Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Rockin' Dopsie

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Alton Jay Rubin

Instruments
  
Accordion, vocals

Labels
  
Sonet

Record label
  
Sonet Records

Genres
  
Zydeco

Years active
  
1970–1992

Genre
  
Zydeco

Rockin' Dopsie Rockin39 Dopsie Jr I Got My Mojo Working Louisiana Music Factory

Born
  
February 10, 1932 Carencro, Louisiana, United States (
1932-02-10
)

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, composer, singer

Died
  
26 August 1993, Opelousas, Louisiana, United States

Albums
  
Saturday Night Zydeco, Zydeco Blues Party, Hold On!, In New Orleans, Lucille, Ay-Tete-Fee

People also search for
  
Fernest Arceneaux, David Rubin, Alton Rubin, Jr., Alonzo Johnson, Mark Miller

Alton Jay Rubin (February 10, 1932 – August 26, 1993), who performed as Rockin' Dopsie (sometimes Rockin' Dupsee), was an American zydeco singer and accordion player who enjoyed popular success first in Europe and later in the United States.

Contents

Rockin' Dopsie musicrisingtulaneeduuploadsoriginalslurockin

Biography

Rockin' Dopsie Rockin39 Dopsie amp The Twisters Rock Me Baby YouTube

He was born in Carencro, Louisiana, the son of Walter Rubin, who played accordion at local dances. Alton Rubin's first language was Louisiana Creole French. He was given his first accordion at the age of 14, and, being left-handed, learned to play it upside down. He began performing at local parties, and soon outstripped his father's abilities. He moved with his parents to Lafayette, Louisiana at the age of 19, and began playing in clubs in the mid-1950s with his cousin Chester Zeno on washboard. He took his stage name from a visiting dancer called Doopsie (and pronouncing his own name the same way). At the same time, he continued with his day job, eventually becoming an electrical contractor.

Rockin' Dopsie Rockin39 Dopsie Jr amp The Zydeco Twisters

Dopsie played music for dancing, assimilating R&B influences into zydeco and sometimes covering R&B hits in a zydeco style. He performed around Louisiana, and recorded occasionally for small independent labels in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1976 he appeared at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and was signed by the Swedish record label Sonet, who issued his first album, Doing The Zydeco, in 1978. Starting in 1979, he toured Europe regularly with his group, the Twisters, and his popularity there led to him recording a string of albums for Sonet in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Rockin' Dopsie Rockin Dopsie JR and the Zydeco Twisters Tickets Rockin Dopsie JR

In the 1980s, he started to gain attention in the US. His song "That Was Your Mother" with Paul Simon appeared on Simon's Graceland album in 1986. He recorded the album Crowned Price Of Zydeco in 1987. His final album in 1991, Louisiana Music, received a Grammy nomination. Dopsie also recorded with Bob Dylan and Cyndi Lauper, and in 1992 appeared in the film Delta Heat.

He died from a heart attack in 1993, aged 61.

Legacy

Rockin' Dopsie Rockin Dopsie Louisiana Music Amazoncom Music

Since his death, his band, The Twisters, has continued to perform. Now led by his son Dopsie Jr. (accordionist, vocalist and washboard player), with another son Alton Jr., on drums, the band is called Rockin' Dopsie, Jr. & The Zydeco Twisters. Dopsie's younger son Dwayne also plays accordion and leads his own band, Dwayne Dopsie & the Zydeco Hellraisers.

Dopsie was related to professional tennis championship player Chanda Rubin.

Quotation

"I'm the only man in the world that plays the accordion upside-down," Rockin' Dopsie said. "It's all because daddy didn't taught me how to play. I just picked it up."

Selected discography

  • Doin' the Zydeco (1976, Sonet SNTF 718)
  • Zy De Blue – Rockin' Dopsie and the Twisters Play the Blues (1977, Sonet SNTF 761)
  • Rockin' Dopsie & The Twisters (1977, Rounder 6012, licensed from Sonet)
  • Rockin' Dupsee (The Legendary Jay Miller Sessions Vol. 30) (1983, Flyright 592, recorded 1970–74)
  • Crowned Prince of Zydeco (1986, Maison De Soul 1020)
  • Songs

    They All Ask For You1993
    Ay-Te-Te-FeeIn New Orleans
    Keep A Knockin'In New Orleans

    References

    Rockin' Dopsie Wikipedia


    Similar Topics