Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens: The Big Ol' Box of New Orleans
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Welcome To New Orleans - Galactic Feat. Theryl Declouet
- Drop Me Off In New Orleans - Kermit Ruffins
- I�m Walkin� - Fats Domino
- Dr. John - Iko Iko
- Potato Head Blues - Louis Armstrong & His Hot Seven
- My Darlin' New Orleans - Lil' Queenie & The Percolators
- Para Dona Vas (Where Are You Going) - The Iguanas
- Meet The Boyz On The Battlefront - Anders Osborne &
- Ain't Got No Home - Clarence
- Feel Like Funkin' It Up - Rebirth Brass Band
- Zydeco Gris-Gris - Beausoleil
- Mother-In-Law - Ernie K-Doe
- That's Enough Of That Stuff - Marcia Ball
- Confidential - The Radiators
- Hey Pocky A-Way - The Meters
- I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say - Jelly Roll Morton & His New Oreleans Jazzmen
- Foot of Canal Street - Paul Sanchez
- Down In Honky Tonk Town - Vernel Bagneris & The Cast Of One Mo' Time
- Rocking Pneumonia And The Boggie Woogie Flu - Huey (Piano) Smith & The Clowns
- More Hipper - Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen
- Release Me - Johnny Adams
- Preachin' Blues - Sidney Bechet & His Hew Orleans Feet Warmers
- Jambalaya - Clifton Chenier
Disc 2:
- Dog Days - Leigh Harris
- No City Like New Orleans - Earl King
- Sal�e Dames, Bon Jour - Don Vappie & The Creole Jazz Serenaders
- Marshall's Club - Balfa Toujours
- You Can Have My Husband - Irma Thomas
- Go Go - Galactic
- Not Too Eggy - The New Orleans Klezmer All Stars
- St. James Infirmary - Preservation Hall Jazz Band
- Going Back To New Orleans - Deacon John Moore
- Hot Tamale Boy - Buckwheat Zydeco
- Fear, Hate, Envy, Jealousy - The Neville Brothers
- Poop Ain't Gotta Scuffle No More - James Andrews
- Mardi Gras Mambo - The Hawketts
- Ice Cream - George Lewis' Ragtime Band
- No Doubt About It - J. Monque'd
- Don't You Feel My Leg - The Dirty Dozen Brass Band With Danny Barker & Eddie Bo
- Dog Hill - Boozoo Chavis
- Au Bord De Lac Bijou Au Bord De Lac Bijou - Zachary Richard
- Mardi Gras In New Orleans - Tuba Fats' Chosen Few Brass Band
Disc 3:
- Shrimp And Gumbo - Dave Bartholomew & His Orchestra
- St. Phillip Street Breakdown - Dr. Michael White
- Going Back To Louisiana - Clarence
- Tell It Like It Is - Aaron Neville
- The Saints - Coolbone Start Start
- Canaille (You're Cute, But You're Sneaky) - Geno Delafose & French Rockin' Boogie
- Carnival Time - Al Johnson
- La Negra Tomasa - Fredy Omar Con Su Banda
- Let The Good Times Roll - Shirley & Lee
- The Broken Windmill - Tom McDermott & Evan Christopher
- Way Down - Champion Jack Dupree
- Hallelujah - Raymond Myles With The Rams
- I Hear You Knocking - Smiley Lewis
- La Cr�ve De Faim/Starvation 2-Step - Steve Riley & The Mamou Playboys
- Main Street Blues - The Red Stick Ramblers
- Sea Cruise - Frankie Ford
- Tee-Nah-Nah - Henry Butler
- Smoke That Fire - The New Birth Brass Band
- Give Him Cornbread - Beau Jocque & The Zydeco Hi-Rollers
- I Like It Like That, Part 1 - Chris Kenner
- Classified (Version Two) - James Booker
- Southern Nights - Allen Toussaint
Disc 4:
- Tipitina - Professor Longhair
- Party - The Wild Magnolias
- Dr. Jazz - Ellis Marsalis
- Ooh Poo Pah Doo - Troy Andrews
- South Of I-10 - Sonny Landreth
- Lipstick Traces (On A Cigarette) - Benny Spellman
- The Right Key But The Wrong Keyhole - Charmaine Neville Band With Reggie Houston & Amasa Miller
- Rip It Up - Little Richard
- Royal Garden Blues - Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band
- Stoned, Drunk & Naked - Anders Osborne
- Laissez Faire (Let It Be) - Bruce Daigrepont
- Digga-Digga-Do - The New Orleans Jazz Vipers
- Tailspin - Walter
- Lawdy Miss Clawdy - Lloyd Price
- Havin' Fun In New Orleans - Edie Bo
- King Of The Mardi Gras - Tim Laughlin
- Red Beans - Snooks Eaglin
- S.U.V. - Mem Shannon & The Membership
- 'Tits Yeux Noirs (Little Black Eyes) - The Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band
- Lazy River - Pete Fountain & His Band
- Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans? - Louis Armstrong & His Dixieland Seven
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #75569 in Music
- Released on: 2004-10-26
- Number of discs: 4
- Format: Box set
- Dimensions: 2.40 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens: The Big Ol’ Box of New Orleans takes the music of the Big Easy and puts it in the context of that vibrant city in a way that has never been done before. The four CDs feature more than 80 hits—old and new—by such artists as Dr. John, Professor Longhair, Louis Armstrong, The Meters, Fats Domino, Buckwheat Zydeco and many others. The result is a spicy gumbo containing all of New Orleans’ musical styles and flavors: jazz and blues, Cajun and Zydeco, R&B and funk.
Also included is a gorgeous 84-page book that features essays and sidebars that completely explode the idea of what liner notes can be. They’ll take you by the hand through the narrow streets of the Quarter, through the Garden District and up through Bayou St. John—imparting the history alongside the colorful legends, while giving an insider’s-eye view of the city’s great (and notorious) bars and restaurants.
Amazon.com
The producers of The Big Ol' Box of New Orleans claim it to be the first box set to cover the full range of music from the Crescent City--from R&B to jazz, from zydeco to funk. Indeed, this handsome four-disc collection ranges through the decades and the neighborhoods of America's first city of music, which has both pluses and minuses. Yes, it's a joy to bask in the diversity of the New Orleans sound. From Louis Armstrong to the Meters, Little Richard to Pete Fountain, Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queens scrambles to include a little something from a whole lot of native sons and daughters among its 85 selections. Problems, however, do arise. At times the sequencing can be jarring, as when Troy Andrews's raucous take on "Ooh Poo Pah Doo" gives way to the modern blues-rock of Sonny Landreth's "South of I-10." The obscurities here are great fun, but, given the city's rich history, they skew too heavily toward more recent releases. Still, there's much to be enjoyed here, from the photo-packed 82-page booklet to the mix of classics and hidden treasures that populate the discs. Not definitive, perhaps, but definitely delightful. --Steven Stolder
Customer Reviews
500 Stars
New Orleans is my home, and I love New Orleans music. New Orleans is, and always has been, a city that lives and breathes music. Doctors, Professors, Kings and Queens ("DPKQ") magnificently succeeds in capturing the wide spectrum of seemingly disparate sounds that comprise the New Orleans music phenomenon. No other compilation comes even close to seamlessly melding the common threads found in jazz, R&B, blues, gospel, Mardi Gras music, Cajun, zydeco, brass band music, Latin dance grooves, funk, and even klezmer music.
DPKQ shoots for an extremely high goal. It tells the grand story of the history of New Orleans music from the jazz of the 1920's through the brass band/hip hop fusion of the present day while paying tribute to every important stylistic genre in between. Although it is impossible to do more than scratch the surface of the endless bounties of the New Orleans sound in any 85 track, 5 1/4 hour box set, DPKQ thrillingly pulls it off and clearly sets the new standard for compilation projects.
In addition, the "liner notes", is actually an 84 page book chock full of detailed descriptions of the music and the history and idiosyncrasies of the city itself. There are over 70 photographs that will transport you to New Orleans if you don't live here, and will remind you of the unique beauty of your own backyard if you do.
As a life long New Orleanian, I am proud to give DPKQ the highest possible rating and to praise everyone involved in sharing the wonderful gift of New Orleans music with the world.
5 stars? What a joke. 500 stars is more like it!
DPK&Q - Boxset of New Orleans is excellent
November 8, 2004
Title: `The Big Ol' Box of New Orleans
Rating: Great
Usually boxsets do not sell in the numbers that single disc albums do but are thrown at for serious fans. This year there have been two "great" boxset releases; `Five Guys Walk Into a Bar' by one of rock's best bands The Faces, and, `Doctors, Professors, Kings & Queen The Big Ol' Box of New Orleans.'
The New Orleans boxset is probably the coolest gift one could give to a serious music fan. Four discs, a great box, and a terrific book inside, this boxset gives the listener a comprehensive over-view of America's premier music city. While other communities have an impressive history of great music, for me, New Orleans of the bedrock of "American" music. The so-called Big Easy is the home of jazz, a heavy contender for rhythm & soul base, and certainly the town that birthed funk. By mixing music & culture, food & entertainment, and a sense of the mystical New Orleans music has given the town a swagger that other communities can't mimic.
Each disc takes the listeners down a unique route. There will be well known names such as Dr. John, The Neville Brothers, Louis Armstrong & Pete Fountain. There are also less known but equally brilliant tracks by acts that deserve to be known like; Walter Wolfman Washington, Sonny Landreth, Henry Butler, and the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. The book, 84 pages long, includes sensational photographs, excellent sidebar graphics, and well written narratives that help the reader understand the history of this city and how it's inhabitants blended together numerous cultures to create a bizarre but beautiful community. This boxset is an absolutely brilliant introductory to some of America's best music and the listener's interest will be warmly rewarded.
Not Definitive, But Very, Very Good
I listened to this great box set almost daily until Katrina hit. After that, I stopped for awhile because it brought back too many painful memories. Slowly, I am inching back to it again.
Its great strength is variety. Louisiana is the only state I know that can lay claim to so many indigenous types of music: New Orleans Jazz, Cajun, Zydeco, New Orleans Funk (e.g. the Meters, the Neville Brothers), and the Blues (which the Mississippi Delta lays first claim on, but New Orleans and Memphis also deserve some credit for). And as the early tracks on this set prove, New Orleans was one of the first cities to explore Rock n' Roll as we know it. This set looks at all these styles, and it digs pretty deep. The Cajun and Zydeco selections are especially strong. "Au Bord Du Lac Bijou" is one of the most beautiful folk songs I have ever heard, and "Hot Tamale Baby" is sizzling hot Zydeco. This collection doesn't miss many important artists.
The only criticism I can muster against it is that the producers decided to limit each artist to one song only. This gives great breadth to the music, but little depth. Imagine a box set of the best British music that only included one song each from the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Led Zeppelin and you get the idea. Sometimes this set only opens the door to new sounds with a single song, and the listener is compelled to look for more. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it does make the set sound incomplete at times.
And one other nitpick: Why, of all the Neville songs, did the producers pick "Fear, Hate, Envy, and Jealosy," a song I have always disliked? On the same album this track came from ("Live on Planet Earth") is a spectacular song, "Junk Man," that leaves this one in the dust.
Still, if you know nothing about New Orleans music, or even if you do, this is an excellent choice.




