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Tipitina's Presents
Cimafunk'n New Orleans - Live and Direct From Cuba Cimafunk w/ The Soul Rebels + Jon Cleary Band w/ Herlin Riley
Sat, 6 Apr, 10:00 PM CDT
Doors open
9:00 PM CDT
Tipitina's
501 Napoleon Ave, New Orleans, LA 70115
TICKET SALES TERMINATED
Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
***
- Ages 18+
- Must Have Valid Government-Issued ID to Enter
- General Admission / Standing Room Only
- Purchaser Must Be Present (with Valid Photo ID -OR- Passport) to Claim Will Call Tickets
- Name Changes Must Be Made Before Night of Show
- No Professional Cameras or Rigs (Cameras with Removable Lenses)
- All Sales Are Final
** The Box Office is open 10am to 4:30pm Monday-Friday **
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ONLINE TICKET SALES WILL CEASE APPROXIMATELY 1 HOUR BEFORE DOORS OPEN
TICKETS PURCHASED IN ADVANCE (WILL CALL) WILL BE HELD AT THE FRONT DOOR -OR- A TABLE WILL BE SETUP ON THE SIDE OF THE BUILDING 30 MINUTES BEFORE DOOR TIME
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Event Information
Age Limit
18+
Refund Policy
All sales final

Music
Cimafunk
Cimafunk
Music

New Orleans Brass Bands
The Soul Rebels
The Soul Rebels
New Orleans Brass Bands
The Soul Rebels started with an idea – to expand upon the pop music they loved on the radio and the New Orleans brass tradition they grew up on. They took that tradition and blended funk and soul with elements of hip hop, jazz and rock all within a brass band context. The band has built a career around an eclectic live show that harnesses the power of horns and drums in a deep pocket funk party-like atmosphere. The Soul Rebels continue to chart new territory as they feature in major films, tour globally, and combine topnotch musicianship with songs that celebrate dancing, life, funk and soul.

Music
Jon Cleary
Jon Cleary
Music
Jon Cleary’s love and affinity for New Orleans music goes back to the rural British village of Cranbrook, Kent, where he was raised in a musical family. Cleary’s maternal grandparents performed in London in the 1940s, under the respective stage names Sweet Dolly Daydream and Frank Neville, The Little Fellow With The Educated Feet – she as a singer, and he as a crooner and tap dancer.
As a teen Cleary grew increasingly interested in funk-infused music and discovered that three such songs that he particularly admired – LaBelle’s “Lady Marmalade,” Robert Palmer’s version of “Sneakin’ Sally Through the Alley,” and Frankie Miller’s rendition of “Brickyard Blues” – were attributed to Allen Toussaint as either the songwriter, the producer, or both. Cleary’s knowledge of Toussaint’s work expanded significantly when his uncle returned home to the U.K., after a two-year sojourn in New Orleans, with a copy of a Toussaint LP and two suitcases full of New Orleans R&B 45s.
In 1981 Cleary flew to New Orleans for an initial pilgrimage and took a cab straight from the airport to the Maple Leaf Bar, a storied venue which then featured such great blues-rooted eclectic pianists as Roosevelt Sykes and James Booker. Cleary first worked at the Maple Leaf as a painter, but soon graduated to playing piano there – even though his first instrument was the guitar, which he still plays and has recently reintroduced into his live performances.
As word of Cleary’s burgeoning talent began to spread around town, he was hired by such New Orleans R&B legends as Snooks Eaglin, Earl “Trick Bag” King, Johnny Adams, and Jessie “Ooh Poo Pah Doo” Hill, while also gaining the respect of the great Crescent City pianists Dr. John and the late Allen Toussaint. Years later, in 2012, Cleary recorded a critically acclaimed album of all-Toussaint songs entitled Occapella.
Today, Cleary’s work pays obvious homage to the classic Crescent City keyboard repertoire created by such icons as Jelly Roll Morton, Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, Art Neville, Dr. John, and James Booker – while also using it as a launching pad for a style that incorporates such other diverse influences as ’70s soul and R&B, gospel music, funk, Afro-Caribbean and Afro-Cuban rhythms, and much more.
Deciding to stay in New Orleans, Cleary recorded his first album of nine, to date, in 1989. His ever-elevating profile led to global touring work in the bands of Taj Mahal, John Scofield, Dr. John, and Bonnie Raitt. Cleary has led his own group, the Absolute Monster Gentlemen, for over two decades now, but he still collaborates frequently with these old friends. At the 2018 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, for instance, Cleary performed alongside Raitt in a heartfelt tribute to Fats Domino.