PLEASE JOIN US IN SUPPORTING THESE WORKING MUSICIANS WHOSE ART AND SPIRIT CONTINUE TO UPLIFT AND SUSTAIN US.

This week we present C.J. Chenier, coming to you straight from his backyard with a short set of zydeco and blues. Behind him are some personal mementos and a photo of his famous father: the late Clifton Chenier, undisputed King of Zydeco. The accordion C.J is playing belonged to his dad, who called it Black Gal. Clifton gave it to C.J. It doesn’t leave the house often, if ever, so it’s a rare treat to see it in good shape after all these years and coming to life again in C.J.’s able hands.

100% OF ALL DONATIONS OR PURCHASES GO DIRECTLY TO THE ARTISTS.
(Together, Little Village Foundation & Arhoolie Foundation will match the first $500 donated)

PAYPAL

C.J. Chenier is a GRAMMY-nominated zydeco and blues musician and recording artist. Son of the late Clifton Chenier, C.J.’s Louisiana Creole and zydeco roots run deep. When he was 21 years old, his father called him to join his Red Hot Louisiana Band on the road. C.J. grabbed his saxophone, met the band in nearby Bridge City, and never looked back. Over time he learned accordion by watching and listening to Clifton up close, and in the months after his father’s death, Arhoolie Records released his first album as a leader. Let Me In Your Heart featured CJ out in front of the Red Hot Louisiana Band, playing the accordion left to him by his father.

Today, C.J. can look back on a distinguished career of his own. For over thirty years he’s kept his zydeco roots alive and some form of the Red Hots on the road delighting audiences here and abroad. He has recorded and toured with Paul Simon (Rhythm of the Saints), appeared on national television (Daily Show, CNN, VH1), played many of the biggest festivals (New Orleans Jazz & Heritage, Chicago Blues, SXSW), and won his share of awards along the way. Like so many working musicians right now, he can’t wait to get back out in front of live audiences. “I’m not happy at all about not being able to come out there and make everybody happy,” he tells us in his WFH video. “I miss everybody and I’m really ready to perform.”

Learn more about C.J. Chenier at: http://www.officialcjchenier.com/

ABOUT WORKING FROM HOME

Just about everyone has been affected by the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic. In the music world, no one knows when the box office will open again, and even as many of us return to work in the coming weeks and months, working musicians will continue to be cut off from the clubs, dancehalls, theaters, and festivals that sustain them. And the rest of us will be cut off, too, from something we need now more than ever. So we’re bringing the gigs to the artists, and the artists to you — straight from their living room to yours.

Working from Home,” a co-production of the Arhoolie Foundation and Little Village Foundation, will feature intimate mini house concerts recorded live by traditional musicians around the country trying to make it through this current public health crisis doing what they do best. For every installment, we will provide links where you can give tips directly to the performers, and we will match the first $500 raised for each. 

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