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Meschiya Lake LIVE From the Jazz Museum Balcony!

  • New Orleans Jazz Museum 400 Esplanade Ave. New Orleans United States (map)

Meschiya Lake photographed by Babs Wood

Meschiya Lake will perform at the New Orleans Jazz Museum's Balcony Courtyard concert series on Tuesday, January 10th at 5:00 PM CST.

 Bring your blanket! Seats are not provided for outdoor programs. 

In case of inclement weather, this concert will be moved indoors or rescheduled.

Enjoy jazz music from home with the New Orleans Jazz Museum! Join the Jazz Museum online for their weekly Courtyard Live-Stream Concert Series, in which dynamic jazz musicians perform live from the Jazz Museum’s balcony! Tune in every Tuesday at 5 pm on facebook.com/nolajazzmuseum/live to watch for free.

Meschiya Lake
Looking back, it’s no surprise that when a precocious nine year-old Meschiya Lake hit the stage for a singing contest at a Rapid City, South Dakota steakhouse, she already believed that she could hold her own with the best of them. She had been singing around the house, and competing against adults who thought she was “cute” didn’t intimidate her. When she won the contest – which came with $500 prize and a weekly in-house singing gig – it made sense that – in some form or another – the groundwork for a career had been laid, even if she didn’t realize it at the time. For several more years singing for fun and joy continued to trump music as vocation for Lake, but it was only in her early twenties during her stint as a member of the Know Nothing Family Zirkus Zideshow and End of the World Circus – a ragtag traveling troupe that blended traditional circus arts with modern sideshow entertainment – that she ultimately realized exactly what she wanted to do as an adult. The circus schedule of six months on, six months off ultimately brought Lake to New Orleans for a prolonged stretch of downtime. After driving alone for an entire day to make it to the city and meet up with her cohorts, Lake stopped in the French Quarter to locate her friends and was struck immediately by an overpowering sense of timelessness. After “running away” from the circus, and employing a myriad of jobs, from building the Burning Man festival to forklift driving at cranberry harvest, Lake was searching to, once again, make music her bread and butter.  In 2007, this life change found her by way of traditional jazz outfit, complete with dancers, The Loose Marbles. This ragtag group of busking street performers originally set up camp on Royal Street in New Orleans.  

From there, they created a residency in New York City’s Washington Square Park, the gateway to what would become Ms. Lake’s next stomping ground, Europe.  Affectionately referring to this time in her life as “jazz boot camp”,  she began to build her now extensive repertoire, and learned several life lessons, including, but not limited to, don’t date the band leader, Be the bandleader. A year later, she did just that, creating the Little Big Horns Jazz Band. Now steadfastly at the helm of her own musical battleship, things moved fast and far for Ms. Lake.  The year 2010 saw the band’s debut album, Lucky Devil, and the beginning of a decade’s worth of accolades, tours, and awards.  From the stages of Lincoln Center in NYC, to Brazil, Canada, Denmark, The Netherlands, Italy, Russia, the U.K., and Ireland, she’s shown people to express love of life through music and dance.  This passion, seemingly tireless energy, and expert skill has garnered much praise, from NPR’s top ten albums of 2010, to First Lady of Jazz 2013 at the Sun Valley Jazz Festival. But most importantly, back at home in New Orleans, Lake was recognized as Female Performer of the Year, three years running, at the Big Easy Awards, was named Best Female Singer in Offbeat Magazine’s Best of the Beat poll in 2013 and 2014, and in 2013, the Little Big Horns were honored with the Best of The Beat’s coveted Best Trad Band Award.  Along the way, Meschiya found the time to record, write, and produce another two albums with the Little Big Horns, Foolers’ Gold, and Bad Kid’s Club. Meschiya has also worked in the studio as a vocalist with musicians like Alec Ounsworth of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, as well as singing for a gentleman by the name of Tom Waits.  Her 2019 collaboration with Soren Siegumfeldt, This is Meschiya Lake,  won the Danish Music Awards category of Best Vocal Jazz, otherwise known as the “Danish Grammy.”