New Orleans Beyond Bourbon Street
From out-of-the-way jazz joints to po' boy shacks, a native son shares his favorite haunts in the Big Easy
- By Randy Fertel
- Photographs by Tyrone Turner
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Highbrow and lowbrow intermingle at lunch. Galatoire’s, that bastion of haute Creole cuisine, still requires a jacket for evenings and Sundays, even though its patrons must shoulder their way past strip clubs on Bourbon Street that call for only tassels on their dancers. On my tour, we lunch at the Parkway Bakery, which drew a thousand people when it reopened after Katrina. Most came for the roast beef po’ boy, a kind of terrestrial ambrosia.
On the lakeside edge of Tremé, I head for the crossroads of Orleans and Broad, where my mother’s flagship Ruth’s Chris once stood. (She died in 2002, my father in 2003. After Katrina’s flood, the corporation that now owns Ruth’s Chris relocated the restaurant near the Convention Center.) Here, the power elite once clinched their deals over 16-ounce rib-eyes drowned in butter, creamed spinach (my great-uncle Martin’s recipe) and generous martinis. When things got rowdy, Mom would take her servers aside and warn, “Easy on the drinks, girls, easy on the drinks.”
Catty-corner from where the original Ruth’s Chris stood lies the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club, the black Mardi Gras krewe that Louis Armstrong once proudly presided over as king. Across the street at F&F Botanica, my visitors ogle gris-gris jars filled with magic powders.
The Fertel Funky Tour then lands on South Rampart Street, which once housed the pawnshop of my immigrant great-grandparents, Sam and Julia Fertel. In the early decades of the 20th century, their world was an odd mixture—a claustrophobic, Orthodox Jewish mercantile enclave and the epicenter of a musical whirlwind. At the corner of Perdido and Rampart, in 1912, a young boy was arrested for firing a weapon and sent to the Colored Waifs’ Home where he learned to play the cornet. Little Louis Armstrong later bought his first cornet, one door off that same corner, from Jake Fink, whose son Max, a jazz musician of note himself, married my great-aunt Nettie.
At that time, South Rampart Street sat on the edge of Back o’ Town, with hundreds of joints saturated in music, booze and vice. These Uptown musicians drew upon an African musical template and preferred improvisation to written music.
While jazz was aborning Uptown in Back o’ Town and South Rampart, the Downtown black Creole musicians in Tremé, having been trained in the orderly traditions of European classical music, disdained Buddy Bolden’s “ratty” sounds. Separated geographically only by Canal Street, the Uptown and Downtown musicians hailed from different cultures and different worlds. But when Uptown greats such as Armstrong came into their own, Creoles could no longer look down their noses at them. As musicologist Alan Lomax put it, marrying the “hot blasts from black Bolden’s horn” with “searing arpeggios from light [Lorenzo] Tio’s clarinet burned away the false metal of caste prejudices.”
Visitors on the Funky Tour enjoy the fruits of that marriage at the Thursday gig of Kermit Ruffins and the Barbecue Swingers at Vaughan’s, a Downtown dive in Bywater—his band so named because trumpeter Ruffins often brings his grill and serves ribs and red beans during the break. On Fridays, we travel a bit farther Uptown to Snug Harbor to hear the cooler contemporary jazz stylings of pianist Ellis Marsalis, father to four great jazz musicians and teacher to many more.
In such musicians you can hear the jazz marriage of Uptown and Downtown, high-toned and down-low funky that reshaped American and world culture. My visitors are drawn to New Orleans to pay homage to that union. Still heard in joints all over town, that music, at once heavenly and earthy, makes me forever proud to be both from and of New Orleans.
Randy Fertel’s memoir, The Gorilla Man and the Empress of Steak, comes out next month.
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Comments (7)
Three of us older tourists from NY will be visiting New Orleans from 12/30/11 through 1/6/12. Randy Fertel's Smithsonian article was definitely helpful, but we would sure appreciate some advice on where to go for New Year's Eve, and if anyone knows of someone like Randy that we could hire for an insider's tour of the city, please let me know. Thanks
Posted by Julian Stone on November 28,2011 | 11:58 PM
I love that city. My daughter lives there and, from what I can tell, would live no where else. Thank you for your thumbnail sketch of where to go. I'm visiting for 3 nights this weekend and will use your roadmap well.
Posted by Jim Mallios on November 1,2011 | 04:27 PM
I love this city, where people greet each other even if they haven't been introduced. As a northerner in Maine, I always knew I was "from away," and Boston didn't seem much different. Here in the Crescent City I felt welcomed from the start. Seems like New Orleans people are interested in each other and always happy to meet new friends. I really love how we all get together for dinner, and what do we talk about? The great places where we ate, and where to eat next time. Thanks to Randy Fertel for the background on Ruth Chris' Steak House and how he grew up there in his Mom's restaurant. The "Fertel Funky Tour" sounds like just the thing for our visitors to do, after they recover from the shock of Bourbon Street.
Posted by Rob Stuart-Vail on September 24,2011 | 06:34 PM
Loved the story. I have visited New Orleans many times beginning in 1964 and agree that it is unique among cities. The music is always good and worth the trip. I really like the way musicians wander in off the street and sit in with the band that is playing. And I learned something new...the origin of the name "Ruth's Chris Steak House." Thanks Mr. Fertel for an interesting story.
Posted by Harry King Elliott on September 16,2011 | 09:10 PM
Great Article !
Even though I was born in New Orleans in 1947 and have played saxophone there all of my life , I never really knew what the true meaning of neutral ground was. As a child we played hide and seek in the bushes on the neutral ground on North Broad Street. It drove my mom nuts as she was afraid we would get hit by a car. Thanks for the enlightenment !
Ed
Posted by ed veatch on September 3,2011 | 12:31 PM
R - great - can not wait to dig into gorilla man - jim polster
Posted by Jim Polster on September 2,2011 | 03:14 PM
This article hits the proverbial natil on the head. Everyone thinks New Orleans is all about Bourbon Street, booze and corrupt politicians, while in truth, that is just some of what stirs the gumbo pot that is the Crescent City.
A native, twice removed, but now back for good, I love this city warts and all. Many have asked me why I stayed after Katrina. I know not how to answer that question except to say it's in my blood. There is a rhythm, a beat a breathing soul to this city. I can share it's high-lights and weep at the low-lights. Crime, Murders, "good-old-boy" politics, hurricanes, flooding, brutal heat...it comes with the territory, for while all of that lies beneath the surface of the city, what predominates is the joie de vivre. It is that joy that calls me to put my feet on the floor and greet the day, for you never know what the rising sun may bring - an impromptu parade for some joyous occasion, the offering to share a meal, a friend stopping by to say hello.
New Orleans lives and breathes. I would not want to be anywhere else.
Thank you, Mr. Fertel, for sharing your story.
Posted by Catherine Bell on September 1,2011 | 02:20 PM