- Source: Leo Nocentelli
Leo Nocentelli (born June 15, 1946) is an American musician and songwriter best known as a founding member and lead guitarist of the funk band the Meters. He wrote the original versions of several funk classics such as "Cissy Strut" and "Hey Pocky A-Way". As a session musician he has recorded with a variety of notable artists such as Dr. John, Robert Palmer and Etta James. He is the recipient of a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award as a member of the Meters.
Career
Nocentelli grew up in the Irish Channel and Seventh Ward neighborhoods of New Orleans. He was encouraged by his father to pursue music. He played ukulele at an early age and started on guitar at age twelve. He gravitated to jazz and was influenced by jazz guitarists Charlie Christian, Barney Kessel, Johnny Smith and Kenny Burrell. His first professional gig was at age thirteen. By age fourteen he was backing notable musicians such as Otis Redding and Clyde McPhatter. He played jazz, Dixieland, rhythm and blues, and rock.: 2 He joined the Hawketts and developed a reputation as a guitarist. At age seventeen he did session work for Motown acts including the Supremes, Temptations, and Spinners.
In 1964 he was drafted and served in the army for two years. During leaves he did session work in New Orleans. After the service he joined Art Neville and the Neville Sounds, at the time a recently founded seven-piece band. By 1968 the band consisted of four members: Nocentelli, Art Neville, George Porter, and Ziggy Modeliste. The band had a fluid style and each instrument was free to go anywhere musically. The band performed dance-style rhythm and blues at the Ivanhoe nightclub six nights a week. On Sundays, Nocentelli, Porter, and Modeliste performed jazz gigs. Nocentelli said his bandmates were his biggest influence and called his experience up to this point in time the learning phase of his career.
The band released two singles as the Meters, "Sophisticated Cissy" and "Cissy Strut", both originally written by Nocentelli. The commercial success of "Cissy Strut" became an impetus for the band's subsequent recording career as the Meters. From 1969 to 1977 the band released eight studio albums, with Nocentelli as one of the primary songwriters. He wrote the original versions of funk songs such as "People Say" and "Hey Pocky A-Way". Early on, improvisation was a major part of song development.: 2 Though the band gained notoriety in the music community, the lack of commercial success along with managerial and artistic factors gave way to their disbandment in late 1970s.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Nocentelli wrote, co-wrote and did session work – mostly in Cosimo, Sansu, and Sea-Saint studios. As songwriter and producer, he learned from and was influenced by Allen Toussaint. He backed a variety of artists such as Dr. John, Robert Palmer, Albert King, Etta James, Joe Cocker, Earl King, Chris Kenner, and Betty Harris.
In 1971, Nocentelli recorded a solo debut album titled Another Side. He wrote the album during a brief span when the Meters were split up. Nocentelli sidelined the project because the Meters signed a record deal with Warner Records in 1972. The album was released years later in 2021.
In the early 1980s Nocentelli toured with Jimmy Buffett. He moved to Los Angeles in 1982. He continued to do session work and performed regularly with former bandmate George Porter as GEO/LEO. He also remained close with Modeliste, who had moved to the San Francisco Bay Area. They performed in various quartet formations and released a live album titled Nocentelli: Live in San Francisco. At one of their shows in 1989, Nocentelli and Porter invited Modeliste and Neville on stage. The impromptu performance was the first reunion of the original Meters. The same year Nocentelli, Neville, and Porter formed The Funky Meters with Russell Batiste on drums. Nocentelli performed with the reincarnated lineup until 1993.
He briefly moved back to New Orleans in the early 1990s and returned to Los Angeles in 1992. He continued to perform with two Meters-inspired lineups: The Meter Men and the Meters Experience. The Meter Men are Nocentelli, Porter, and Modeliste with Page McConnell on keyboards; variations included keyboardists Rich Vogel, John Gros, and drummer Russell Batiste. The Meters Experience is Nocentelli in various quartets with Bernie Worrell, Bill Dickens, Oteil Burbridge, Al Di Meola, Jason Crosby, George Laks, Albert Margolis, Jamal Batiste, Ricky Cortez, Felix Pollard, and others.
Early on, Nocentelli used a Gibson ES-175 hollow body guitar. He switched to a semi-hollow Fender Starcaster in mid-1970s. Around 2001 he switched to the semi-hollow Gibson ES-335. Nocentelli has performed in several reunions with the original Meters lineup. He moved to New Orleans in 2015 and continues to perform. He received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018 as a member of the Meters.
Style
Nocentelli was self-taught. In his early teens he emulated jazz guitarists while listening to phonograph records. He was drawn to jazz, but to survive professionally he had to become proficient in multiple genres. In 1960s and 1970s he was part of an era in which New Orleans jazz gave way to rhythm and blues, and funk. Nocentelli's band, The Meters, were innovative and set the stylistic tone of New Orleans funk. The band's early works were rooted in improvisation. According to Nocentelli, genres are relative and he alludes to incorporating different genres in his style. He said in funk as well as in rhythm guitar you have to complement and react to what you hear, and said that is not a teachable skill. In addition to live performance and session work, songwriting was a significant part of Nocentelli's contribution.
Discography
= Solo albums
=Nocentelli: Live in San Francisco (DJM, 1997)
Rhythm & Rhymes Part 1 (TLB, 2009)
Another Side (Light in the Attic, 2021), lost solo album, written in 1971, released in 2021
= With others
=Credits partly adapted from AllMusic.
In the Right Place (Atco, 1973) with Dr. John
Nightbirds (Epic, 1974) with Labelle
Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley (Island, 1974) with Robert Palmer
Desitively Bonnaroo (Atco, 1974) with Dr. John
Keep On Lovin' You (United Artists, 1975) with Z. Z. Hill
Phoenix (Epic, 1975) with Labelle
The Wild Tchoupitoulas (Mango, 1976) with The Wild Tchoupitoulas
Patti LaBelle (Epic, 1977) with Patti LaBelle
New Orleans Heat (Tomato, 1978) with Albert King
Peaceful (Marina, 1978) with Al Johnson
Tasty (Epic, 1978) with Patti LaBelle
Changes (MCA, 1980) with Etta James
Fiyo on the Bayou (A&M, 1981) with The Neville Brothers
On My Way (Atlantic, 1982) with Gwen McCrae
Experiment in White (Atlantic, 1982) with Janis Siegel
On the Line (RCA, 1983) with Michael Wycoff
Let My People Go (Quest, 1985) with The Winans
Winner in You (MCA, 1986) with Patti LaBelle
Tenderness (American Clave, 1990) with Kip Hanrahan
Stickin' to My Guns (Island, 1990) with Etta James
Victory Mixture (Orleans, 1990) with Willy DeVille
Brother's Keeper (A&M, 1990) with The Neville Brothers
Storyville (Geffen, 1991) with Robbie Robertson
Solace (Arista, 1991) with Sarah McLachlan
Us (Geffen, 1992) with Peter Gabriel
Southern Exposure (Jive, 1993) with Maceo Parker
There's Room for Us All (Black Top, 1993) with Terrance Simien
Urban Blues Re: Newell (Sony Plain, 1995) with King Biscuit Boy
Connected (NYNO, 1996) with Allen Toussaint
Rock and Roll Doctor: Lowell George Tribute (CMC, 1997) with various artists
Life, Love & the Blues (Private Music, 1998) with Etta James
Matriarch of the Blues (Private Music, 2000) with Etta James
Big Wide Grin (Sony, 2001) with Keb' Mo'
Sing Me Back Home (Sony BMG, 2006) with New Orleans Social Club
Maestro (Heads Up, 2008) with Taj Mahal
The Dreamer (Verve, 2011) with Etta James
Unlock Your Mind (Rounder, 2012) with The Soul Rebels
Parking Lot Symphony (Blue Note, 2017) with Trombone Shorty
Instructional videos
The Secrets of Funk: Using it and Fusing it ! (2003) – instructional DVD
References
Further reading
Jason Berry; Jonathan Foose; Tad Jones (1992). Up from the Cradle of Jazz. Da Capo Press. pp. 190–200. ISBN 9780306804939.
Grace Lichtenstein; Laura Dankner (1993). Musical Gumbo: The Music of New Orleans. W.W. Norton. pp. 153–160. ISBN 9780393034684.
External links
Leo Nocentelli Interview NAMM Oral History Library (2020)
Leo Nocentelli Interview Eric Krasno Plus One podcast (2021)
Leo Nocentelli Interview The Guardian (2021)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Leo Nocentelli
- The Meters
- Nocentelli: Live in San Francisco
- Super Tight
- The Meters (album)
- Mike Mangan (musician)
- Look-Ka Py Py
- Berzerk (song)
- Rejuvenation (The Meters album)
- Struttin'