The Original Pinettes Brass Band
The Original Pinettes Brass Band are a New Orleans brass band. Consisting entirely of women, they are the city's only all-female brass band.[1] The band got their start in 1991 at St. Mary's Academy (New Orleans), a Catholic girl's school.[2] Taking direction from band director Jeffery C. Herbert, they began playing New Orleans style jazz in what Mr. Herbert at the time called a “Dixieland band.” At the school’s spring concert in 1992, the band played the Rebirth Brass Band's “Freedom” and the favorable crowd response gave Herbert the idea that he could fashion the musicians to play contemporary brass band music rather than traditional New Orleans jazz. Some of the band members’ parents were having difficulties paying tuition to St. Mary’s, so Herbert’s idea was to capitalize on the possible commercial success of an all-female brass band to pay for tuition to the school. He dubbed the band the Pinettes, a feminization of the name of his own band, the Original Pinstripe Brass Band.[3]
For the 1993-‘94 school year, Herbert left St. Mary’s to direct the band at John McDonogh High School, but he continued to manage the Pinettes, many of them having already graduated from the school. In 1998, he left New Orleans to become assistant band director at Southern University in Baton Rouge, at which point management was turned over to the band members. During this period, the Pinettes played in second line (parades) and released a cassette tape, which garnered them little success outside New Orleans.[3]
As with many brass bands in the city, the Pinettes have had a lot of turnover in membership over the years.[3] When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans on August 29, 2005, band members were forced to relocate to other cities throughout the United States. After the storm, bandleader Christie Jourdain took leadership of what was left of the band and made an effort to recruit new band members because some members, greatly affected by the traumatic emotional and economic effects of the storm, were unable or unwilling to come back to New Orleans.
In 2013, after twenty-two years as a band, the Pinettes released their debut full-length CD, appropriately titled Finally.[4]
Red Bull Street Kings competition
In October 2013, the Original Pinettes Brass Band won the Red Bull Street Kings competition. Facing three other prominent New Orleans brass bands, the Pinettes not only won the title, but changed it to "Street Queens."[5][6][7]
References
- ↑ MacCash, Doug. "Original Pinettes all-female brass band blasts French Quarter Fest 2015". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- ↑ McConnaughey, Janet. "Unique all-female New Orleans brass band at Jazz Fest". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- 1 2 3 DeCoste, Kyle. "Street Queens: The Original Pinettes and Black Feminism in New Orleans Brass Bands". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- ↑ "Finally by The Original Pinettes Brass Band" . Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- ↑ Sakakeeny, Matt. "Street Queens Bury Competition In Brass Band Blowout". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- ↑ Odell, Jennifer. "The Original Pinettes Brass Band: Meet Last Year's Winners of NOLA's Red Bull Street Kings contest". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
- ↑ Reuters. "The Original Pinettes Crowned Street Queens in Biggest New Orleans Brass Band Blowout of the Year". Retrieved 2015-08-18]
Further reading
- Kyle DeCoste, Street Queens: The Original Pinettes and Black Feminism in New Orleans Brass Bands (2015. Online)
- Matt Sakakeeny, Roll With It: Brass Bands in the Streets of New Orleans (Duke University Press, 2013)
- John Swenson, The Original Pinettes Brass Band: Brass-Pop (2012. Online)
- Sherrie Tucker, A Feminist Perspective on New Orleans Jazz Women (2004. Online)