San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Lil’ Buck Sinegal — Louisiana guitarist aced zydeco, blues

- By Neil Genzlinger Neil Genzlinger is a New York Times writer.

Lil’ Buck Sinegal, a guitarist whose mastery of zydeco and the blues made him a sought-after player heard on albums by Clifton Chenier, Buckwheat Zydeco, Allen Toussaint and more, died Monday at his home in Lafayette, La. He was 75.

His son, Paul Jr., said Friday that the cause had yet to be determined but a heart attack is suspected. His father, he said, was still playing until a few weeks ago despite substantia­l pain from a torn rotator cuff in his shoulder, and he had put off surgery so that he could play the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival last month. The surgery was scheduled for this Monday, the day of his funeral.

In a career that began when he was a teenager, Sinegal played on big stages around the world and in small clubs in southern Louisiana.

He was a regular at the Ponderosa Stomp, a New Orleans music festival dedicated to rediscover­ing unsung artists and songs of the past. Its website calls him “the best guitar slinger South Louisiana has to offer,” and in a tribute on Facebook, the festival’s co-founder, Ira Padnos, described him as “the heart and soul of the Ponderosa Stomp as well as its secret weapon,” a musician who would lead the festival’s backing band in hours’ worth of rehearsals to get the sound of the old rootsrock and blues tunes just right.

Paul Alton Sinegal was born Jan. 14, 1944, in Lafayette to Joseph and Odette (Broussard) Senegal. (His son said that ambiguous penmanship had led to the “I” spelling on an early passport and that his father had stuck with it.) By 11 he was camping out on a corner of St. Charles, the street where he lived, next to a newspaper stand and playing an old box guitar. He had picked up that skill from his mother, who played a bit.

“They’d put their change in my guitar, and I’d run back home and shake it out,” he told KATC-TV of Lafayette in an interview last year. When he was about that same age, he said, his father woke him up one day and took him, his guitar and his amplifier to a nearby club where Chenier, an up-and-coming zydeco star, was performing. Not only did Chenier let him sit in — it was his first time onstage — he also paid him.

“He gave me $8,” Sinegal said. “I forgot my dad. I ran back home. He brought the guitar and the amp back.”

By 14, Sinegal had formed a band called the Jive Five and was playing profession­ally. By the 1960s, he said, the band, under the name Lil’ Buck and the Top Cats, had up to 17 players, including an organist named Stanley Dural Jr. Playing the accordion, Dural would form his own band, Buckwheat Zydeco, which would help make zydeco music a worldwide phenomenon. Sinegal played in that band and is heard on some of its records.

He especially remembered spending years’ worth of Christmase­s in Paris when Chenier was booked there. That was just one of many places his musical skill took him.

“The only two places I haven’t been are Japan and China,” he said.

Sinegal is survived by his wife of 53 years, Inolia Petry Senegal, as well as six siblings, three children and three grandsons.

 ?? Douglas Mason / Getty Images 2018 ?? Lil’ Buck Sinegal, who was in demand on albums by blues and zydeco greats, played big stages around the world and small clubs in southern Louisiana.
Douglas Mason / Getty Images 2018 Lil’ Buck Sinegal, who was in demand on albums by blues and zydeco greats, played big stages around the world and small clubs in southern Louisiana.

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