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Legacy of Bone: Mardi Gras and Afro-Diasporic Spirituality
“Legacy of Bone” will analyze the traditions of New Orleans’ famous, North Side Skull & Bone Gang, and the parallels to ancestral reverence
When and where
Date and time
Friday, April 7 · 7 - 10pm CDT
Location
crescent city conjure 1224 Decatur New Orleans, LA 70117
Refund Policy
About this event
- 3 hours
- Mobile eTicket
“Legacy of Bone” will analyze the traditions of New Orleans’ famous, North Side Skull & Bone Gang, and the parallels to ancestral reverence in Afro-Diasporic practices such as Hoodoo, Rootwork and Conjure. Big Chief Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes [@BruceSunpieBarnes] will discuss initiation, rites of passage, and social responsibilities of a fraternity famous for spreading messages of morality and mortality throughout the Treme on Mardi Gras morning. Crescent City Conjure’s own, Sen Elias, will then illuminate the way those practices echo and extend ancestral veneration/“work” found within the framework of African-American folk spirituality. Inquires: @DjMixx305
About The Speaker
Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes, born in Gravel Hill, Arkansas, is a veteran educator, athlete (Kansas City Chiefs, NFL), and musician (piano, percussion, accordion) traveling the world playing his signature blend of blues, zydeco and Afro-Louisiana folk rhythms. After moving to New Orleans, he founded Sunpie and the Louisiana Sunspots with which he has recorded five critically acclaimed albums, and became an archivist for the New Orleans Jazz Historical Park. Remaining at the intersection of the community and its rhythms, Mr. Barnes has also been called to serve as the Second Chief of the North Side Skull and Bone Gang, one of the oldest existing carnival groups in New Orleans, and is a member of the Black Men of Labor Social Aid and Pleasure Club.