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Warren Storm

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Birth name
  
Warren Schexnider

Role
  
Vocalist

Name
  
Warren Storm


Years active
  
1956-present

Instruments
  
drums

Genres
  
Warren Storm New Orleans Jazz Fest 2014 Warren Storm NOLAcom

Born
  
February 18, 1937 (age 87) (
1937-02-18
)

Origin
  
Abbeville, Louisiana, United States

Labels
  
Nasco, Jin, Rocko, Zynn, Top Rank, Dot, Sincere, Teardrop, La Louisianne, Premier, Showtime, Starflite, etc.

Associated acts
  
The Shondells (Rod Bernard, Warren Storm, Skip Stewart), Warren Storm and Bad Weather, Warren Storm and Cypress, Kenny and the Jokers, etc.

Movies
  
The Promised Land: A Swamp pop Journey

Albums
  
Lil' Band o' Gold, Swamp Pop Jukebox, Night After Night

Similar People
  
C C Adcock, Willie Tee, David Egan, Tarka Cordell, David Greely

Mama Mama Mama - Warren Storm


Warren Storm - Life's Problem


Warren Storm (born February 18, 1937 in Abbeville, Louisiana) is a drummer and vocalist, known as a pioneer of the musical genre swamp pop, a combination of rhythm and blues, country and western, and Cajun music and black Creole music.

Contents

Warren Storm cypressbandcomWarCypressJPG

Background and career

Warren Storm Touch Me By Warren StormBy Donna Lynn YouTube

Born Warren Schexnider on February 18, 1937, in Abbeville, Louisiana, Storm learned to play drums and guitar from his father, a Cajun musician, and in the early 1950s Storm began to perform publicly with Larry Brasso and the Rhythmaires.

Warren Storm Live and in the Studio Warren Storm Songs Reviews

Around this time he befriended fellow Abbeville musician Bobby Charles, and the two would travel to New Orleans to hear black rhythm and blues artists in the local nightclubs. These visits to New Orleans greatly influenced Storm's musical tastes and his own drumming style. Storm cites New Orleans rhythm and blues musician Charlie "Hungry" Williams as a major drumming influence.

Warren Storm Warren Storm 7 Decades o Musical Gold With the Godfather of

In 1956 Storm founded his own rhythm and blues/early rock and roll group, and in 1958 he began recording for Crowley, Louisiana, record producer J. D. "Jay" Miller. Miller convinced Nasco records of Nashville to release a 45 RPM record of Storm's version of the old country composition "Prisoner's Song"; the flip side was "Mama Mama Mama (Look What Your Little Boy's Done)." The release broke into the Billboard Hot 100 and both songs became lifelong standards for Storm.

Over the following years Storm recorded swamp pop music for numerous labels, including Rocko, Zynn, Top Rank, and Dot. In the early 1960s he teamed up with fellow swamp pop musicians Rod Bernard and Skip Stewart to form The Shondells, performing with the group and cutting tracks on the La Louisianne label until The Shondells disbanded around 1970.

Meanwhile, Storm released songs on several more labels, including ATCO, Sincere, and Teardrop, and, later, Premier, Showtime, Starflite, and Jin, among others. It was during this period that Storm recorded two more regional favorites, "Lord I Need Somebody Bad Tonight" and "My House of Memories."

During the 1980s and '90s, Storm appeared as a regular house musician at several south Louisiana danceclubs, and in 1989 recorded the Cajun Born LP for La Louisianne with fellow south Louisiana musicians Rufus Thibodeaux, Johnnie Allan, and Clint West.

Resurgence of popularity

Around 2000 Storm experienced a resurgence in popularity when he joined the Lil' Band of Gold, an all-star south Louisiana band that included, among others, guitarist C. C. Adcock, accordionist Steve Riley of the Mamou Playboys; fiddler David Greely; Richard Comeaux of River Road; and pianist David Egan of Filé.

On September 5, 2010, during his performance at the "Boogie for the Bayou" fundraiser event at Paragon Casino in Marksville, Louisiana, Warren Storm was inducted into The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame.

References

Warren Storm Wikipedia