Videos made in or made about New Orleans, LA. Music videos, tour videos, cultural videos - any vids that show snippets of this genuinely southern and peculiar city.
Apr 1, 2008
Clint Maedgen: I Can't Give You Anything But Love
It's the 2nd music video they made for Made in New Orleans: The Hurricane Sessions. This music video - made for Valentine's Day - was directed by Ron Rona & Clint Maedgen.
There are very nice shots of New Orleans French Quarter and typical New Orleans visions and images. I especially like the colors in this video. Anyway, it's a great video Valentine postcard. :)
And the lyrics (from Dorothy Fields):
I can't give you anything but love, baby.
That's the one thing I've plenty of, my baby.
Dream a while. Scheme a while.
And you will find,
Happiness, and I guess
all those things you've always pined for.
How I'd like to see you looking swell,
My little baby
Diamond bracelets Woolworth's never sell, my baby.
But till that lucky day you know darn well, my baby.
I can't give you anything but love.
I can't give you anything but love, baby.
That's the one thing I've plenty of, my baby.
Dream a while. Scheme a while.
And you will find,
Happiness, and I guess
all those things you've always pined for.
How I'd like to see you looking swell,
My little baby
Diamond bracelets Woolworth's never sell, my baby.
But till that lucky day you know darn well, my baby.
I can't give you anything
I can't give you anything
I can't give you anything but love.
and the bells ring...
Complicated Life in the French Quarter by Preservation Hall
Hey, one thing is sure, it will make you feel at ease. :) The don't worry - be happy effect kicks in.
Sing along with Clint - here's the lyrics of Complicated Life:
Ladi dah di dahdah, ladi dah di dah dah,
Ladi dah di dahdah, ladi dah di dah dah.
Well I woke this morning with a pain in my neck,
A pain in my heart and a pain in my chest,
I went to the doctor and the good doctor said,
You gotta slow down your life or you're gonna be dead,
Cut out the struggle and strife,
It only complicates your life.
Well I cut down women, I cut out booze,
I stopped ironing my shirts, cleaning my shoes,
I stopped going to work, stopped reading the news,
I sit and twiddle my thumbs cos I got nothing to do,
Minimal exercise,
To help uncomplicate my life.
Gotta stand and face it life is so complicated,
Ladi dah di dahdah, ladi dah di dah dah,
You gotta get away from the complicated life, son,
Life is overrated, life is complicated,
You must alleviate this complicated life.
Like old Mother Hubbard
I got nothin' in the cupboard,
I got no dinner and I got no supper,
Holes in my shoes, I got holes in my socks,
I can't go to work cos I can't get a job,
The bills are rising sky high,
It's such a complicated life,
Take it away.
Gotta stand and face it,
Life is so complicated.
Ladi dah di dahdah, ladi dah di dah dah
Gotta get away from the complicated life, son,
Life is overrated, life is complicated,
Must alleviate this complicated life.
Gotta get away from the complicated life, son,
Gotta get away from the complicated life.
An Atmospheric Video of New Orleans French Quarter
If you wish to learn more about the history of New Orleans French Quarter, check out this site for further info. In a nutshell:
Founded as a military-style grid of seventy squares in 1718 by French Canadian naval officer Jean Baptiste Bienville.
In 1762 the indifferent Louis XV transferred Louisiana to his Bourbon cousin Charles III of Spain.
Francophile colonists staged a revolution in 1768, squelched by Alejandro O'Reilly with a firing squad at the Esplanade fort.
1803 Louisiana Purchase transferred the colony to the US
The "glorious victory" of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans fixed loyalty to the American nation.
Golden era followed as cotton, sugar and steamboats poured into the city. American, Irish, German, African and "Foreign French" immigrants swelled the population of New Orleans
Civil War and Reconstruction: creoles moved to Esplanade and later Uptown, and famine-driven Sicilian immigrants found cramped lodging in the grand spaces of French Quarter mansions of the 1890s.
The 1900 birth of jazz in nearby Storyville nurtured musical legends Louis Armstrong, Buddy Bolden, Nick LaRocca, and other jazz and ragtime greats.
By 1920 the legacy of a storied past attracted artists in increasing numbers. William Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote etc. were attracted to the French Quarter for its creative stimulus.
1936 marked the onset of regulatory controls in the form of the state-sanctioned Vieux Carré Commission to preserve the quaint and distinctive character of the old Quarter.1960s traditional jazz in decline, Preservation Hall emerged to serve beleaguered musicians.
2005 Hurricane Catrina
Historical facts based on the Brief History of French Quarter by Sally Reeves