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R.L. Boyce presented by The Jazz Foundation of America

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

The New Orleans Jazz Museum and Jazz Foundation of America present a performance featuring R.L. Boyce on Wednesday, April 19th at 2:00 PM CST.

This program takes place inside our third-floor Performance Center, listening room. Admission is free and open to the public, seating is limited and offered first come, first serve.

Enjoy jazz music from home with the New Orleans Jazz Museum! Join the Jazz Museum online for our daily Live-Stream Concert Series, in which jazz musicians perform live from the Jazz Museum! Tune in at 2 pm on facebook.com/nolajazzmuseum/live to watch for free.

R.L. Boyce

Seeds of American blues music were cultivated in tight-knit African American communities located an hour south of Memphis in Tate and Panola Counties, Mississippi. From the Civil War until the 1970s African American traditional fife and drum bands flourished in the area. Led by a cane fife player accompanied by three marching drums and a unique dance, it was a popular form of entertainment from the region. Such bands performed at social gatherings like picnics, weddings, and funerals.

A life-long resident of Panola County’s Como, Mississippi, R.L. Boyce was born into the fife and drum tradition. Boyce’s uncle was the late Othar Turner of the Rising Stars Fife and Drum Band, a 1992 NEA National Heritage Fellow. Turner established an annual family picnic he called the GOAT Picnic. Many great local musicians like the Young Family, R.L. Burnside, Fred McDowell, and Jessie Mae Hemphill played these picnic and social gatherings.

As a young teen, while watching his uncle play fife with his band at a picnic, Boyce realized that he wanted to play music. He joined the Rising Stars Fife and Drum Band in 1970 as a drummer at age 15. Boyce remained a member of the Rising Stars for 30 years, until Turner’s passing in 2003.

In the 1980s, Boyce moved to guitar after fellow Mississippi musician Luther Dickinson “dared him” to learn. His Hill Country boogie style is simple, repetitive trance music. Boyce’s approach to playing and song structures are rooted in past traditions; however, his music is uniquely contemporary. “There are a lot of good blues players out there. But see, I play the old way and nobody today can play my style, just me.” 

Boyce has played North Mississippi blues for more than half a century. He has shared stages with blues greats John Lee Hooker (1983 NEA National Heritage Fellow) and Howlin’ Wolf. He was the drummer for and recorded with Jessie Mae Hemphill. Boyce’s sophomore solo release, Roll and Tumble,was nominated for a Grammy Awardin 2018. He is featured in the Daniel Cross documentary, I Am The Blues (2015) and appeared on BBC’s Later… with Jools Holland in 2017. Boyce represented North Mississippi blues at the Blues Rules Crissier Festival in Lucerne, Switzerland, and Blues Alive Concert in Czech Republic in 2018. His self-produced live recording, Boogie w/ RL Boyce Live (WoodB Records), was nominated for Best Traditional Blues Album, Blues Music Awards, 2022. Boyce has also received several grants from the Mississippi Arts Commission (MAC) and is on their Mississippi Artist Roster.

Boyce hosts his own annual gathering, RL BOYCE Picnic: a three-day music event held over Labor Day weekend in Como, Mississippi, offering an array of activities, such as a music workshop, guided tour, and family picnic celebrating his music and traditions.

By Amy Verdon, Visual Artist, FANCY! Partners, Media Arts, Brooklyn, NY