Anthony "Tuba Fats" Lacen
September 15, 1950 - January 11, 2004
R.I.P
Popular New Orleans Tuba Player Dies At 53
Anthony Lacen Suffered Heart Attack Sunday 1/11/04
POSTED: 4:46 PM CST January 13, 2004
NEW ORLEANS -- Anthony "Tuba Fats" Lacen, a popular brass
band tuba player and stalwart of the Jackson Square musicians' community,
died late Sunday at his home of an apparent heart attack. He was 53.
He was among the young performers recruited for the Fairview Baptist
Church Band in the 1960s by jazz banjoist Danny Barker. The schooling
he and his peers received from Barker helped rekindle interest in traditional
New Orleans brass band jazz and its historic role in jazz funerals, second-line
parades and other cultural traditions.
Lacen developed his jazz talents working with Sweet Emma, Kid Thomas
and other bandleaders at the French Quarter's Preservation Hall. He later
served in the Gibson, Olympia, Doc Paulin, Onward and Tuxedo brass bands,
among others.
Services to celebrate his life and contributions to New
Orleans are as follows:
Saturday, Jan. 17
Visitation
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Rhodes Funeral Home
3933 Washington Ave.
Sunday, Jan. 18
Visitation
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Gallier Hall
545 St. Charles Ave.
Funeral Service
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Gallier Hall
545 St. Charles Ave.
Departure of Jazz Funeral Procession
2 p.m.
Gallier Hall
Parade route:
St. Charles Ave. to Poydras Street
Poydras Street to Carondelet Street
Carondelet Street to Canal Street
Canal Street to Bourbon Street
Bourbon Street to St. Ann Street
St. Ann Street to Chartres Street
Chartres Street to Jackson Square
St. Peter Street to Preservation Hall
St. Peter Street to N. Rampart Street
N. Rampart Street to St. Louis Street
St. Louis Street to Basin Street
Disband at St. Louis Cemetery No. 1
The Repast will follow at the Treme Center Tuba Fats: Livin’ La Vida Tuba
From offBEAT Interview by Bunny Matthews
Photography by Rick Olivier
Tuba Fats, born Anthony Lacen on September 15,
1950 in New Orleans, is an icon of brass band players. From the defunct
Gibson Brass Band to
Doc Paulin’s brass band to the Fairview, the Olympia, the Onward,
the Eureka and the Chosen Few, Tuba Fats has provided the bottom notes
for virtually every performing brass band ensemble in New Orleans.
Most afternoons, he plays in Jackson Square. Fortunately for us, a
recent deluge temporarily prevented this activity, thereby freeing
Tuba Fats to sit down and reflect upon his career.

I started playing tuba in grammar school
at McDonogh 36 with the band director Clyde Kerr, Sr. I wanted to play
trumpet and I went in to
join the band and Mr. Kerr said, "See that big horn in the corner?
If you want to be in the band, you play that big horn." I never
did get to play the trumpet. He said I was a big guy and he needed
somebody big to carry the horn.
You’ve got to like the tuba–that’s
the key–you’ve
got to really like it. You have to have a lot of wind to put in it also.
I listened at a lot of upright bass players and I perfected the tone
and the sound that I got from listening at upright bass players. At one
time, I was one of the youngest tuba players in the city of New Orleans.
I was born and raised six blocks from the Dew Drop
Inn. I used to sneak out at night and go ride my little bike down by
the Dew Drop. I was always
big so I was able to get in. I’d see Big Joe Turner and B.B. King.
We’d be playing ball and see these big busses going up Simon Bolivar
and say, "Somebody’s at the Dew Drop tonight!" Later
on that night, my parents would be sleeping and I’d sneak out the
side door and later, I’d catch a whupping. My mother whupped me
so much! She didn’t want me playing this music. She used to always
tell me, "Get that music out of your head!"
My parents were very religious–church peoples.
They looked at the drugs and stuff and figured everybody had to be that
way. My mother
used to tell people, "That’s the worst kid I got in my house
because he’s got that music in his head." After she started
seeing me playing and saw I was doing all right, she’d tell ’em, "He’s
the best kid I got!"
I worked out of Preservation Hall. I played with
all the greats–Kid
Thomas, Sweet Emma, Ernie Cagnoletti. It’s just a nice thing that
Allan Jaffe gave me the opportunity to come in to Preservation Hall,
to learn to play the old music.
The music changed around 1974. I was playing for
the Olympia Brass Band and we kinda did some rhythm and blues tunes like "I
Got A Woman" and
Professor Longhair’s "Mardi Gras In New Orleans" and
a tune I wrote called "Tuba Fats" and the Mardi Gras Indians
tune, "Iko Iko." It changed the music around and that’s
what brought on the ReBirth, the Little Rascals and all these other bands
that’s out. I had also formed a band called the Chosen Few Brass
Band and we started hipping the music up a little bit. That’s what
brought the big change onto the music scene.
New
Orleans musicians have a certain feeling in their music that peoples
like. It’s that beat–we’ve got that beat. No matter
where we go, we’re always recognized. I just went on a little small
tour to Austria and peoples enjoyed it. I went back to Munich, the week
after, with James Andrews, and people still enjoyed it. There’s
something about New Orleans music that just moves peoples around and
it’s gonna always be there. It’s not ever gonna leave us.
It’s just like gumbo. You can do a gumbo and
if you don’t
put that filé to it, it’s not a gumbo. It’s the same
way with New Orleans music, it’s got that filé in it. That’s
what it’s all about.
Tourists get all different types of ideas about the
music here in New Orleans. Some peoples tell ’em bad things about
it, some peoples tell ’em good things about it. I play in Jackson
Square and I do it because peoples love music and I love to see peoples
enjoy music.
There’s some musicians that don’t talk to me or think bad
about me because I play out on the street and all but I care less about
that because when I die, I’m gonna die by myself. And they’ll
be the ones standing over me, saying, "Oh, he was a good man!"
People come to New Orleans to hear the music and
they don’t get
it up and down Bourbon Street. It’s not there anymore. When I’m
on the square playing, I can see the joy in these peoples’ hearts–they’re
really enjoying the music. New Orleans music is something that will never
die.
I’m fine–I don’t need to be a millionaire.
If I want to play on the street, that’s my business. We’re
not beggars, we’re not homeless. People should wake up and realize
we’re
playing on the street because we’re playing for some old folks
who can’t get out at night. Doctors and lawyers are crazy about
music on the square. Danny Barker played on the square with us. Louis
Armstrong played on the streets.
Music is communication and relaxation. You can go
somewhere and be very, very mad and hear some good music and you forget
about the madness that
you have.
Some of the musicians who are sitting back with their
mouths pushed out, putting out bad things about music should come forward
and spread
it a little forward so that peoples can enjoy it because you only have
a short life. I’m enjoying mine. Music will go with me all the
way to my grave. That’s how I want to die–I want to play
that last note and die. That’s the way to go–take the joy
with you.
home | music
| new
releases | news | merchandise
| order info | photos | links | guestbook
| contact
web site design
and hosting by
LAlink, Inc.
|