This image is the cover for the book The Sounds of Louisiana

The Sounds of Louisiana

Chronicling the creation of new categories of music like zydeco and jazz and the addition of distinct flavors to established genres like rhythm and blues, rock ’n’ roll, funk, and hip-hop, journalist Roger Hahn provides an overview of Louisiana’s impressive role in the musical heritage of the last two centuries. He documents twenty musicians and musical groups who have—and still are—shaping the face of music in America. Profiles of well-known and more obscure, but no less influential, musicians include Jelly Roll Morton, Clifton Chenier, Irma Thomas, Buddy Guy, Li’l Wayne, and Hunter Hayes. Each profile centers on the cultural inheritance, accomplishments, and influence of the artists and features a full-color portrait by artist Chris Osborne. A bibliography is provided for further reading.

Roger Hahn

Roger Hahn is an accomplished, versatile, and respected New Orleans journalist. For more than four decades his work has been featured by such organizations as NPR Jazz Online, Louisiana Cultural Vistas magazine, Songlines, and KnowLA. Born in New York City, he studied and worked across the country before settling in New Orleans. After Hurricane Katrina, he used his skills as a writer and photographer to help organizations apply for post-disaster grants and documented the recovery efforts. Chris Osborne received a BA in art from Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, and an MFA in printmaking from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. While living in New York, she managed the Jazz& Blues department at Tower Records Lincoln Center, which put her in the middle of the music world and significantly influenced her art. Osborne’s paintings are in the collections of many musicians, including Tony Bennett’s, and her works have received many fine-art awards.

Pelican Publishing Co