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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/allen_toussaint_promo_photo_4_copy__large.jpg]]
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3
4->''Southern nights\
5Have you ever felt a southern night?\
6Free as a breeze\
7Not to mention the trees\
8Whistling tunes that you know and love so''
9-->- "Southern Nights"
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11Lyricist, producer, session pianist and solo artist, Allen Toussaint (January 14, 1938 – November 10, 2015) ranked among UsefulNotes/NewOrleans R&B's greatest and most enduring musical ambassadors. Thanks to his work with various artists both inside and outside of the Big Easy, he became a key figure in the curation of the sound of R&B in New Orleans in the '60s and '70s.
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13Learning piano as a teenager, Toussaint began his professional life in the mid-50s as a keyboardist for Crescent City music chief and producer Dave Bartholomew. If Bartholomew had defined the sound of New Orleans in the '50s, then Toussaint updated and remade it for the new decade with a rolling and rollicking piano and horn-led sound. In 1958, Toussaint (under the pseudonym, "Al Tousan"), released his ''The Wild Sound Of New Orleans'' for [[Creator/RCARecords RCA Victor]], an album that helped establish his reputation and, furnished a hit for American trumpeter and bandleader, Al Hirt in the early-60s with "Java". Although the record was a relative success, Toussaint really began making his mark on the scene after becoming A&R man for the Minit label at the dawn of the '60s, in which with his ability as a writer, producer, arranger and musician, he would be the man behind a string of hits including Chris Kenner's "I Like It Like That", Jessie Hill's "Ooh Poo Pah Doo", Music/IrmaThomas' "Ruler Of My Heart" and Barbara George's "I Know", among several others.
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15The mid-60s also found him working with Lee Dorsey, whose Toussaint-penned singles for the Amy imprint ("Ride Your Pony", "Get Out Of My Life, Woman", "Working In The Coal Mine" and "Holy Cow") made him one of the era's best-loved soul artists. The late '60s, meanwhile, saw Toussaint working with New Orleans funk musicians, The Meters. Hired as the in-house rhythm section for Sansu Enterprises (the label Allen had set up with fellow New Orleans producer Marshall Sehorn), this bunch backed the likes of Dorsey and Earl King, before becoming stars in their own right. With Toussaint at the helm they made songs that would be considered classics of the New Orleans funk scene sin as "Cissy Strut", "Look Ka Py Py" and "Yeah, You're Right" among others.
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17As well as helping invent the sound of New Orleanian funk, Al had also re-instated his solo recording career with in the 70s eponymous album, ''Toussaint'' (sometimes known as ''From A Whisper To A Scream'') and The Meters-backed, ''Life, Love And Faith'' for the Scepter label before leaving for Creator/{{Warner|BrosRecords}}/Creator/{{Reprise|Records}} in 1972. His three albums for the label included ''Southern Nights'', which would yield a hit record for Glen Campbell with a cover of its TitleTrack. He would also continue songwriting for artists such as Music/{{Labelle}}, for whom Toussaint also produced the massive 1975 No.1 R&B classic, "Lady Marmalade". He also worked with Music/BonnieRaitt, Music/TheBand, and ''The Wild Tchoupitoulas'' (a record comprised of the performance of [[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mardi_Gras_Indians Mardi Gras Indian]] music by the tribe of the same name, with instrumentation from the Meters and future members of the Neville Brothers band).
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19A further solo set, ''Motion'' (1978), would again fall largely on deaf ears and Toussaint would begin to withdraw himself from the music industry. However, he would periodically resurface on occasion producing works for the likes of Music/JoeCocker, Albert King and Music/EttaJames. And although he would still be present in the music scene (releasing ''I Love A Carnival Ball, Mr Mardi Gras Starring Allen Toussaint'', appearing as the musical director for the 1987 off-Broadway production ''Staggerlee'' and, like many other soul/funk artists of his time, his compositions were were sampled by hip-hop artists), he wouldn't release another high profile record until 1996, with ''Connected''.
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21However unfortunately, the most notable about his 90s-00s period was aftermath of Hurricane Katrina which would destroy his home and recording studio. Causing Toussaint had to uproot from his homeland, relocating to UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity. He would still record during this time-frame releasing ''Going Places'' with a backing band called the Jazzity Project, appearing on Solomon Burke producer, Joe Henry's soul artist assembly ''I Believe to My Soul'' and releasing a collaborative album with Music/ElvisCostello, titled ''The River in Reverse'' all within the three years after the tragedy. In 2009 and 2013, for Creator/{{Nonesuch|Records}} and Rounder Records respectively, Toussaint would ''The Bright Mississippi'' and ''Songbook'', the latter recorded live at Joe’s Pub in NYC in 2009.
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23Sadly, Toussaint died while on tour in UsefulNotes/{{Madrid}}, UsefulNotes/{{Spain}}, on November 10, 2015. The distinguished artist was paid tribute by producer Joe Henry, who pieced together several of Toussaint’s ''Bright Mississippi'' outtakes for the posthumous ''American Tunes'' (2016).
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25!! Discography
26* ''The Wild Sound of New Orleans'' (1958)
27* ''Toussaint'' (sometimes known as ''From A Whisper To A Scream'') (1971)
28* ''Life, Love and Faith'' (1972)
29* ''Music/SouthernNights'' (1975)
30* ''Motion'' (1978)
31* ''I Love A Carnival Ball, Mr Mardi Gras Starring Allen Toussaint'' (1987)
32* ''Connected'' (1996)
33* ''A New Orleans Christmas'' (1997)
34* ''Allen Toussaint's Jazzity Project: Going Places'' (2004)
35* ''I Believe to My Soul'' (with various artists) (2005)
36* ''The River in Reverse'' (with Music/ElvisCostello) (2006)
37* ''The Bright Mississippi'' (2009)
38* ''Songbook'' (live album) (2013)
39* ''American Tunes'' (posthumous) (2016)
40----
41!!Contains examples of:
42* FortuneTeller: In "Fortune Teller", the narrator goes to the eponymous individual asking about his love life.. and ends up marrying her. "..And now I get my fortune told for free!"
43* NomDeMom: On some of his earlier songs, he used the full maiden name of his mother, Naomi Neville, as a songwriting pseudonym for legal reasons.
44* RecordProducer: Before he effectively started his musical career in the 1970s, he was a producer in the 50s and 60s New Orleans R&B scene. He even did some self-producing for his solo albums.
45* WorkingClassAnthem: "Workin' in a Coal Mine" involved the tedium of the job as described in the title:
46-->'Cause I work every morning\
47Hauling coal by the ton\
48But when Saturday rolls around\
49I'm too tired to have any fun

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