Livery tours haunted ghost tour
We took a New Orleans haunted tour and this is part of it. Madame Delphine Lalaurie house.
Nature filled Swamp Tour with lots of Alligators Louisiana USA
Highly recommend Cajun Pride Swamp Tours outside New Orleans LA with wildlife, birds, huge variety of Trees, and our guide was AWESOME!
New Orleans Swamp Tour
This is some video from the Jean Lafitte swamp tour I had while in New Orleans, USA with my friend Jess. The tour was great and we had a chance to see a lot of wildlife including Birds, Turtles, Fish, and Alligators.
This tour is located 25 minutes from New Orleans in the Jean Lafitte National Historic Park. The Tour explores Louisiana's back country through its Bayous which have loads of natural beauty and wildlife. This video was shot in June 2014.
The company we did this tour with can be found online here -
This was a great tour and I had a blast. It's been one of my personal highlights from my travels in 2014. We really enjoyed it and I can highly recommend it if you're travelling to either the USA or to New Orleans in Louisiana.
Morning in New Orleans - Bourbon Street
New Orleans @ 6am, after all the party in the night, people really left lots of litter on the floor! Heres a short 5mins clip on the condition of New Orleans, USA
Technology By ECam.Inc
Alligator City Park New Orleans
Lilly and I were walking in City Park in New Orleans and came upon this alligator sunny himself/herself. Luckily Lilly saw it and no longer just runs into the water willy nilly. This guy could easily take down a dog or small child.
A Frentz reminds us all if we see this to please report! Hi there! When you see something like this please let the Park know by calling or emailing the Park. 482-4888 or info@nocp.org. Thanks!
New Orleans Night Swamp Tour
Landing at New Orleans Airport,Louisiana
New Orleans Swamp Manchac
New Orleans Manchac Swamp - alligators, turtles and snakes OH MY. .. what trip to NO would be complete without a swamp tour.
Spotted Horse Livery Funeral Clips
This is a short video to show prospective customers our horsedrawn funeral carriages.
Introducing Louisiana One | Southwest Airlines
Watch the painting of our brand new Louisiana One aircraft livery, designed to reflect the unique and rich culture of the Pelican state.
Scooba Mississippi Downtown Tour
Exploring Scooba, Mississippi.
From Wikipedia:
Scooba is a Choctaw word meaning reed brake, and the early settlement was noted for its productive farmland.
A line of the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad passed through Scooba. A Democratic weekly newspaper, The Kemper Herald, was established in Scooba in 1876.
By the early 1900s, Scooba had several residential homes, a hotel, a livery barn, a post office, two saw milling plants, a cotton gin, a general store, five churches (three white and two colored), a school, and a bank (the Bank of Kemper, established in 1904). Scooba was a local market for cotton.
In late December 1906, Scooba and Wahalak, Mississippi, were the sites of white rioting against blacks. In the various conflicts, which started with confrontations between passengers and conductors on the railroad, a total of 12 blacks and two whites were killed by December 26. The county sheriff called in the state militia for assistance.
The events were covered by national newspapers
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Celebrating New Orleans' 300th birthday with Louisiana One | Southwest Airlines
Southwest joins New Orleans' tricentennial celebration by unveiling the brand new Lousiana One aircraft. Hear from our local employees what makes the plane so special and what it means for this resilient state.
Louisiana Five Lead Me To It (1919) early jass
Louisiana Five Lead Me To It (1919)
Sound file was done by Cary Ginell.
Musicians are Charles Panelli, Alcide Nunez, Joe Cawley, Karl Berger, and Anton Lada.
Here is one of the first groups to record jazz. I listen to records by the Louisiana Five about once a year to see if I'm missing something. I'm not a fan, yet I'm very interested in the early years of jazz (or jass). I adore the Original Dixieland Jazz Band.
But Louisiana Five recordings leave me cold, mostly because that of constant clarinet. How about a piano solo? Nuzez plays clarinet well, but this seems too much of a good thing (why do I never think that if I listen to solo piano records--Art Tatum or Teddy Wilson?).
Wait, I'm not crazy about this clarinet after all--it reminds me of Bechet, and I don't like Bechet. Tastes differ.
Louisiana Five records lack the impressive ensemble work of the ODJB and lack variety though my beloved ODJB is likewise guilty of this artistic sin--repeating too much.
Another problems is that the Five made records for companies that issued inferior products whereas the ODJB's early work is mostly on Victor discs. Louisiana Five cylinders--I mean the Blue Amberols issued by Edison--are bad.
The Louisiana Five made tests for Columbia in early 1918, and its first records to be issued--on the Emerson label--were recorded later that year. The group consisted of clarinetist Alcide Yellow Nunez; pianist Joe Cawley; trombonist Charlie Panelli; banjoist Karl Berger; and drummer Anton Lada, who served as the band's manager.
It was the second New Orleans ensemble to make jazz records, entering a studio only months after the Original Dixieland Jass Band (ODJB) made the first jazz record (Victor 18255) on February 26, 1917.
Nunez had played clarinet for the ODJB in 1916 in Chicago but had been replaced by Larry Shields. Relations between Nunez and ODJB members had soured, and soon after the ODJB debut disc was issued, Nunez further antagonized the others by filing a copyright for Livery Stable Blues (the song was copyrighted for the ODJB under the name Barnyard Blues), claiming credit along with Ray Lopez.
The Louisiana Five recorded for various companies, including Emerson, Columbia, and Edison. The March 15, 1919 issue of Talking Machine World features a photograph of the five musicians and states, Among the many new additions to the Emerson staff of artists the Emerson Phonograph Co. present the group whose photograph appears here. The Louisiana Five are an entirely new combination....They have recently closed a tour of Keith's Orpheum circuit and are now under contract to tour the world. The first of their recordings to be listed in the Emerson catalog are 'Orange Blossom Rag' and 'Heart-Sickness Blues' on Emerson record No. 9150.
Emerson 501, featuring Yelping Hound Blues and High Brown Babies Ball, is a twelve-inch disc, one of the few issued by the company.
The first Columbia disc was made on April 1, 1919: Just Another Good Man Gone Wrong backed by Yelping Hound Blues. During a session later in 1919, a cornetist (either Doc Behrendson or Alfred Laine) is added for Slow and Easy (A2949), enriching the band's sound. Slow and Easy has a fullness and variety that other Louisiana Five records lack.
The band's first Edison session was on April 14, 1919, recording Foot Warmer and B-Happ-E. It returned on September 12, 1919, to cut Clarinet Squawk and Yelping Hound Blues. The jacket for the latter when issued on Diamond Disc 50622 states, By a clever manipulation of the clarinet the effect of a yelping hound is realistically brought out and at the same time a perfect Fox Trot rhythm and also a humorous melody are maintained. The jacket also states, The organization is perhaps the only one that originates the music it so successfully performs, a curious statement given the fact that the more famous Original Dixieland Jazz Band composed its own numbers. Yelping Hound Blues was also recorded for Emerson (501) and Columbia (A2742).
Clarinet Squawk One Step, issued as Diamond Disc 50609, was written by Lada, Nunez and Cawley. The title reflects the fact that in its early years jazz was widely characterized as a loud music featuring funny noises. The disc jacket states, It sure does squawk but musically so, if you like cyclonic jazz, played by a quintet which has steeped its musical interpretive qualities in a concentrated essence of contortive jungle music. . . . The 'Louisiana Five' orchestra was featured on the Keith and Orpheum circuits and at the Astor Hotel in New York City.
Promotional literature announcing the November 1919 release of Blue Amberol 3843 states, 'Foot Warmer' is delightfully timed and jazzed for the average fox trotter by the Louisiana Five. The word 'Jazz,' meaning 'to liven things up,' was first used on the Gold Coast of Africa.
A Model of New Orleans In 1915
My friend Louise Kripal discovers a 1915 model of how New Orleans looked in 1915 at the Ursulin Convent in The French Quarter. Video footage by Louise Kripal.
The Adventures of FOUNT: 6 (New Orleans)
Well, we made it to New Orleans after checking on mom at the hospital and spending some time with Jason Tijerina our NW Georgia Donations Coordinator.
The parade was great, but due to rain, we only saw one. Did some horse back riding and spread the word to everyone with ears to hear. the Self Sustainable Housing Initiative WILL be a reality!! Next episode: Columbia,MO
MC VIET THAO- LANDING in NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA.
Các bạn đang trên chuyến bay của United Airlines chuẩn bị đáp xuống
Phi trường New Orleans, Tiểu Bang Louisiana, Hoa Kỳ.
Những gì bạn đang thấy cũng giống như Việt Thảo đang thấy, đó là bầu trời, là mây, là một phần quang cảnh bên dưới của Thành Phố New Orleans trong tiếng rì rào của tiếng máy phi cơ.
Hãy thưởng thức những gì Việt Thảo đang ghi lại cho các bạn, rất tầm thường, nhưng đối với các Bạn, có thể do cuộc sống, do hoàn cảnh mà có thể cả một đời người chưa từng thấy qua.
Hãy hạnh phúc với những tầm thường nhất trong cuộc sống
nghen các Bạn.
Xin chia sẽ những cảm giác yêu thường này đến với những ai mà tôi có thể yêu thương được.
with love,
vietthao.
Vlog #3 Drive to New Orleans Included a Plane landing Wow
Drove to New Orleans and saw a plane that landed on I10, picture in thumbnail soon wow.
Ghost Walks In New Orleans
Ghost Walks In New Orleans
Jefferson, Louisiana
Experience Jefferson...the food, the fun, the culture and the southern hospitality. Next door to one of the most famous cities in the United States, you will discover a place steeped in history and culture, mouth watering cuisine, the shopping capital of Louisiana, and the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. You will discover Jefferson, just a beat away from New Orleans. Jefferson sprawls the southern shore of Lake Pontchartrain and ends sixty miles later on the beaches of the Gulf of Mexico.