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The Grammy-winning
Rebirth Brass Band is a globally renowned paragon of the New Orleans' brass band tradition. They are celebrated for melding their tradition with second-line, funk, jazz, soul, and hip-hop. Emerging from Treme's now shuttered Joseph S. Clark Senior High School in the Lower Ninth Ward, they are, alongside their brethren the
Dirty Dozen Brass Band and
New Birth Brass Band, simultaneously keepers of the lineage flame and pioneers in expanding that legacy on recordings and stages. In addition to releasing dozens of their own recordings since the 1980s, they have guested on albums by
Trombone Shorty,
Robbie Robertson,
John Fogerty, and
Kenny Wayne Shepherd. They also made several appearances in the HBO docudrama Treme. Four of their albums, from 2000's
Main Event: Live at the Maple Leaf Bar through 2014's Move Your Body, have landed on the jazz and blues charts in the United States. Four singles, including their version of the NOLA staple "When the Saints Go Marching In" and 2013's "Do Whatcha Wanna" have landed in the Top 40 on sales charts.
The
Rebirth Brass Band was formed in 1983 by tuba player
Phil Frazier and his brother, bass drummer Keith Frazier, and trumpeter
Kermit Ruffins. Since the economics of keeping such a large group of musicians on the road in the '90s and into the new millennium was often a daunting task, there have been many personnel changes through the years. For example,
Ruffins, a prominent trumpeter and bandleader in his own right, worked with the
Rebirth Brass Band throughout the '80s but left the group to start his own career in 1994. Similarly, trumpeter Shamarr Allen left the group to forge a solo career and has made a name for himself through theater gigs with
Willie Nelson's band.
One significant break for the group came about when Allison Miner began managing them in the '80s. Through her network of contacts nationally and internationally (partially a result of her involvement with the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival), she was able to secure the group bookings at prestigious festivals around the U.S. and Europe. The band's discography is long and varied, but began with a very small label run by musicologist
Chris Strachwitz, Arhoolie Records. In 1984, the band released their debut, Here to Stay, for the tiny label. By 1989, they landed at a then-growing roots music company, Rounder Records, to release
Feel Like Funkin' It Up, and a slew of good recordings followed throughout the '90s. In 2008, they released 25th Anniversary on their own label.
In the long run, it isn't the number or quality of albums
Rebirth has released -- though their 2011 album
Rebirth of New Orleans did well on the jazz radio charts, which is due to the great cross section of fans the band has attracted over the years. Founder
Phil Frazier has said he's proud of the diverse crowds the band regularly attracts at shows in New Orleans and everywhere else in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. A wide spectrum of ages and ethnic groups finds something comfortable and something they can relate to in the meld of classic R&B, New Orleans funk, soul, rock, and jazz that the band performs.
Rebirth of New Orleans also won the group their first Grammy, for Best Regional Roots Music Album, in 2012.
Two years later,
Rebirth Brass Band issued the full-length Move Your Body. After that, the group's touring regimen kept them from studio recording, but in August 2019, Live at New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival 2019 appeared from Munck Music. The record was nominated in the Best Regional Roots Music Album category in the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards. ~ Richard Skelly