The Wild Magnolias

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
(Somebody Got) Soul Soul Soul 00:00 Tools
Corey Died on the Battlefield 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda 00:00 Tools
All On A Mardi Gras Day 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke It Right) 00:00 Tools
New Suit 00:00 Tools
Party 00:00 Tools
Fire Water 00:00 Tools
Brother John Is Gone/Herc-Jolly-John 00:00 Tools
Ho Na Nae 00:00 Tools
Injuns, Here We Come 00:00 Tools
Two Way Pak E Way 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul 00:00 Tools
Peace Pipe 00:00 Tools
Iko Iko 00:00 Tools
They Call Us Wild 00:00 Tools
New Kinda Groove 00:00 Tools
Battlefield 00:00 Tools
Pock-A-Nae 00:00 Tools
We're Gonna Party 00:00 Tools
Jumalaka Boom Boom 00:00 Tools
Life Is A Carnival 00:00 Tools
Coochie Molly 00:00 Tools
Soul Soul Soul 00:00 Tools
Old Time Indian 00:00 Tools
Herc-Jolly-John 00:00 Tools
Tootie Ma 00:00 Tools
Pocket Change 00:00 Tools
(Somebody Got) Soul, Soul, Soul 00:00 Tools
Oh! When The Saints 00:00 Tools
Shanda Handa 00:00 Tools
Ah Anka Ting Tang Boo Shanka Boo 00:00 Tools
Who Knows 00:00 Tools
Battlefield [Joe Claussell Remix] 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul (The Wild Magnolias) 00:00 Tools
Meet The Boys (On The Battlefront) 00:00 Tools
Shoo Fly (Don't Bother Me) 00:00 Tools
Hang Tough 00:00 Tools
(My Big Chief Has A) Golden Crown 00:00 Tools
Black Hawk 00:00 Tools
Cowboys And Indians 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke It Right) (Single Edit) 00:00 Tools
Meet the Boys on the Battlefront 00:00 Tools
Ah Anka Ting Tang Boo Shanka Boom 00:00 Tools
Golden Crown 00:00 Tools
Saints 00:00 Tools
Shoo Fly 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul - Somebody Got 00:00 Tools
All on Mardi Gras Day 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda Part 1 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda Part 2 00:00 Tools
Blackhawk 00:00 Tools
(Somebody Got) Soul, Soul, Soul * (from The Wild Magnolias) (1974) 00:00 Tools
Iko, Iko 00:00 Tools
Oh When The Saints 00:00 Tools
Peacepipe 00:00 Tools
Battlefield (Joe Clausell remix) 00:00 Tools
Corey Died 00:00 Tools
Cowboys & Indians 00:00 Tools
Two Way Pak A Way 00:00 Tools
Pock-N-Nae 00:00 Tools
Herc, Jolly, John 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul (1974) 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda (original version) 00:00 Tools
Ho Na Naee 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke It Right) - Single Edit 00:00 Tools
Battlefield (Joe Claussell remix) 00:00 Tools
Meet de Boys on de Battlefront 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke It Right) [Single Edit] 00:00 Tools
Cowboy & Indians 00:00 Tools
Go Tell It on the Mountain 00:00 Tools
(sombody got) soul soul soul 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke It 00:00 Tools
(Big Chief Like Plenty Of) Fire Water 00:00 Tools
( Somebody Got ) Soul Soul Soul 00:00 Tools
Brother John Is Gone / Herc-Jolly -John 00:00 Tools
Brother John is Gone 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul (edit) 00:00 Tools
Ho No Se 00:00 Tools
My Big Chief Has A Golden Crown 00:00 Tools
Carnival Time 00:00 Tools
Saint 00:00 Tools
Ho Ha Ha 00:00 Tools
Fire Water [The Wild Magnolias] 00:00 Tools
Firewater 00:00 Tools
Hando Wanda 00:00 Tools
New Suit [The Wild Magnolias] 00:00 Tools
I Been Hoodood 00:00 Tools
Pass It On 00:00 Tools
Smoke My Peacepipe 00:00 Tools
Brother John Is Gone / Herc-Jolly-John 00:00 Tools
Somebody Got Soul Soul Soul 00:00 Tools
Wild Magnolia 00:00 Tools
New Orleans Project 00:00 Tools
Meet the Boys on the Battlefront 00:00 Tools
Sew, Sew, Sew 00:00 Tools
Mighty Mighty Chief 00:00 Tools
Indian Red (Chant) 00:00 Tools
Run Joe 00:00 Tools
Ho No Nae 00:00 Tools
I Know You Mardi Gras 00:00 Tools
Angola Bound 00:00 Tools
Might Mighty Chief 00:00 Tools
Tipitina 00:00 Tools
George Wein 00:00 Tools
(Somebody Got) Soul, Soul, Soul ['Straight Out the Jungle'] 00:00 Tools
Life Is A Carnaval 00:00 Tools
Injuns Here They Come 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda (Percussion) 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul (The Wil Magnolias) 00:00 Tools
Quitters Never Win 00:00 Tools
Louisiana 00:00 Tools
505.3 Soul, Soul, Soul 00:00 Tools
Battlefield - Joe Claussell Remix 00:00 Tools
Hell Out The Way 00:00 Tools
Ah Anka Ting Tang Boo Shaka Boo 00:00 Tools
Barclay/Polydor Medley 00:00 Tools
Mardi Gras Make Ho Na Nae 00:00 Tools
Bye Bye Baby/We Love The USA 00:00 Tools
Handa Wanda / Smoke My Peace Pipe (Smoke it Right) 00:00 Tools
10 - Soul, Soul, Soul 00:00 Tools
Walk On Gilded Splinters 00:00 Tools
Shallow Water 00:00 Tools
Soul, Soul, Soul (Somebody Got) 00:00 Tools
Voodoo 00:00 Tools
  • 95,190
    plays
  • 21,289
    listners
  • 95190
    top track count

This information is copied from the Wild Magnolias web site http://www.wildmagnolias.net Hands down, New Orleans is the world's most musical metropolis. What's more, the Big Easy can also tout itself as the most exotic, exuberant city on the planet. These sensual delights converge and complement each other in the rich tradition of the Mardi Gras Indians. Between their irresistible folk-routed music and their stunning, ornate costumes, the Indians unleash a sensory barrage that epitomizes New Orleans’ “always for pleasure” aesthetic. And among New Orleans’ many tribes, none exceeded the talent, renown and flamboyance of the Wild Magnolias. Many misconceptions surround the Mardi Gras Indians. First and foremost, they are not Native Americans. The Mardi Gras Indians were black working-class groups that are part secret and spiritual society and part neighborhood social club. Fifteen or so tribes parade on Mardi Gras Day, chanting, singing, and beating percussion instruments. They are costumed in elaborate, handmade outfits that fancifully recall the dress of Native Americans, complete with feathers, ornate beadwork, and enormous head dresses. The spy boys mentioned in Sugar Boy Crawford's song, Jock-A-Mo, are scouts who check out the route before a tribe advances. In decades past, this was a serious assignment, because of the possibility of violent, armed confrontations. The origins of this tradition - which has striking parallels in the Caribbean, especially Trinidad - have yet to be conclusively documented. African, Creole, Indian, and Spanish roots have been suggested, and some synthesis of all these sources seems likely. This is also true of the meanings and the etymologies of the chants themselves. The original words and context are difficult to trace, but today the gut-level function is assertive peer-group bonding. In recent years, some observers have theorized that New Orleans’ black community identified with Native Americans as fellow victims of oppression, and imitated them out of admiration. The Indian tradition is also cited as yet another instance of New Orleans’ status as the northern frontier of Caribbean culture. This dialogue is apt to continue, at times sparking heated debate. What’s indisputable, however, is the fact that the Mardi Gras Indian tradition is flourishing. New tribes such as the Guardians of the Flame have formed in recent years, and Indian gatherings are no longer limited to Mardi Gras Day. In addition, the tradition is influencing other musical genres. One striking manifestation is the fact that progressive-country diva Emmylou Harris named her new band Spyboy, and now performs some Mardi Gras Indian material with help from her New Orleans-based rhythm section. Big Chief Theodore Emile “Bo” Dollis was born in New Orleans. As a child he followed a tribe known as the White Eagles, and he began masking as a Mardi Gras Indian around 1960 as a member of the Golden Arrows. In 1964 Dollis became Big chief of the Wild Magnolias. In 1970, the Wild Magnolias recorded a single entitled "Handa Wanda" for the Crescent City label, with Jazz Fest impresario, Quint Davis producing; nearly 30 years later, "Handa Wanda" remains a local favorite and a perennial Mardi Gras Classic. [More on Bo Dollis below] The Wild Magnolia's international reputation was enhanced with two mid-70’s albums, The Wild Magnolias (featuring the hit "Smoke my Peace Pipe" which the group recorded a different version for Life Is A Carnival) and "They Call Us Wild" which combined with the tribe’s deep folkloric roots with New Orleans funk. Subsequent appearances on Rounder Records in the early ‘90s underscored The Wild Magnolias’ continuing importance in New Orleans’ cultural scene, as does their Metro Blue/Capital Records debut, Life Is A Carnival. Theodore Emile "Bo" Dollis was born in New Orleans in 1944. His father was from Baton Rouge, and his mother came from a French-speaking Creole family in St. Martinville, Louisiana. Bo grew up in the central city, an old, run-down commercial-residential uptown neighborhood behind the grand St. Charles Avenue mansions. He was first attracted to the African-Caribbean-American tradition of Carnival Indians while still a youngster. Bo's career as a performer and his development as one of the classic singers in the history of the New Orleans recording began when, as a junior in high school, he secretly started attending Sunday night Indian "practice" in a friend's back yard. He followed The White Eagles tribe, playing and singing the traditional repertoire. In 1957 he masked for the first time with The Golden Arrows, not telling his family of his involvement with the Indians. He made his suit at someone else's house and told his folks he was going to a parade. Hours later his father discovered him, having recognized his son in the street, underneath a crown of feathers. Bo Dollis' name is virtually synonymous with the Wild Magnolias Mardi Gras Indian Tribe. He is clearly the most popular Indian Chief (chosen in 1964) in New Orleans, with everybody wanting to see him in his hand-crafted suit on Mardi Gras or St. Joseph's Day. Bo has been a legend almost from the beginning, because he could improvise well and sing with a voice as sweet as Sam Cooke, but rough and streetwise, with an edge that comes from barroom jam sessions and leading hundreds of second-lining dancers through the streets at Carnival time. In 1975, Dollis and Monk Boudreaux, Chief of the Golden Eagles, recorded James "Sugarboy" Crawford's 1954 R&B hit "Jackomo, Jackomo." There is contrast in their vocal phrasing, and each swings the story line at a slightly different pace; nonetheless, the unity of spirit shines through. You can hear the closeness of these two childhood friends, the only two professional Chiefs performing in New Orleans. In 1970, they appeared at the first New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Shortly afterwards, they collaborated on the classic Mardi Gras song "Handa Wanda." Seldom do they sing together in practice. The Wild Magnolias and The Golden Eagles have taken Bo Dollis and Monk Boudreaux from the ghettos and brought them to places like Carnegie Hall in New York City, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, DC, London, Nice and Berlin. Where ever they go, listeners will hear an authentic music to which New Orleans owes so much. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.