Sunday, November 1, 2020

"Bayou Lafourche" - Happy, Doc And The Boys

Throughout the 1930s, Leroy "Happy Fats" Leblanc and his Rayne-Bo Ramblers became the first Cajun band from south Louisiana to play on a radio show broadcast nationally over the CBS network.  However, the outbreak of WWII caused his band to go into hiatus.  Once the war was over, he filled in as a backup musician for country star Tex Ritter in Hollywood.  By the time he arrived back home, the Louisiana Hayride show in Shreveport was looking for new talent.  According to Happy, he recalled playing in the same lineup with Hank Williams on the Hayride radio show.  It was a half-hour show where the rules dictated "no repeats!"  Happy explains to author Ryan Brasseaux:
So, we played "Jole Blonde" there was a tremendous crowd that night.  Hank Williams was there playing.  We got on and we played "Jole Blonde" and when we got through playing it they started clapping.  Horace Logan, the station manager, was there so I though he wanted us to quit.  "No", he said, "play it again!"  "Well, you said no repeats".  We had to repeat on that network three times!2

Bon heures tous les matins,
J'peux voir mon vieux papa,
Partir à la pêche dessus la mer,
C'est su' le Bayou Lafourche,
Il vient toutes les dimanches,
À l'église du bon dieu pour prier.

Y'en a pas qu'est si riche,
Y'en a pas qu'est si pauvre,
Juste les bons Acadiens, apprise faire une vie,
Et c'est là  j'sus parti,
Pour la balance d'ma vie,
Sur le côté du beau Bayou Lafourche.



Lake Charles American Press
Oct 29, 1952


After his last contract recording with RCA in 1946, he quickly reformed a group called Happy, Doc And The Boys.  "Bayou Lafourche" (#1011), recorded in Crowley, Louisiana at J.D. Miller's studio between 1947 and 1949, marked Happy's attempt at converting his popular pre-war hit "Les Veuves de la Coulee" into a waltz-tempo ballad.  The bayou translated to "Fork Bayou") is one of the major navigable tributaries of the Mississippi River and flows through lands once owned by displaced colonial French Acadian and Spanish Isleno settlers.  Along with Oran "Doc" Guidry on fiddle, Bradley "Sleepy" Stutes on steel guitar, and possibly the Redlich brothers , Happy's ultimate goal was to break into the Nashville scene and become the next big country music star, similar to Hank Williams.   According to Happy:

Hank Williams had a lot of influence down here.  He was on the Louisiana Hayride.  It covered about a quarter of the nation, it was a 50,000 watt station.  And Hank, you've got to give him that, he was good, he was really good.  He was on, like I was, for Johnny Fair's Syrup.  He left to go to the Grand Ole Opry.  He gave me the job, the Old Syrup Sopper. 
Rayne Tribune
Oct 24, 1952


Early every morning,
I can see my old papa,
To go fish near the waters,
It's on the Bayou Lafourche,
He comes every Sunday,
To the church for the Good Lord to pray.

There isn't anyone too rich,
There isn't anyone too poor,
Just good Acadians, trying to make a living,
And that's where I'm leaving to go,
In order to set my life straight,
To the shores of the beautiful Bayou Lafourche.


The Drifting Cowboy and Happy Fats reunited in 1952 when Williams invited the Cajun guitarist to tour around the US.2









  1. Rayne's People and Places By Tony Olinger
  2. Cajun Breakdown: The Emergence of an American-Made Music By Ryan Andre Brasseaux
  3. Image by Mark P
  4. Lyrics by Stephane F, Francis M, Jerry M and Herman M
Release Info:
Bayou LaFourche | Fais Do Do F-1011-A
Sothe Fermon | Fais Do Do F-1011-B

Find:
Acadian All Star Special - The Pioneering Cajun Recordings Of J.D. Miller (Bear, 2011)

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