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Mardi Gras Party

7.8M streams

7,776,072

Cajun Spice

703.5K streams

703,532

Cajun Life

502.3K streams

502,328

Cajun Christmas

369.2K streams

369,191

Cajun Roots

308.6K streams

308,603

Cajun Mardi Gras

246.2K streams

246,218

Rockin' Cajun

204.9K streams

204,875

Cajun Hymns

159.8K streams

159,754

Live In Canada

72.3K streams

72,308

Cajun Blood

71.2K streams

71,156

Biography

There were better-known figures than Jo-El Sonnier in the Cajun music tradition of Louisiana. And there were Louisiana musicians such as Doug Kershaw who have taken simplified versions of Cajun music to Nashville and experienced greater success in the world of country music. But no one moved as easily between Cajun and country music as Sonnier, and no one was as well respected as a bridge between musical traditions. A fixture of the traditional Cajun scene, Sonnier also reached the top of the country charts and brought his energetic accordion sounds to recordings by artists ranging from Bob Dylan to Steven Curtis Chapman. Sonnier was born the son of French-speaking sharecroppers near Rayne, Louisiana. He was raised in extreme poverty, often working in the cotton fields with his parents. He began playing his much older brother's battered accordion at age three and was soon known as something of a Cajun music prodigy. He first performed on the radio when he was six (on Crowley station KSIG) and was recording by 11. As a teenager Sonnier became a well-established Cajun musician, recording four albums and at least a dozen singles on regional Louisiana labels. (Some were reissued in 2000 on the Cajun Valentino album, whose title referred to Sonnier's billing at the time.) He moved to California in search of wider fame in the early '70s, landing session work and making friends among the Los Angeles music elite, and he seemed to have stardom within his grasp when he was signed to the Mercury label's Nashville division. Sonnier's Mercury releases attempted to make him into a Louisiana version of the wildly successful Freddy Fender, mixing his accordion with Nashville electric bass guitars and including French-language passages in some songs. Sonnier experienced little commercial success at the time, but his Mercury material continued to amass fans and was reissued in its entirety in 1992. Meanwhile, Sonnier temporarily gave up on country music and returned to Louisiana, cutting the Grammy-nominated Cajun Life for the Rounder label. Merle Haggard tapped Sonnier as an opening act in the early '80s, and renewed contacts with California musicians such as Albert Lee -- who was then helping to spearhead Nashville's traditional country revival as part of Emmylou Harris' Hot Band -- who led Sonnier to take another shot at recording in Nashville. Signed to RCA, he released the album Come On Joe in 1987, which coincided with the crest of the late-'80s neo-traditionalist wave, and Sonnier was soon sharing country airwaves with the likes of Randy Travis as the album spawned two Top Ten singles, the ballad "No More One More Time" and a ferocious cover of British folksinger Richard Thompson's Cajun-inspired "Tear-Stained Letter." Sonnier moved to Capitol in the early '90s, but the new trend toward country music rooted in '70s rock left him behind. Although his country career never really recovered, Sonnier remained in heavy demand as a Nashville session player. Sonnier appeared on recordings by Alan Jackson and Harris and went far beyond country music with guest slots on releases by Elvis Costello and Edie Brickell & New Bohemians. He also had success as a songwriter; both Patty Loveless and George Strait recorded Sonnier's "Blue Is Not a Word," and he consistently placed songs on albums by other artists in the late '80s and early '90s. Sonnier also dabbled in acting, appearing in the films Mask, They All Laughed, and A Thing Called Love. He finally returned to pure Cajun music and to the Rounder label, where he teamed with Beausoleil's Michael Doucet on several '90s releases. A second Grammy nomination came Sonnier's way for his 1997 release Cajun Pride, and he joined fellow Louisianan Eddy Raven for the album Cookin' Cajun. Sonnier toured widely, performing at the New Orleans Jazz Festival and the Grand Ole Opry (in 1999) and visiting Europe and South America. His self-released album Cajun Blood won him a third Grammy nomination, this time for the 2001 Best Traditional Folk Album award. In 2015, Sonnier finally earned a Grammy when his release The Legacy won the award for Best Regional Roots Music Album. Jo-El Sonnier died on January 13, 2024, at the age of 77. ~ James Manheim, Rovi