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Don't You Worry About Boozoo Anthony Wilson "Boozoo" Chavis lived out his life in Lake Charles, on a few acres he immortalized in song called Dog Hill. Born in 1930, he spent his life farming and raising horses. In 1954, he recorded the regional and seminal hit "Paper in my Shoe" for Eddie Shulers Goldband Records in Lake Charles. Chavis always contended that Shuler ripped him off, and Shuler always denied it. The experience left a bad taste in Chavis mouth, and for 30 years he didnt record or perform. But in the 1980s, Chavis re-emerged from obscurity to international acclaim and is credited with revitalizing zydeco music. On April 29, 2001, just days after performing at the Dewey Balfa Cajun And Creole Heritage Week, Chavis suffered a heart attack and stroke while in Austin, Texas. He passed away six days later. Chavis was a walking powder keg of dynamite, both in conversation and on stage with his band The Majic Sounds. In the following exchange taken from a two-hour interview with Chavis in Lake Charles on Feb. 26, 1999 published here for the first time Chavis talked about what made him the one and only Boozoo. How did you learn to play the accordion? You know you cant hardly learn nobody how to play the accordion by telling them, "Do this and do that." You aint going to learn like that. You got to look at your fingers and how they go. Then you can tell em, "Push and pull. Make it rhyme with you words." Its got to ding-dong there in your head. You got to make that accordion say what you want to say, the way that the song goes. You know, like Susie-anna, Susie-anna, dont you cry for me. You heard that way back. (sings) Im going to Alabama with a banjo on my knee. Susie-anna, Susie-anna, dont you cry for me. Now make that accordion say that, and you cant talk it. You got to rhyme it. I cant read music, but thats the only way I can explain you. You see, I got a son there. He tries to sing some of my songs, and I tell him, you cant sing that. Let me sing my own. You sing something that I cant sing. His voice is not there at all. You couldnt sing my songs. You know what Im saying? Because you might talk it. Youve gotta let your music go up and down, let it rhyme. On my other record there, "You Gonna Look Like a Monkey When You Get Old," (sings) I can tell about your hair, you been fighting with that bear. You gonna look like a monkey when you get old. See? You cant say, "Hey, you gonna look like a monkey when you get old!" You talking it. You got to sing this thing. Youve got to have a tone of voice. I explain that to the people, and its right. Yeah. You got to make the accordion say what you say, and you got to say it and sing it right, like the song goes. Did you learn to play the accordion just by watching others? Yeah, you watch. A lot of them come to the dance where Im at and watch my songs and my fingers, and they pick up on my songs and they cut it. They change the words around. All that music they got there, you watch all of my music in there. I told them dont be famous on my music. Be famous on your own. They cant wait for one of my albums to come out so they can copy off of it. They want to make a rock beat with it. I keep up the tradition, the zydeco. Im the only one playing zydeco. Im the oldest one now living, except Bois Sec [Ardoin]. The only one sticking with zydeco. S--t, that old messed up music. They aint doing nothing but messing that music up. Thats why when sometimes somebody asks me something, and I dont be thinking about that, I tell em sometimes what I aint supposed to say. They want to change the tradition of that zydeco. They dont want to say theyre French, theyre Creole. They want to try to play something like that come from New York or Chicago somewhere. That thing was born right here in the cotton fields, but they dont want that to be said. But Im proud where I come from, and Im proud what I am. Im Creole, and Im down to earth. Im not trying to be something I aint. Thats right. Im me. People ask me those things sometimes, and I get angry. I come out with it. I tell it just like it is. I dont bite my tongue, because I know. Im 68 years old. Ive been married 47 years. When I was out there, them boys here wasnt born. Then they want to act like theyll pass over me. No, no. Right here. I speak like it is, and Im telling the truth because they werent even here. Ask today. I know. Thats like what I be telling yall. I dont brag, no. I speak right out from the truth. The truth is the light. What I tell you today, Ill tell that other guy that last year, and Ill tell him that next year. Whatever I tell you, Ill tell it again. If you met somebody who had never heard zydeco before, how would you describe it to them? The zydeco music is like the Cajun music, yeah, but its got a little rock beat to it. Its more lively. Well, the Cajun music is lively, but then theres a little rock n roll in there. Now a lot of people say that zydeco is snap beans and salt. Thats a bunch of bull. You understand? Everyone use that word. Like you ask me that, I could have told you that. Thats what it meant in French, Creole, but thats a bunch of baloney, man. (mimicking) "Oh, zydeco is snap beans and salt." Well what you explaining? You aint explaining nothing! Aint that right? You asked me, whats the difference between zydeco and all this kind of stuff. The zydeco is more like a rock beat to that. See? Its Creole music, but its got a rock beat. But thats where the word came from. Yeah, thats bull corn. Makes me mad. Snap beans and salt and all that junk. Thats not the word for that, but its the word snap beans and salt. Zydeco sont pas salé. Well thats snap beans aint salted, but dont use that word. I think thats ignorant, the way I can explain it. Thats ignorant. Dont be using that. What was it like the first time you went up North to play for people up there? It was beautiful. It was wonderful. Did they react differently to the music? Yeah. Its not too much different. They dance just like them out here, but to me they be dancing a little better. Over here, they want to clown now. Them people out there going to out-dance them two to one. And them people love that music over there. Theyre all friendly. You know, I come from the old school, see. And if I would have been out there and known what I know now 25 or 30 years ago, I would have been out there that way. I wouldnt be here at all. Because the people out here, theyre prejudiced. Over there, them people, we already got a motel, they want to take you to their house, and eat dinner and spend the night over there some doctors, lawyers. And over there, we call people by their name. They dont want you to call them mister. And over here, Im older than a bunch of them punks. I forget myself, and I say mister. Im old enough to be that punkys daddy, and I call that thing mister. But its a habit I grew up with over here, like Uncle Toms cabin. S--t. That burns me up, man. If I would have known what I know now, I would have been gone from here 40 years ago. See what I mean? I get mad when I go to answering those questions. Over yonder everybodys just alike, equal. Everybodys equal over there. S--t. "Hey Boozoo! Hey, how yall doing? Glad you could make it. We seen you on the Internet where you was coming, and we drove 800 miles to come see you." Dont that make you feel good? These bastards over here dont even want to come here. I give a festival right there (pointing to his yard) every year for Labor Day. All them neighbors there wont come here. First thing, you see them in the store, "Hey Boozoo, where you playing?" Sometimes I be wanting to say, "Go to hell." No good bunch of coonasses over here, Im telling you. And the blacks are just like it. They wont come. I got that pasture full of people from Washington, D.C., Chicago, Arizona, New Orleans. All that right here. All these from Lake Charles, nobody comes. My neighbors right there, they wont come. All of them punks out here, man. I was born and raised here. We been married 47 years. Im 68 years old. But its too late for me to move from here now. But I wish I could move from here and go stay out there Washington, D.C. or Chicago somewhere. I dont want to stay in New York, but Ohio. We went to Cleveland. We went to Minnesota. We went to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Virginia. All that. Connecticut, I could go stay up there. S--t, to get away from this. Yeah. Dog eat dog. The people going to help you over there. Over here, nobody helps you. If you aint got a bite of food to eat, they aint giving you nothing. Sometimes they told me it was like that in California, but I dont like California. Got a bunch of people there. I dont like it. But over here, if you aint got no gas to put in that car, well you better leave it parked cause nobody aint going to give you nothing. You eat what you can, egg and rice, maybe get you some meat. But you aint got nothing. Nothing from nothing leaves nothing. They giving you nothing. Theyre jealous of you. Im the only black here got a hurricane fence around here When I say something on that I be telling you true. If a promoter asked you to go to Europe, would you go? Theyve been asking me that. I ask them what they pay. I aint going to Europe just to say Im going. Its gonna cost them. Them other guys went over there for little or nothing. But not me. Its gonna cost some money to go there, for me, and I told my agent that. People been asking me for years why I aint went yet. Because the money aint right. My son-in-law went over there. They went to Holland, $400 a piece when they come back here. S--t, besides the band theyre going to have to pay me 25, 30 [thousand] dollars for me by myself. And thats not the band. Then youre gonna pay my motel. One guy told me from London, I met him at Slims and all that, I said, "What would yall pay to go there?" "Well, Boozoo, you play one night over here for a thousand. You play one night over there for 700. You play a night over yonder for " I said, "What you saying? You got be hustling them nights like that?" "Yeah, you know. You play for a thousand one night over here, and you go play the next for 500 over there. Then you play another night over yonder for 800." I said, "Oh man, Im not gonna play no thing like that." I aint lost nothing across there. Them people ask me that every year. I dont want to go. Uh-huh. Piss with Europe. I aint going over there. I aint going to try to go there because you went. If I see you out with a red car, then Im going to go buy a red one? Bull corn with that. Thats why come Im gonna stay where Im at because Im not that kind of fool. Ive been a fool all my life, but I begin to wake up now. And when I tell people that I guess I make em mad. I be mad when I tell em that! (Laughs). See I dont try to do like them. They try to do like me. Thats where the problem at. Do you think zydeco is going to continue in the direction of the rock beat? I think so. All the old ones are going. Im the only one left here. So all them young punks want to turn that music like that. You see, Wayne Toups was trying to turn that Cajun music to ZydeCajun. Now aint that something? They think the world of him. Me and him play together on the same stage, but Wayne Toups is just messing that music up. He can play that Cajun music, yeah, but hes going to play you a couple songs Cajun, and then hes going to start singing in English. You know what Im trying to say. Its Cajun music, but hes singing "I left you crying this morning, blah blah blah." Theyre changing it. Theyre turning it around. They use the English word in that and they change it totally different, but you can tell its that Cajun music, yeah. You can tell. Like them other boys, you can tell thats my music. [sings] I aint gonna cry no more; listen what they say, I aint gonna cry no more! But thats my music. But he changed the words. See? You can listen to my music in there. But thats what theyre doing with this Cajun music. I would rather them stay like them other guys Belton Richard, Jesse Leger stay with that Cajun music like that. But Wayne Toups, hes changing that Cajun music. I once read where you said that you dont mind people playing your music, but you mind them playing it wrong. Are there any younger guys trying to play your music the right way? Theyre all twisting it around. My grandson wants to try to play my music, but then hes got that Beau Jocque style in there. Sometimes he acts like he wants to play, and sometimes he acts like he wants to go the other way. I gave him an accordion. So I aint going to mess with him. If you want to play, play. If you dont want to play, well, f--k you. Thats the way I see it. In "Boozoos Payback" you sing "You play my music when Im not home, but they cant sing my song." Thats a good song, yeah. You know I dont get to play that song often. (sings) You play music and you doing me wrong. But they cant sing my song. Leona get mad and she stay home. Boozoo gonna keep on going. On your album Who Stole My Monkey theres an explicit lyrics label because of the version of "Uncle Bud." Does that bother you? No. I play it good all the time. Then when they ask me to play it rated X, I play it. "Oh, no! Dont play that in here." Man, I come out with it more faster you make me mad. If they bother me to play it, if the owner or somebody get disrespect, well Im sorry. I tell them ladies, I say, "Im sorry about this ladies." I let em have it. "Oh dont say that!" Well, whats the matter with you? You got some kids, eh? How you think you brought them kids here? And if you say it, "Oh, thats bad for you to say that." No. Bull, man. Come on. They dont want you to use that bad word, but you know what it is. When you leave out the building you doing it every night. I tell it like it is, me. Im serious when I tell you that because its coming from the truth. Then like [my wife] Leona hollers at me sometimes, you know. She says, "Oh Boozoo, oh no babe, dont say that." I say, "What? Its the truth!" Dont tell me dont say that, but it is the truth. Then I come with it more. I get mad. Just like I tell you, if you play that "Uncle Bud," you say, "Uncle Bud got this, Uncle Bud got that. Uncle Bud got a pecker like a baseball bat." That offend you that much? Well you aint got no business being in this hall. If it offend you, dont come here. See where Im coming from? I dont go out there and sing it all the time. The people ask for it. The audience. Charles tells em, "Yall want it rated X-rated, or yall want it clean?" "No, we want it rated X!" I say, "Yall want it rated X, Im going to give it to you." Well, if you dont want it you must as well walk out. You shouldnt have been in here. This is not a church house. Youll hear anything in a club. On songs like "Johnny Billy Goat" its just you and the accordion. Would you prefer playing just by yourself or with the band? It dont make me no difference. Playing by myself, it sounds good yeah. Thats on that big accordion. That joker sounds good. So it dont make me no difference. Its a yes and no. You dont want to lie. It will strain you a little bit more to play by yourself. And youre so used to playing with the band. But I come up playing by myself! I didnt have no loudspeakers, no guitar, no bass and all that. We used to hit on the wall with some sticks or some spoons for the drums and hit on the Coke box. So I keep time with my foot, see. I aint keeping time with them boys now. They got to follow me. You keep time with me. Im going, me. You catch me. I guess you prefer playing with the band, but Im used to by myself. I can play by myself. But the people are gonna want to hear a band. The boss, the owner of the place is going to want the full band to pay you. He aint going to pay you no good money by yourself. So you got to have a band and look professional. You know like on TV they got about 20 horns in there. That jazz music; I dont like jazz. I like the best music. I got the best. The Creole. The zydeco. I got the best music. Im not bragging on that though. Im just saying, I like the Cajun music and I like zydeco, but I dont like all them jazz outfits with about 20 horns in there. Thats just kinda noisy there. If theres one thing that you would want people to remember about Boozoo, what would you want that to be? I want them to remember me for my music, as the best in zydeco and remember that they had to copy my music. They know they got that music from me. I kept the tradition up, and then they want to turn it around. Dont forget that. But they aint going to forget, no. But they gonna want to forget, but they aint going be able to forget. Some people aint going to let them forget. Yeah. |
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