Libbey Bowl "BIG BAD VOODOO DADDY Band"-California FIRES Benefit Concert
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 Published On Dec 27, 2018

   • Libbey Bowl "BIG BAD VOODOO DADDY Ban...  

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Video was filmed in 4K HD...Watch In High Def.

We Do Not Claim Any Copyright on this music.
We were allowed by the band and organizers to film the event.

This Amazing Live Great Brass Jive Band-Played for the victims
and families of the THOMAS Fire-WOOLSEY Fire and BORDERLINE
and MONTECITO Mudslide Remembrance and Charity Memorial Concert.

In OJAI ,Ca. at the Quaint but famous LIBBEY BOWL and Park.
An Excellent Venue.

The Brave FIRST RESPONDERS of all the events and tragedies were also Graciously Thanked and Honored by all who attended.

Many who put on the concert and attended were also families who
lost all their homes and personal belongings, but still wanted to
Help others "HEAL" and begin to rebuild their lives again.

It was AMAZING to witness this Courage and Unselfish effort.....

And as Expected The Great Music and Dancing Helped EVERYONE
Begin to feel stronger and better and supported by the community.

Much Thanks to ALL and to BIG BAD VOODOO DADDY for this !


"California's Big Bad Voodoo Daddy are an old-school swing-and-jump blues outfit who first came to prominence in the '90s as one of the main progenitors of the neo-swing revival.

Along with similarly-inclined neo-swing acts like Squirrel Nut Zippers and the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy helped to revive big-band music and popularize swing dancing for the MTV generation and beyond. As with many of their neo-swing contemporaries, BBVD concentrated on the swinging days of the '40s and '50s, borrowing some of the Rat Pack lingo in addition to the zoot suits that cloaked each bandmate. Though heavily associated with the '90s swing movement, the band has thrived on touring and continued to mature, deepening their jazz influences.
Formed by lead singer/guitarist Scotty Morris and drummer Kurt Sodergren in Los Angeles in 1992, the group built up a following with regular gigs on the local lounge circuit, playing to Gen-Xers enamored with the kitschy charm of the cocktail nation. This burgeoning lounge scene was captured in the hit 1996 indie comedy film "Swingers", which featured a song by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy on the soundtrack as well as an onscreen cameo by the band. By the end of 1997, the band had self-released two albums -- Big Bad Voodoo Daddy and What'chu Want for Christmas -- which were local hits and led to a major-label contract with Capitol Records.

In February 1998, Capitol released the group's major-label debut, Americana Deluxe (also known as Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, although the album was different from the band's self-released debut). This Beautiful Life followed one year later. By the time the band came together for a follow-up, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy had sold over three million albums, performed at Super Bowl XXXIII with Stevie Wonder and Gloria Estefan, and had their music used in over 60 film and TV trailers. The swing revival had considerably died down, however, thus returning Big Bad Voodoo Daddy to their original status as an underground band."

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