Toussaint was getting more high-profile offers for outside work during the first half of the '70s. He did horn arrangements for
the Band,
Paul Simon,
Little Feat, and
Sandy Denny, and his continued work with
the Meters was moving him into contemporary funk with a harder edge than his own albums. In fact, he wound up producing two of New Orleans' greatest funk records:
Dr. John's Top Ten hit "Right Place, Wrong Time" and
LaBelle's number one disco-funk smash "Lady Marmalade." In 1975,
Toussaint released what many regarded as his finest solo album,
Southern Nights; the title track went on to become a huge hit for country-pop superstar
Glen Campbell, and "What Do You Want the Girl to Do?" was covered by
Boz Scaggs,
Lowell George, and
Bonnie Raitt.
In 1976,
Toussaint produced the
Meters-related group
the Wild Tchoupitoulas, whose self-titled debut was hailed as a classic of New Orleans funk. The record's experimentalism signaled a growing desire to branch out in the
Meters camp, though, which would soon cause the band's split with
Toussaint and, eventually, each other. The absence of their unerring sense of groove was noticeable on
Toussaint's final solo LP for quite some time, 1978's Motion.
Toussaint's activities tailed off in the years that followed; he still produced, arranged, and played piano on selected projects, which included albums by blues artists
Etta James and
Albert King, and rockers
Elvis Costello and
Joe Cocker, among others. In the meantime, his extensive song catalog was still mined regularly for cover material; the
Lee Dorsey period was the most fertile, not just for "Working in a Coalmine" (
Devo,
the Judds), but lesser-known items like "Yes We Can" (
the Pointer Sisters), "Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley" (
Robert Palmer), and "Freedom for the Stallion" (
the Oak Ridge Boys, among others). In addition, "Play Something Sweet (Brickyard Blues)" was a hit for
Three Dog Night, and
Bonnie Raitt cut a well-received version of "What Is Success."
The Allen Toussaint Collection, a fine overview of his major-label recordings in the '70s, was released in 1991. In 1996,
Toussaint formed a new label, NYNO, and recorded a full album of new material at his Sea-Saint studio titled Connected.
Toussaint also began recording newer Crescent City artists in hopes of preserving the classic New Orleans sound. He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1998 in the non-performer category. Going Places, attributed to Allen Toussaint's Jazzity Project, appeared in 2005, followed by the
Joe Henry-produced
The Bright Mississippi from Nonesuch Records in 2009. Four years later, the solo live album
Songbook -- its performances dating from 2006 -- appeared on Rounder. Although
Toussaint continued to perform,
Songbook was the last album he released; he died in Madrid on November 10, 2015 while touring. A few weeks prior to his passing,
Toussaint reunited with
Joe Henry to cut material for a new record. Those recordings, combined with some solo 2013 sessions, were packaged as the posthumous
American Tunes, released in June of 2016. ~ Steve Huey