|
<<Back to main
Notes page
Dewey Balfa
FRC207
Dewey Balfa was born in Mamou, Louisiana on March 20, 1927. Balfa was
one of nine children in a family of sharecroppers such; when not picking
cotton, he learned to play the fiddle from his father, and taking early
inspiration from the music of Leo Soileau, Harry Choates and Bob Wills.
Playing fiddle and singing with the Balfa Brothers (which included Dewey,
Rodney, Burkman, Harry, and Will, the latter of

Photo by Dan Peck
whom
spelled his surname Bolfa), he became a seminal figure in the revival
of traditional Cajun music. Dewey Balfa was among his native culture's
most impassioned ambassadors, helping introduce the Cajun sound to countless
new fans across the globe and inspiring an entire generation of performers
to explore their roots. He recorded memorable songs like "Drunkard's
Sorrow Waltz" and "Parlez-nous à boire," and appeared
on the Swallow label. By day a school bus driver and discount furniture
salesman, Balfa's cultural pursuits garnered him numerous grants and citations,
including the National Heritage Award in 1982, and a Grammy nomination
in 1986.
During World War II, he worked in a Texas shipyard, later enlisting
in the merchant marine; in his off hours, he continued playing music,
sitting in with a variety of western swing bands. By the late 1940s, Balfa
returned home to Louisiana, where he teamed with his siblings Rodney,
Will and Harry to play local parties and dances as the Musical Brothers;
by 1951, they even amassed enough of a local following to cut a 78 rpm
single, "La Valse de Bon Baurche." Acclaimed for his fluid,
precise style, Balfa emerged as so much a fiddle virtuoso that he was
much sought after by other Cajun performers, most notably accompanying
Nathan Abshire on a variety of recording sessions and live dates. During
the 1950s, conventional wisdom held that Cajun music was old-fashioned
and commercially irrelevant, but Balfa forged on; he and his brothers
continued performing live, and even hosted their own radio show. A mid-1950s
Newport Folk Foundation field recording brought them limited exposure
outside of the southwest Louisiana area, and in 1964 Balfa led a group
of Cajun musicians during a landmark appearance at the Newport Folk Festival
which ended in a standing ovation from the 17,000-plus in attendance,
offering the first concrete proof that the music could find a wide audience.
With Rodney and Will, daughter Nelda and accordionist Hadley Fontenot,
Dewey officially formed the Balfa Brothers band in 1965, and with them
returned to Newport in 1967 to a similarly rapturous response.
Balfa's experiences at Newport galvanized him to become an advocate
for traditional Cajun culture, and he worked closely with the Council
for the Development of French in Louisiana to increase studies of the
French language in the state's schools; he also pushed for a Cajun music
festival. At the same time, the Balfa Brothers continued recording and
performing live on a regular basis, growing in popularity throughout the
years to come. However, tragedy struck in 1979, when Will and Rodney were
both killed in an auto accident; within the next several years, Balfa's
wife and son died as well, but he soldiered on, reforming the Balfa Brothers
with daughter Christine and nephew Tony. In 1982, he also won the National
Heritage Fellowship, the highest award given to folk artists by the National
Endowment of the Arts. After a long battle with cancer, Balfa died on
June 17, 1992; his daughters soon formed Balfa Toujours, "Balfa Everyday,
Forever" to continue promoting the Cajun tradition into the next
century.
<<Back to main Notes page
|
|