840 North Rampart-Rock n’ Roll history

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum designated Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Recording Studio as a historic Rock and Roll Landmark, one of 11 nationwide.
A few J&M recordings, including Fats Domino’s single “The Fat Man,” Roy Brown’s “Good Rockin Tonight” and Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti” have sometimes been called the first rock n’ roll record.
Now a launderette, you can still hear Fats Domino at the piano if you listen closely enough when the rinse cycle comes on..
Then stop by and see the Matassa boys at the family store at St. Phillip and Dauphine and get some red beans for later…
from Frank Etheridge’s 2006 (?) Gambit story:
Matassa then opened a studio in a larger space on the 500 block of Gov. Nicholls Street in a former cold storage space for avocados — “great sound there,” he says — and then later expanded further when he moved to the 700 block of Camp Street in a building that also housed offices for his Dover record distribution business as well as a studio. Matassa also had a plant in Jefferson Parish to manufacture the records.

“I was trying to be a factor on the national level,” Matassa explains of his expansion in the years leading up to the mid-’60s. “But every time I went to a bank for a loan, they’d throw me out. Unfortunately, people in New Orleans with money at the time were only interested in real estate deals or oil deals. That’s why Nashville made it with the music industry, because the city had a couple of sympathetic banks.”

couple of names from the past..

And I had several good meals at the popular tourist bar and cafe named “Olde N’Awlins Cookery” on Conti Street. The place is owned by Mike Lala, a long-time television cameraman in New Orleans who, after all those years of hanging out in bars, decided to open one. He has made his fortune serving the same four appetizers, four soups, and eight entrees year after year. It’s a successful formula with the out-of-towners. “I don’t change anything,” Mike told me. “I don’t even like to change the light bulbs.” Phil has known Mike Lala even longer than I have, but I always went to Olde N’Awlins alone. Phil says he isn’t going there until Mike starts using tablecloths.
Charles Kuralt, passage from his excellent 1995 book, “America”

Kitchen Witch

While heading for lunch or dinner in the Quarter, make a point to stop and see Phillipe and Deb at Kitchen Witch on Toulouse between Royal and Chartres. A great browsing store with excellent people to talk with. Best cookbook selection and conversation about cookbooks in town. It also has some other items like local art focused on food and records (yes vinyl) for those who, like the owners, have more than one passion. open til 6 most days and like most stores in the Quarter, opens around 10ish.
This is a highlight for your day and the best place to buy a few gifts all at once.
http://www.kwcookbooks.com

French Quarter-same yet different

On this day, most of us in the region are thinking back 5 years. I have read heart wrenching reminders as well as happy news that people waited to share today with their friends so that happy memories could start replacing the sad ones. I appreciate them all.
Since this blog talks of everyday life in the old quarter, I will tell the stories I heard about the days directly after K. All are tales that were told to me, so details are as close as I can remember…
-A friend of mine who was kayaking around the city after the levees broke talked of getting to the Quarter, finding a pay phone and calling his family in Chicago from its still working state. Hanging up, he turned back to the waterway, which was St. Claude on the lake side. He said (as did others) that you could walk on the river side but not on the lake side of the street.
-My mother evacuated and her coworkers did not know (as she never had before). Neighbors told her when she returned 30 days later that people would come and call for her over her wall (sure she was in there) so they could bring her food and drink from the restaurant. When one of the neighbors said, “she left”, the coworkers said, “Holy shit! She left!” Of course, she took the important paperwork so she was able to mail out paychecks from my sister’s house in Ohio right on time. She became the lifeline to over a hundred people needing to know what was going on back home and needing a shoulder to cry on. As usual.
-My mother walked back into her house (September 28th or so) on St. Louis and found the lights on, fish still alive and plants thriving in her courtyard. My stepfather had finished his 3 week shift on his boat on the Mississippi and walked home a week before. With their home intact, they worked to assist me and my grandmother who had damage from falling trees on the Northshore. Since my mother’s home is brick, built by hand by craftsmen who came from tropical climates (so knew how to build it right) AND its held together with iron rods with the older brick house next to it she remains among the luckiest in the city.
-My kayaking friend used another friend’s place on St. Ann that had electricity and working laundry throughout.
-I heard that the workers working on the cupola at the Presbytere stayed throughout to make sure it didn’t topple as they were not done.
-Scott Braswell of Stella’s opened Stanley’s on Decatur within a few days after the storm. Stanley’s is now on Jackson Square where he successfully fought off a bid of a Starbucks that wanted the vacant storefront in the country’s oldest apartments.
– A friend just told me a story last week of her and her husband’s stay in their non-flooded home in Treme and how they used their FQ shop to stay in when the police got too insistent about them leaving more than a week after the levee breaks. Even though one was working with media and they were fine with all of the food and water they had. So off to the shop with their 7 dogs. When they tried to leave later and went to get their car from the garage on Rampart, they encountered some dudes doing damage within to windows, ostensibly trying to get a car. They could hear glass being broken methodically on upper levels. Their van was flooded as they tried to exit, and as they pushed it up the street to a place where it could dry, police kept guns trained on them from across the street, warning them to stay away.
-All of the old families who had property still in the FQ used it for anyone in the family who was flooded or rented to people here to work. For a few months, the old city was packed with full-time residents. Unfortunately, it also brought Americans who drive everywhere with huge cars and the streets were overrun (and the sidewalks) with trucks with out-of-state plates and no idea how to parallel park.
-After many of us returned, we came to the old city more and with a renewed belief that keeping old and new side by side is more important than ever.

Protest to restore a park

Beth Lovett, Quarter resident

This morning French Quarter resident Beth Lovett protested in front of Armstrong Park about the park’s condition.

She also sent this email to all City Council members:

“Armstrong Park is a disgrace. Those of us who live in the neighborhood and

who use the green space on a daily basis are sickened by the deplorable

condition in which the City of New Orleans has left this treasured and

beautiful park. What is being done to insure that our park is finally being

restored?

This is not only a neighborhood issue. It is an embarrassment to our City.

Tourists ask why the park is not open. In the past I would tell them the

story of the “Nagin legacy”. Now it is your legacy.”

Garbage in, garbage out.

One of my favorite historical sites in the Quarter:
Garbage chutes designed (supposedly) to hold garbage from FQ homes, making it easier for garbage men to collect.
I remember these problems:
1. Bags did not fit. So, you shoved it down as far as you could and either broke the bag or you left it stuffed over the top (kind of like how some women wear tight shirts that show the rolls above their pants).
2. Rain collected in them. A lot of rain.
3. Garbage men left them open. People fell in.
4. Tops were broken or stolen. See above.
4. People threw some crazy stuff in there. Just imagine.
So, quietly they were cemented closed or torn up as soon as the sidewalks needed to be repaired. A few enterprising people used them to plant trees, some still are growing.
These are amazingly intact and found on Chartres.

What a boondoggle

Starting in the 1980s, these were placed in the French Quarter

D’or #1 and #2

When you need a pastry and a seat, its best to find yourself on Ursuline between Royal and Chartres. Croissant D’or is still a treat (even tho tourists now line up at 8:30 and knockoff folk art surrounds you).
The surroundings can take you back to Brocato’s Italian Ices or just since the bakery came to be there maybe 25 years ago. Still, even with the tourist line, if you get there early or late, you can have a great baguette and a strong cup of espresso…