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  1. The album also notably featured Landry's nephews, the Neville Brothers, providing harmonies and some of the instrumentation. The album was produced by famed New Orleans writer-musician-producer Allen Toussaint .

    • Mardi Gras Indian music, funk
  2. The Wild Tchoupitoulas is a 1976 album by the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indian tribe the Wild Tchoupitoulas. While not a commercial success, the effort was well received critically and the experience recording it encouraged the four Neville brothers to perform together for the first time as a group.

    • 1976
  3. 19. Juni 1991 · Take Me to the River. 4.27K subscribers. 24. 16K views 1 year ago #takemetotheriver #neworleans #NOLA. "Hey Mama (Wild Tchoupitoulas)", an Original Song from Take Me to the River New...

    • 5 Min.
    • 16,9K
    • Take Me to the River
  4. 15. Sept. 2022 · 364 views 11 months ago. Neville Brothers and Wild Tchoupitoulas at the Monterey Jazz Festival (September 17, 1977). The Nevilles’ backing band for the show was made up of: Gerald Tillman –...

    • 77 Min.
    • 572
    • NevilleTracks
  5. Original album cover. “The Wild Tchoupitoulas” is a definitive expression of the New Orleans sound. From “Brother John” to “Hey Hey (Indians Comin’),” the album draws on carnival traditions stretching back centuries, adapting songs from the Mardi Gras Indians.

  6. The group notion started in 1976, when the four brothers of the Neville family, Art (1937–2019), Charles (1938–2018), Aaron (b. 1941), and Cyril (b. 1948) came together to take part in the recording session of the Wild Tchoupitoulas, a Mardi Gras Indian group led by the Nevilles' uncle, George Landry ("Big Chief Jolly"). [1]

  7. 13. Feb. 2024 · But George Landry, AKA Big Chief Jolly, founder of the Wild Tchoupitoulas, was positioned to do something even more special. Landry’s nephews just happened to be the city’s first siblings of ...