Find more presales for shows in Santa Cruz, CA
Show Rebirth Brass Band presales in more places
Parade Roots, Club Fire: Rebirth Brass Band
Born in Treme in the early 80s, the band blends second-line tradition with funk, bounce, and street chants. Led by the Frazier brothers on sousaphone and bass drum, they pair bright trumpet melodies with gritty parade cadences. After co-founder Kermit Ruffins left in the 90s, they leaned harder into funk drums and rap breaks without losing the parade roots.
Songs that spark second lines
Expect staples like Do Whatcha Wanna and I Feel Like Funkin' It Up, stretched into long vamps with call and response. They often flip R&B into brass workouts, so Casanova or a stitched Rebirth Medley are good bets.People, places, small secrets
The crowd skews mixed in age and background, with dancers up front, instrument nerds near the horns, and friends waving towels in time. Their Tuesday Maple Leaf run taught them to pace peaks and valleys, and it keeps the book loose enough for on-the-spot quotes. A small detail: the sousaphone mic is kept close for punch, making the low end hit like a kick drum in tight rooms. Note that the likely songs and staging touches here are educated guesses rather than a fixed plan.The Rebirth Brass Band Scene, Up Close
The scene feels like a rolling block party turned inside a venue, but it is paced with care rather than chaos. You will see second-line umbrellas, handkerchiefs, and sneakers built for movement, alongside brass band tees from past tours and local bars.
Shared rituals, not just noise
People clap the backbeat on four, chant hooks between horn lines, and leave space for the band to parade aisles if the room allows. The merch table leans classic: logo shirts, posters with bold fonts, and a nod to the Tuesday tradition that many out-of-towners ask about.Time-travel flavors
Fashion often nods to 90s New Orleans street style, while the music toggles between old parade chants and fresh bounce tags. The vibe is welcoming but musically focused, where a good solo earns a cheer and a tight stop-time break gets a grin. Folks tend to swap show memories like trading cards, comparing which night the band stretched a tune the farthest.How Rebirth Brass Band Builds the Pocket
Onstage, vocals act like rhythm hooks, short and percussive, leaving space for horns to carry the tune. Arrangements stack trumpet and trombone in tight harmonies, then peel to unison riffs when the drums push the tempo.
The engine room
The snare and bass drum use parade cadences with a heavy backbeat, while the sousaphone plays short notes that feel like a drum machine made of brass. Many tunes sit in horn-friendly keys like F and B-flat, which lets the melodies pop and the solos glide without strain.Stretch and release
They often flip the form by extending the vamp, dropping to a whisper, and then slamming back in on a shout chorus for a clean lift. Trumpets cut bright but not harsh, with mutes pulled for color rather than volume, and trombones handle the growl when needed. A lesser-noted habit is slipping a half-time groove under the hook so the crowd can chant while the horns dance above it. Lights tend to warm the stage in gold and red, with quick snaps on hits, but the focus stays on the pocket and interplay.Kindred Horns for Rebirth Brass Band Fans
Fans of Dirty Dozen Brass Band will recognize the shared New Orleans lineage and the way horn lines ride a street beat. The Soul Rebels bring a hip-hop edge and crowd chants that mirror the band's party-minded callouts.