Suppose
Opelousas Waltz qualifies as a
Cajun garage record since 13 tracks were literally recorded in
Austin Pitre's garage, with the final five from a dance at
the Silver Star five days before. Although the experience
Pitre picked up recording for the local
Swallow label shows -- every song here is a compact two and a half to three minutes long -- this is still
Cajun music recorded without any thought of audiences outside
Cajun territory. The excellent liner notes by
Ann Allen Savoy really give you the context for this music: hard, hard sharecropper work during the week with making music and dancing on the weekends. There are fascinating tidbits like how the famed "fais do do" -- where mothers put their children to sleep in an adjacent room and then rejoined the dance -- disappeared with a 1952 Louisiana state law barring children from anywhere alcohol was served and a few rare insights on the
Cajun music scene from the woman's side. The music is classic
Cajun with accordion, fiddle, guitar rhythm, and drums with the bass drum providing a foundation thump. Most of the songs are public domain, with a few
Pitre originals and
Clifton Chenier's genre-naming
"Zydeco Sont Pas Sale" done here live with a pedal steel lead and
Pitre's accordion pumping the rhythm.
"Cajun Breakdown" is a fine example of the unerring swing to the music, while
"Evangeline Playboys Special" shows that consistency is a virtue for
Pitre. There's an evenness in the tempos and instrumental tones --
"Grand Basil" gives a good taste of how the accordion and fiddle sort of harmonize and intertwine -- and not much variation in the approach. But the execution is very pro with two-steps for slow dances and the more up-tempo material fast enough to generate dancefloor action without getting too wild.
Pitre is out of the fluid, melodic accordion school and doubles on fiddle for plenty of high-pitched (and sort of out of tune) sawing on
"Lake Arthur Stomp" and
"Cheres Joues Rose." His nasal, whining voice is pretty grating, though, and while the live tracks feature more active drums,
Will Balfa's abrasive fiddle detracts from the pleasant surprise of
J.W. Pelsia's mellow pedal steel. There are plenty of other
Cajun discs -- by
the Balfa Brothers and
Beausoleil or one of the Ardoin clan, to name a few -- that would make better introductions, but
Opelousas Waltz is a perfectly representative slice of traditional, accordion-and-fiddle-driven
Cajun music. There's not a glimmer of artifice --
Pitre's band just set up and played like they probably did the weekend before
Chris Strachwitz showed up with his recording equipment and probably did the weekend after he left. ~ Don Snowden