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  1. The Wild Tchoupitoulas. Mardi Gras Indian tribe from New Orleans, who recorded a classic album featuring the Meters and the Neville Brothers in 1976. Read Full Biography.

  2. 100% creole musicwhat chu kno bout it

  3. 11 de dic. de 2006 · The Tchoupitoulas are one of the black indian tribes in New Orleans. The efforts of a year are devoted to the wild silk and rhinestone costumes they make for Mardi Gras; kind of Indian in drag or in a Las Vegas revue. Their music is driving and hypnotic. Cajun. I can think of little that's as high spirited as the Wild Tschoupitoulas.

  4. The Wild Tchoupitoulas were originally a group of Mardi Gras Indians formed in the early 1970s by George Landry. With help from local New Orleans musicians — The Meters — The Wild Tchoupitoulas recorded an eponymous album, which featured the “call-and-response” style chants typical of Mardi Gras Indians.

  5. 3:59. 7. Hey Mama (Wild Tchoupitoulas) 4:44. 8. Hey Hey (Indian Comin) 4:00. July 1, 1976 8 Songs, 35 minutes ℗ 2015 Island Records, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc. Also available in the iTunes Store.

  6. A black working-class mystic society and fraternal organization, the Wild Tchoupitoulas is one of several dozen tribes whose members mask as American Indians on Mardi Gras and other ritual occasions, taking to the streets in intricate and often astonishingly beautiful handmade costumes, boasting about their beauty and bravery in their own ...

  7. 14 de nov. de 2013 · The Wild Tchoupitoulas were, for a time, led by George Landry, known as Chief Jolly — an uncle to the Neville brothers — and the album was made as a tribute. “He was, as far as I’m concerned, a giant,” remembers Cyril Neville, “and one of the people who put New Orleans culture on the map.”. This story was produced by Ben Manilla ...