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Howard Tate performs at the 8th annual Ponderosa Stomp, held at the House of Blues in New Orleans on April 28, 2009. <br />
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Howard Tate is a soul singer from Georgia, most famous for a series of hits on Verve Records in the late 1960s.  While his albums were critically acclaimed throughout the 70s (as well as having one song covered by Janis Joplin) his music sold relatively poorly and he retired from the music industry late in the same decade.  After falling in and out of drug abuse in the 1980s Tate worked as a preacher in the 1990s began a musical comeback in 2001.  <br />
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The Ponderosa Stomp is an annual music festival held in New Orleans since 2002 that celebrates the uncelebrated names in American musical history.  The festival spotlights musicians who have contributed to the American roots musical canon in various genres, from rockabilly to soul to rock and roll to jazz to experimental.  For two nights of the year these mostly forgotten names perform to an audience of aficionados whose memory has not faded and turn back the clock with blistering performances of the hits that did or (in the case of the regional musicians that plugged away unknown to the world at large, as well as those whose songs were recorded to acclaim by other musicians) did not make them famous.  <br />
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In addition to the two nights of performances the Ponderosa Stomp Foundation (the non-profit founded by the eccentric Dr. Ira Padnos and his coterie of like minded music fanatics the Mystic Knights of the Mau Mau) also produces two days of the Music History Conference, where many of the performers, as well as other music industry names, share stories of their lives in the business.  The Conferences take place in the Louisiana State Museum at the Cabildo in Jackson Square.

Howard Tate performs at the 8th annual Ponderosa Stomp, held at the House of Blues in New Orleans on April 28, 2009.

Howard Tate is a soul singer from Georgia, most famous for a series of hits on Verve Records in the late 1960s. While his albums were critically acclaimed throughout the 70s (as well as having one song covered by Janis Joplin) his music sold relatively poorly and he retired from the music industry late in the same decade. After falling in and out of drug abuse...
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The Ponderosa Stomp: 2009 Edition