The zydeco tradition is to evolve,โ Terrance Simien tells me. Itโs a refreshing idea in a genre thatโs so identified with roots music that purists of all kinds gravitate toward it, and that unique reading of the tradition will take center stage when Terrance Simien and the Zydeco Experience appear at the Germantown Performing Arts Center (GPAC) this Saturday.
โYouโve got a lot of people that hear zydeco music from a certain period, and think, โOh, if it doesnโt sound like that, itโs not zydeco.โ But when I listen to zydeco music as a whole, Iโve always heard an expansion. Every zydeco artist has their own interpretation of the music, in their own voice.โ
Itโs a lesson that Simien learned right out of the gate, when he was still a teenager, unexpectedly catapulted from his hometown of Mallet, Louisiana, into the world of rock royalty. โMy career started out like this,โ he explains. โI did two 45s that I produced myself, released in 1982 and 1983. I was still a kid. Around that time, Paul Simon was thinking, โIโve got to have a zydeco song on my next record.โ It was before he was even calling it Graceland. So he had Dickie Landry find three bands to do a session with him, and my band was one of them. In the end, he decided that we werenโt gonna make the album, but he wanted to do something special for us. So I recorded this Clifton Chenier song, โYou Used to Call Me,โ and Paul went back and put these five-part harmonies on it, making it sound like Simon & Garfunkel! To hear Paul take a zydeco song and bring it into that world, I couldnโt sleep for days with all the ideas I got from what he did. That was in 1985, and Iโve been on the road ever since.โ
Simien kept evolving, and so did his brand of zydeco. Many of his mentors were not zydeco artists at all. โI was mentored by some of the best. In addition to John Delafose and Clifton Chenier, Dr. John, Art Neville, Allen Toussaint, Dickie Landry, and Taj Mahal all mentored me,โ he says. โEvery last one of them did their best to help me any way they could. My mission now is to pay it forward and do the same with younger artists. Iโm nowhere near the level those guys were and will never be, but I see it as a mission. My wife and I have a nonprofit called Music Matters, and we try to mentor people in the business.โ
He also pays special attention to bringing his history and music to much younger folks, and heโll be hosting a kid-friendly matinee show on Friday, October 21st, at 10 a.m., where children are encouraged to dance and sing along. Heโll also bring a strong family vibe to his Saturday show, where his daughter, local singer/songwriter Marcella Simien, will make a cameo. Seeing her thrive here is one reason Simien is especially fond of Memphis.
โI canโt thank Memphis enough for embracing my daughter like they did,โ he says. โMarcella has seen what a roller coaster the music business is, but sheโs embraced it. Thatโs what she wanted to do. She went to the Memphis College of Art, and what an awesome school. Thatโs where she learned to have confidence in being creative, knowing what it takes, that itโs a process.โ
But Marcella wonโt be his only guest: Drummer George Receli will also make an appearance. โAt 17, George left Hammond, Louisiana, to tour with Edgar and Johnny Winter,โ says Simien. โSince then, heโs played with Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, James Brown, Keith Richards, and many others. Iโm even going to do a little interview โ he has these amazing stories. And weโre going to play together. He played on and produced our last record that won a Grammy, Dockside Sessions.โ
Ultimately, reflecting on his daughterโs cameo, Simien is encouraged by zydecoโs continued appeal to young people. โBecause the music evolves,โ he says, โit connects with the youth of today. Weโre not just doing this to keep it alive; weโre doing it because it is alive.โ

