Active from 1933 | Genres World, Folk | |
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Albums Early Recordings: 1935-1950, Cajun Music, High Society Members Luderin Darbone, Edwin Duhon, Ben Sandmel, Lennis Sonnier, Johnny Farque, John Faulk, James Glen Croker Similar Joe Falcon, Leo Soileau, Harry Choates, Iry LeJeune, Dennis McGee |
Hackberry ramblers vinton high society 1937
The Hackberry Ramblers (also known as the Riverside Ramblers), a Grammy Award-nominated Cajun music band based in Hackberry, Louisiana, formed in 1933. Since its heyday in the late 1930s it has become one of the most recognized names and influential groups in Cajun music.
Contents
- Hackberry ramblers vinton high society 1937
- Colinda hackberry ramblers louisiana cajun music
- Early Years
- James Glen Croker
- Current members
- Songs
- References

The group, which continues to tour and perform, has one of the longest histories of a musical group in the United States of America, and while its lineup has changed many times since its conception, its founders — fiddler Luderin Darbone and accordionist Edwin Duhon — led the band until Duhon's death in 2006. (Darbone died November 21, 2008.) While the roots of the band lie in its Cajun music repertoire, the Ramblers perform a broad swath of American music, from Western swing to blues and rockabilly, and much of their sound blends them all.

Colinda hackberry ramblers louisiana cajun music
Early Years

In 1930 Luderin Darbone met a guitarist called Edwin Duhon and together they formed the nucleus of a band they named the Hackberry Ramblers in honor of their hometown. By 1933 they were on the radio and signed with RCA Bluebird Records. In 1936, they recorded "Jolie Blonde", "Oh Josephine, Ma Josephine", "One Step De L'Amour" and "Faux Pas Tu Bray Cherie". Darbone and Duhon were the first musicians to bring electronic amplification to area dance halls, running a public address system off the idling engine of Darbone's Model-A Ford.

Their eclectic repertoire included Cajun music, country music and Western swing, jazz music, and blues music. Due to a sponsorship deal with Montgomery Ward, the band adopted the name "The Riverside Ramblers". In 2002, Darbone and Duhon received a prestigious National Heritage Fellowship from the Folk Arts Program of the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Country Music Hall of Fame has honored the group; it holds enshrined many of the founding members' instruments.
James "Glen" Croker
Croker died at the age of 77 on August 23, 2011.
Current members
Songs
Grand TexasCajun Boogie · 1992
Turtle TailCajun Boogie · 1992
Crowley WaltzCajun Boogie · 1992