The Meters are an influential American funk band from New Orleans, formed in 1965 by keyboardist and vocalist Art Neville, alongside bassist George Porter Jr., drummer Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste, and guitarist Leo Nocentelli.[1][2] Regarded as founding fathers of funk, the quartet developed a signature sound characterized by potent, syncopated grooves rooted in Crescent City rhythm and blues, which profoundly shaped the genre's evolution during the late 1960s and 1970s.[3][4] Their music emphasized instrumental precision and joyous interplay, serving as a house band for local clubs like The Night Cap and Ivanhoe before gaining wider acclaim through session work with producer Allen Toussaint on tracks such as Lee Dorsey's "Yes We Can Can" in 1970.[5]The band's core lineup released eight studio albums between 1969 and 1977 on labels including Josie and Reprise, with standout instrumental hits like "Cissy Strut" (1969) and "Look-Ka Py Py" (1970) reaching the R&B charts and becoming funk staples.[5][6] Later additions, such as percussionist and vocalist Cyril Neville in 1972, expanded their sound on albums like Cabbage Alley (1972) and Rejuvenation (1974), which incorporated more vocal elements and Mardi Gras-inspired tracks such as "Hey Pocky A-Way."[5] Despite internal tensions leading to their breakup after a 1977 Saturday Night Live appearance, The Meters' raw, danceable style influenced artists across funk, rock, and hip-hop, from the Grateful Dead to modern acts like Galactic.[5][7]In recognition of their enduring legacy, The Meters received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018, honoring their role in pioneering bass-heavy, syncopated funk that bridged New Orleans traditions with national audiences.[4] Following the death of Art Neville in 2019, various lineup iterations featuring surviving original members, including reunions at events like the 2012 Bonnaroo Festival and performances at Jazz Fest in 2025, have kept their music alive into the 2020s, cementing their status as a cornerstone of American popular music.[5][3][8]
History
Formation and early career (1965–1969)
The Meters were formed in 1965 in New Orleans, Louisiana, by keyboardist and vocalist Art Neville, guitarist Leo Nocentelli, bassist George Porter Jr., and drummer Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste.[9] The quartet initially came together as the house band for producer Allen Toussaint and his partner Marshall Sehorn's Sansu Enterprises, a key recording operation in the city's R&B scene.[10][11] In this role, they provided instrumental backing for live performances and studio sessions, honing a tight, groove-oriented sound rooted in local traditions.[5]During their early years, the band supported prominent R&B artists as session musicians at studios like Cosimo Matassa's facility, contributing to several regional hits.[10] Notably, they backed singer Lee Dorsey on his Allen Toussaint-produced tracks "Ride Your Pony" (1965) and "Working in the Coal Mine" (1966), which showcased their emerging funk-inflected rhythm section.[9][12] These gigs established their reputation for precise, interlocking grooves, earning them the name The Meters to evoke the steady, measured quality of their playing.[9]By 1968, under Toussaint and Sehorn's guidance, the band signed with Josie Records, a subsidiary of Roulette, marking their transition from session work to original recordings.[10] Their debut single, the instrumental "Sophisticated Cissy" backed with "Sehorn's Farm," was released that October, gaining airplay in New Orleans and signaling their potential beyond backing roles.[9] This led to their self-titled debut album in May 1969, which featured raw, danceable instrumentals like "6V6 La Wah" and "Sehorn's Farm," capturing the band's minimalist funk approach.The Meters quickly built a devoted local following through regular performances in New Orleans clubs such as the Ivanhoe and the Night Cap, where their music resonated with the city's vibrant street parade culture.[10][5] Incorporating elements of the syncopated second-line rhythms from brass band traditions, their sets emphasized propulsive bass lines and drum patterns that encouraged audience participation and dancing.[5] This grassroots appeal laid the foundation for their enduring connection to New Orleans' musical heritage.[10]
Peak years and commercial success (1970–1977)
The Meters achieved their greatest commercial visibility during the early 1970s with the release of their second and third albums on Josie Records, Look-Ka Py Py in late 1969 and Struttin' in 1970, which solidified their instrumental funk style and attracted national attention.[13] The title track "Look-Ka Py Py" reached number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 11 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart in early 1970, while earlier single "Cissy Strut" from their debut album peaked at number 23 on the Hot 100 and number 4 on the R&B chart in 1969, marking the band's first significant crossover hits. These tracks exemplified the band's tight, groove-driven sound, with George Porter Jr.'s bass lines and Zigaboo Modeliste's drumming providing a propulsive foundation that influenced funk's evolution.In 1972, the band signed with Reprise Records, a Warner Bros. subsidiary, transitioning from regional indie success to major-label distribution and production support from Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn. Their Reprise debut, Cabbage Alley, released that year, introduced subtle vocal elements while retaining their core instrumental focus, peaking at number 30 on the Billboard R&B albums chart.[14] Follow-up Rejuvenation in 1974 became their highest-charting album at number 12 on the R&B chart and number 95 on the Billboard 200, featuring extended jams like "Just Kissed My Baby" that showcased Leo Nocentelli's guitar work and Art Neville's keyboard textures.[14] The 1975 release Fire on the Bayou continued this momentum, reaching number 42 on the Billboard 200, with the title track blending funk grooves and chants for a more communal feel.[14]That year, percussionist and vocalist Cyril Neville, Art's younger brother, joined the band, expanding the lineup to a quintet and shifting toward vocal-driven songs to broaden appeal during tours opening for the Rolling Stones.[3] Tracks like "Jungle Man" and "Fire on the Bayou" highlighted Cyril's contributions, incorporating call-and-response elements rooted in New Orleans traditions. The Meters also provided backing for Dr. John's 1973 hit "Right Place Wrong Time," which reached number 9 on the Hot 100, their rhythmic precision elevating the track's swampy funk.In 1976, the band collaborated on the self-titled album by Mardi Gras Indian tribe the Wild Tchoupitoulas, led by George "Big Chief Jolly" Landry, where the Meters supplied instrumentation for the Neville brothers' vocals on Indian chants and New Orleans standards like "Hey Pocky A-Way."[15] This project bridged their funk expertise with local cultural rituals, though it did not chart commercially.Internal tensions over management, finances, and creative direction—exacerbated by the Neville brothers' desire to pursue family projects—built through 1976 and led to the departures of Art and Cyril Neville in early 1977, following the release of Trick Bag in September 1976.[16] The album, featuring Cyril on tracks like "Hang 'Em High," peaked at number 56 on the R&B chart but marked the end of the band's peak cohesion amid growing frustrations.[14]
Dissolution and sporadic reunions (1978–1988)
Following the departures of Art and Cyril Neville in early 1977, amid escalating internal tensions and commercial frustrations from their peak years, The Meters underwent a full split. George Porter Jr. and Zigaboo Modeliste briefly carried on the band name with new recruits, including keyboardist Kenny Klimkids and lead singer Willie West, culminating in the release of the album New Directions in June 1977. Porter departed later that year, leaving the group to dissolve officially by 1980.[17]In the ensuing years, the original members turned to individual pursuits. Art Neville reunited with his brothers Aaron, Charles, and Cyril to form the family band The Nevilles, debuting at Tipitina's in 1977 and releasing their self-titled debut album in 1978 on Capitol Records; the group stayed active through the 1980s, signing with A&M Records and issuing key releases such as Fiyo on the Bayou (1981), a live album Neville-ization recorded at Tipitina's (1984), and Uptown (1987).[18] Guitarist Leo Nocentelli joined Parliament-Funkadelic briefly during this period, contributing to their evolving sound while also engaging in session work.[19] Bassist George Porter Jr. immersed himself in session recordings and live performances across New Orleans, collaborating with artists like Jimmy Buffett and playing with the band Joyride throughout the 1980s.[20] Drummer Zigaboo Modeliste relocated to Los Angeles and later the San Francisco Bay Area, focusing on solo endeavors including the recording of original funk material in 1980, later released as the EP Funk Me Hard Live in 2009.[21]The dissolution sparked protracted legal disputes among the members over ownership of the band name, trademarks, and recording royalties, which persisted through the 1980s and hindered collaborative efforts.[22] Despite this, sporadic one-off reunions emerged, including a 1980 performance attempt that collapsed disastrously due to personal conflicts and poor organization.[7] Further informal gigs and benefit shows followed in New Orleans, such as 1985 appearances supporting local causes, but repeated efforts at full reformation faltered amid scheduling clashes and unresolved tensions.
Revival as the Funky Meters (1989–2018)
In 1989, following years of sporadic activity, Art Neville, George Porter Jr., and Leo Nocentelli reunited to revive the band, initially under the original name The Meters, with drummer Russell Batiste Jr. joining to fill the role previously held by Zigaboo Modeliste.[17] This formation marked the beginning of a sustained touring phase, and due to ongoing lineup shifts, the group adopted the moniker The Funky Meters to distinguish their evolving ensemble while honoring their roots.[23] Nocentelli departed in 1994, after which guitarist Brian Stoltz joined the core trio of Neville, Porter, and Batiste, solidifying a lineup that emphasized high-energy live renditions of their classic funk grooves.[24]The Funky Meters shifted their focus almost entirely to live performances, prioritizing extended jams and improvisational sets over new studio recordings, which allowed them to adapt their tight, groove-oriented style for festival stages and club venues.[5] Key releases during this era included live albums capturing their dynamic shows, such as Live from the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival (2000), which documented a performance featuring the then-current lineup delivering extended versions of staples like "Cissy Strut" and "Hey Pocky Way."[25] Another notable recording, Zony Mash (2003), compiled unreleased tracks from their earlier years but underscored the band's enduring appeal in live contexts, though the group produced no major new studio material.[26]The band built a reputation for electrifying appearances at major festivals, including regular slots at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, where their sets became highlights for blending second-line rhythms with funk precision.[5] They performed at Bonnaroo in 2005, delivering a set that showcased their influence on jam-band audiences, and returned to high-profile events like Coachella in 2009, further cementing their status as live funk ambassadors.[27] Amid this touring resurgence, the original quartet briefly reconvened for a one-night reunion in 2000 at San Francisco's Warfield Theatre, prompted by a substantial offer that reconciled past tensions for a celebratory performance of their hits.[28] This momentum carried into 2005, when the full original lineup—Neville, Porter, Nocentelli, and Modeliste—reunited for a special Jazz Fest set, joined by horns for an explosive rendition of tracks like "Fire on the Bayou" and "Africa," marking what was billed as a potential farewell to that configuration.[29]Batiste Jr. remained a pivotal force on drums throughout the Funky Meters' run, his propulsive style driving the band's late-period tours until Art Neville's retirement; Batiste died in 2023 from a heart attack, an event that retrospectively highlighted his enduring impact on their sound during the final active years.[30] In 2007, Stoltz temporarily stepped away for solo pursuits, with Ian Neville—Art's son—taking over guitar and keys until 2011, when Stoltz returned for the band's ongoing commitments.[17] The group continued touring steadily, including international dates, until Art Neville announced his retirement in December 2018 after over 50 years in music, citing health reasons; this led to final Funky Meters shows that year, closing the chapter on their revival era with performances honoring Neville's foundational role.[31]
Legacy and recent developments (2019–present)
Art Neville, the keyboardist and co-founder of The Meters, passed away on July 22, 2019, at the age of 81.[32] His death prompted widespread tributes in New Orleans, including a traditional second line parade on July 31, 2019, featuring local musicians honoring his contributions to funk and the city's musical heritage.[33] Although Neville died after the 2019 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, subsequent editions, such as in 2022, included multi-artist tributes to him alongside other local legends, with jazz funeral processions parading through the festival grounds.[34]Following the band's last full performances as the Funky Meters in 2018, The Meters have not undertaken any official tours. However, original members have participated in occasional collaborations, preserving the group's spirit through selective appearances. In 2024, bassist George Porter Jr. and guitarist Leo Nocentelli joined Dumpstaphunk for the "Rejuvenation 50!" celebration at the Telluride Jazz Festival on August 9, performing tracks from the band's catalog to mark the album's milestone.[35] Earlier that year, on May 2, they reunited with vocalist Cyril Neville for a similar event at New Orleans' Civic Theatre, emphasizing the enduring appeal of the Meters' sound.[36] In 2025, Porter Jr. contributed to "A Dream We Dreamed: A New Orleans Tribute to Phil Lesh" on May 1 at the Joy Theater, alongside Ivan Neville and other jam scene figures, blending funk grooves with Grateful Dead influences.[37]The 50th anniversary of the band's seminal 1974 album Rejuvenation was commemorated in 2024 through a series of events and a vinyl reissue. Highlights included the aforementioned Civic Theatre and Telluride performances, as well as a June 28 show at The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York, featuring Porter Jr., Nocentelli, and Dumpstaphunk with Brass Queens.[38] Sundazed Music released a remastered edition on October 18, restoring the album's raw funk essence for modern audiences.[39]Guitarist Leo Nocentelli marked a personal milestone tied to his Meters-era work with a November 22, 2024, concert celebrating the re-release of his long-lost 1971 solo album Another Side. Performed at the Civic Theatre in New Orleans, the event highlighted acoustic tracks recorded during the band's formative years, showcasing Nocentelli's spiritual influences and guitar innovations.[40][41]In 2025, surviving members continued to honor the band's legacy through new projects. During the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival in April/May, George Porter Jr. joined members of Lettuce and Dumpstaphunk for "Crescent City Classics," a funk retrospective celebrating The Meters' catalog.[8] Additionally, Jackpot Records reissued the band's first three albums in November 2025, providing remastered vinyl editions of their foundational Josie Records era.[42]Past trademark disputes over the band's name, stemming from lineup changes and competing iterations like the Funky Meters and Original Meters, appear to have stabilized, with no major legal actions reported since the mid-2010s; current usage aligns with individual member-led projects under licensed branding. As of November 2025, no tours are scheduled for The Meters, though surviving members remain active—Porter Jr., for instance, supports charitable efforts through the Ara's Love Foundation, hosting its inaugural gala in November 2024 to raise awareness for pancreatic cancer and lupus.[43]
Musical style and innovations
Core elements and instrumentation
The Meters' signature sound was built on tight, interlocking grooves that emphasized rhythmic precision and ensemble interplay over melodic complexity. At the core of this was the synergy between bassist George Porter Jr.'s syncopated basslines and drummer Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste's second-line patterns, drawing from New Orleans parade traditions to create a propulsive, percolating foundation. Porter's lines often functioned as lead melodies, weaving fluid, off-beat accents that locked seamlessly with Modeliste's shifting kick, snare, and hi-hat coordination, incorporating ghost notes and open hi-hat splashes for a "bobbing and weaving" feel.[44][45][46]Guitarist Leo Nocentelli contributed sparse, rhythmic textures through his wah-wah-infused chicken-scratch riffs, a percussive technique involving light, rapid strums and chops near the bridge for a scratchy, syncopated edge that reinforced the groove without overpowering it. His solos were economical, prioritizing space and subtle soulful phrasing over extended improvisation, as heard in tracks like "Live Wire." On keyboards, Art Neville deployed the Hammond B3 organ—often whirled through a Leslie speaker—for funky fills that added swirling, rhythmic punctuations, while later incorporating the clavinet for sharper, percussive stabs; his approach favored negative space, allowing the rhythm section to breathe and dominate.[44][47][10]The band's early work maintained an instrumental focus, with percussion elements evoking Mardi Gras rhythms to heighten the danceable, gritty funk sensibility, before evolving to include more vocals starting in 1972 with the addition of percussionist and vocalist Cyril Neville, as heard on Cabbage Alley (1972).[48] Production, handled primarily by Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn for Reprise releases, alongside arranger Wardell Quezergue's contributions on Josie albums, adopted a minimalist style that captured live jam sessions with minimal overdubs, spotlighting the quartet's organic interplay and intentional rhythmic gaps. For instance, the groove in "Cissy Strut" exemplifies this raw, unadorned ensemble dynamic.[10][44][49]
Contributions to funk and New Orleans music
The Meters pioneered "New Orleans funk" by blending elements of R&B, soul, and the syncopated second-line beats of local brass bands, creating a groove-oriented style distinct from the more horn-driven, vocal-centric funk popularized by James Brown.[50] This fusion emphasized tight, interlocking rhythms drawn from the city's parade traditions, where drummers like Zigaboo Modeliste incorporated additive Afro-Caribbean 3-3-2 patterns and subtle syncopations to produce a "between the cracks" feel that prioritized propulsion over overt complexity.[45] As session musicians for Allen Toussaint in the late 1960s, they transitioned into originators of this sound, laying funk's rhythmic foundation through economical instrumentation—featuring Art Neville's organ stabs, Leo Nocentelli's terse guitar riffs, and George Porter Jr.'s melodic bass lines—that established a percussive, pocket-driven template beyond vocal reliance.[7][19]Their instrumental approach set a template for funk's repetitive, groove-based structures, influencing jam-band aesthetics with short, memorable melodies built on percolating riffs and linear drum patterns that deconstructed standard rock and funk beats.[45] Early tracks like "Cissy Strut" exemplified this minimalism, using one-take sessions to capture skeletal rhythms as "beds" for improvisation, rooted in New Orleans' cultural heritage of jazz, blues, and R&B influences from artists like Professor Longhair.[19][51] This shift from backing local acts to leading with their own material marked them as foundational in elevating funk's emphasis on organic, layered percussion and gritty organ grooves, distinct from broader national trends.[1]The band further integrated local elements by incorporating Mardi Gras Indian chants and Creole traditions into their work, notably on the 1974 album Rejuvenation, where tracks like "Hey Pocky A-Way" adapted traditional second-line calls to bridge funk with the city's masking Indian rituals.[50][52] This evolution reflected their deep ties to New Orleans' multicultural fabric, using chants and rhythms from brass band parades to infuse funk with a sense of communal celebration and rhythmic elasticity.[45]Cyril Neville joined in 1972, and by the mid-1970s, they had developed a hybrid vocal-funk style on albums like Cabbage Alley (1972) and Rejuvenation (1974), introducing more lyrical elements while retaining the core groove foundation, thus expanding funk's expressive range without diluting its instrumental roots.[7][48]
Influence and legacy
Impact on other artists and genres
The Meters served as the backing band for several prominent funk and soul artists, including Dr. John and Patti LaBelle, contributing to recordings that amplified their rhythmic innovations within the genre.[3][44] Their raw, groove-oriented sound helped shape the foundational elements of funk, influencing groups like Parliament-Funkadelic, who expanded on similar rhythmic and earthy aesthetics in their expansive productions.[51][53]In the rock and jam band scenes, The Meters' instrumentals became staples for live reinterpretation, with Phish incorporating covers of tracks like "Fire on the Bayou" and "Hey Pocky A-Way" into their sets during the mid-2000s, reflecting the band's enduring appeal for improvisational jamming.[54] Keyboardist Page McConnell, a Phish member, performed "Cissy Strut" multiple times in solo contexts and recalled early Phish rehearsals emulating The Meters' "Pungee," underscoring their role in shaping jam band grooves.[55][56] Guitarist Trey Anastasio's band also covered "Cissy Strut" on several occasions, highlighting mentorship-like connections through shared festival performances and stylistic nods.[57]The Meters' tracks have been extensively sampled in hip-hop, with over 200 documented uses across their catalog, establishing them as one of the most raided sources for rhythmic breaks in the genre.[58][59] For instance, "Cissy Strut" provided the backbone for N.W.A's "Niggaz 4 Life" in 1991 and A Tribe Called Quest's "Da Booty" in 1998, injecting the band's tight percussion into West Coastgangsta rap and alternative hip-hop alike.[60]Modern rock acts like the Red Hot Chili Peppers drew directly from The Meters' funk blueprint, covering "Africa" (retitled "Hollywood (Africa)") on their 1985 album Freaky Styley and later jamming with surviving members at events like the 2006 Voodoo Experience, which reinforced their shared emphasis on bass-driven grooves.[61][62] During the 1970s, percussionist Cyril Neville collaborated with The Meters as a vocalist and band member starting in 1972, contributing to tracks like "Gossip" and later extending those funky rhythms into reggae-infused projects post-1976.[63][64]The Meters' blueprint has resonated globally, particularly in Europe's funk revival scene, where UK-based acts like The New Mastersounds cite their minimalist instrumentation as a core influence for contemporary instrumental funk albums.[65] Dutch and other continental bands from the early 1970s onward echoed this style, blending it with local jazz elements to spark a sustained revival.[66]
Cultural and sampling significance
The Meters' music has left a lasting imprint on popular culture through its prominent use in film soundtracks, most notably with "Cissy Strut" featured in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown (1997), where it underscores key scenes and highlights the band's signature instrumental funk groove.[67] This placement helped introduce their sound to broader audiences, cementing their role in evoking the era's gritty, rhythmic undercurrents in cinema.The band's tracks have been extensively sampled in hip-hop, particularly during the 1990s boom, contributing to the genre's evolution while generating significant economic impact through royalties—though early samplers often went uncompensated, leading to delayed recognition and payments for the original creators.[16] For instance, A Tribe Called Quest's "Clap Your Hands" (1993) drew from The Meters' grooves, exemplifying how their tight, percussive rhythms became foundational elements in East Coast rap production. Similarly, Whitney Houston's "My Love Is Your Love" (1998) incorporated samples from their catalog, amplifying their reach into mainstream pop and underscoring the financial stakes in sampling clearance during that decade's legal shifts.[68]As enduring icons of New Orleans culture, The Meters have been celebrated in local traditions, including their reunion performance at the 2005 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, which symbolized the city's vibrant musical heritage amid ongoing festivities.[69] Their contributions extended to post-Hurricane Katrina recovery efforts, where live performances by the band and its members helped revitalize the music scene, fostering community resilience through funk-driven events that drew crowds back to venues and streets.[70] In 2015, they received further honors via the U.S. Postal Service's Jazz Fest Postal Cachet, a commemorative envelope featuring the band that highlighted their status as cultural ambassadors of the city's sound.[71] More recently, the 50th anniversary of their album Rejuvenation was celebrated in 2024, and a reissue of their debut album was released in 2025, sustaining interest in their catalog among new audiences.[72][73]The Meters' grooves have also influenced educational contexts in music studies, with Berklee College of Music offering dedicated courses like "The Music of the Meters," which analyze their rhythmic innovations and emphasize creating authentic funk feels through imitation of the band's interlocking instrumentation.[74] These analyses often explore groove theory, breaking down how elements like syncopated bass lines and drum patterns generate propulsion, providing students with tools to understand and replicate the band's minimalist yet infectious style.[75]Revivals in the 1990s, spearheaded by Rhino Records' reissues of albums such as The Meters and Rejuvenation on high-quality vinyl, significantly boosted accessibility and merchandise sales, reintroducing their catalog to new generations and sustaining interest in their original pressings.[76] These efforts not only preserved their legacy but also fueled collector markets, with remastered editions enhancing the tactile appeal of their funk essentials.
Members
Original and core members
The original and core members of The Meters were the New Orleans-based quartet of Art Neville on keyboards and vocals, Leo Nocentelli on guitar, George Porter Jr. on bass, and Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste on drums, who formed the band in 1965 and defined its signature instrumental funk sound through tight, syncopated grooves until their initial disbandment in 1977.[1][77] This lineup, often referred to as the classic or original Meters, remained the unchanging foundation of the group's identity, emphasizing minimalist arrangements and rhythmic interplay that blended New Orleans R&B with emerging funk elements.[29]Art Neville (1937–2019), the eldest of the Neville siblings from a prominent New Orleans musical family that included brothers Aaron, Charles, and Cyril, served as the band's leader and primary keyboardist from 1965 to 1977 and again from 1989 to 2018.[32] Born in New Orleans to Arthur Neville, a station porter and amateur singer, and Amelia Landry, Neville grew up immersed in the city's musical culture, initially forming Art Neville & the Neville Sounds in the mid-1960s, which evolved into The Meters as its house band for producer Allen Toussaint.[32][77] His warm organ and piano work, often layered with occasional vocals, provided the harmonic backbone for tracks like "Cissy Strut" and "Look-Ka Py Py," while his post-Meters career included co-founding the Neville Brothers in 1977, whose 1989 album Yellow Moon marked a commercial peak blending funk, soul, and gospel influences.[78][1] Neville passed away on July 22, 2019, at age 81, leaving a legacy as a cornerstone of New Orleans funk.[78]Leo Nocentelli, the lead guitarist from 1965 to 1977 with occasional appearances after 1989, brought a crisp, syncopated style honed from early session work backing artists like Otis Redding and Clyde McPhatter by age 14.[79] His innovative riffing and rhythmic precision, often using a Gibson ES-175 or Fender Starcaster, anchored the band's interlocking grooves on hits such as "Sophisticated Cissy" and "Chameleon" (later covered by Herbie Hancock).[80][81] After leaving The Meters, Nocentelli pursued session and solo endeavors, including the 2021 release of his long-lost 1971 solo albumAnother Side, featuring introspective folk-funk originals like "Thinking of the Day" that showcased his songwriting depth beyond the band's instrumentals.[80][82]George Porter Jr., the bassist from 1965 to 1977 and continuously since 1989 to the present, developed an iconic tone through his Fender Precision Bass and Ampeg amplification, characterized by a woody, punchy attack that drove the band's propulsive low end on tracks like "Fire on the Bayou."[83][84] His fingerstyle technique, blending root-fifth patterns with syncopated fills, epitomized New Orleans funk's laid-back yet insistent pocket.[85] Post-Meters, Porter led side projects including the power trio Porter Batiste Stoltz (with drummer Russell Batiste Jr. and guitarist Brian Stoltz), whose albums like Expanding the Funkin' Universe (2007) extended his improvisational funk into jam-band territories.[86] In 2024, he continued performing at festivals such as the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival with his band the Runnin' Pardners, maintaining his role as a live staple. As of November 2025, Porter remains active, with scheduled performances including at Tipitina's in New Orleans.[87][88]Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste, the drummer from 1965 to 1977 and sporadically from 1989 through the 2010s, pioneered the integration of New Orleans second-line rhythms into funk, using a loose, shuffling hi-hat and snare patterns to create the band's elastic swing on songs like "Handclapping Song."[89] His approach, influenced by brass band parades, emphasized "between-the-cracks" syncopation that influenced generations of drummers.[90] After The Meters' initial split, Modeliste released solo albums on his JZM Records label, including Zigaboo.com (2000) and the 2017 effort New Life, which highlighted his compositional range with tracks blending funk and jazz.[91][92]The original quartet reunited sporadically in later years, most notably for a full performance at the 2005 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, where they played classics like "Cissy Strut" and "Hey Pocky A-Way" to a rapt crowd shortly after Hurricane Katrina.[29] Their final show together as the core four occurred on June 25, 2017, at the Arroyo Seco Weekend festival in Pasadena, California, capping decades of intermittent collaborations.[93]
Evolving lineups and contributors
Cyril Neville, brother of keyboardist Art Neville, joined The Meters in 1972 as a percussionist and vocalist during their Reprise Records era, contributing to albums such as Cabbage Alley (1972), Rejuvenation (1974), Fire on the Bayou (1975), Trick Bag (1976), and New Directions (1977).[3] His addition expanded the band to a quintet, enhancing their rhythmic depth and vocal harmonies while they toured as openers for the Rolling Stones in 1975 and 1976.[10] Neville departed in early 1977 alongside his brother Art, amid internal tensions, subsequently pursuing a solo career blending reggae and funk influences inspired by artists like Bob Marley.[94]Following the Nevilles' exit, The Meters underwent further changes with the addition of keyboardist David Batiste Sr. and vocalist Willie West from 1977 to 1980, as the band navigated a transitional period before its initial disbandment.[17] These interim members supported live performances and recording efforts during a time of uncertainty, though the group officially broke up by 1980 after bassist George Porter Jr. also left later in 1977.[95]Guest contributors played key roles in shaping The Meters' sound across their discography. Arranger Wardell Quezergue provided horn arrangements for prominent albums including Fire on the Bayou and Rejuvenation (1974), adding orchestral flair to their funk grooves.[96] Producer Allen Toussaint oversaw several early recordings, including tracks from 1969–1970 and full albums like Cabbage Alley (1972), infusing the band's output with his signature New Orleans R&B polish.[97][5] Occasional horn sections, often coordinated through Quezergue's work, featured additional musicians to bolster live and studio performances.The revival as the Funky Meters in 1989 introduced new contributors alongside core members Art Neville and George Porter Jr. Guitarist Brian Stoltz joined in 1994 following Leo Nocentelli's departure, serving until 2007 and returning from 2011 to 2018, bringing a modern edge to the band's instrumentation.[5] Drummer Russell Batiste Jr. became a fixture from 1989 through 2018, propelling the group's energetic live shows with his dynamic style until Art Neville's retirement; he passed away on September 30, 2023.[98][99] Ian Neville, Art's son, contributed on guitar and keyboards primarily from 2007 to 2011 during Stoltz's brief hiatus, and sporadically in the 1990s and beyond, maintaining familial ties to the Meters' legacy.[5][98]Lineup variations in the 2000s sparked legal disputes over branding rights, with the original four members—Art Neville, George Porter Jr., Leo Nocentelli, and Zigaboo Modeliste—reuniting sporadically as "The Original Meters" to distinguish from the "Funky Meters" configuration led by Neville and Porter.[22] These conflicts, rooted in ongoing name and recording rights issues from the 1990s, highlighted tensions but did not halt performances by either iteration.[5][1]
Awards and recognition
Major awards
The Meters have received several prestigious awards recognizing their pioneering contributions to funk music and their enduring influence on the genre. In 1970, the band was named Best Rhythm and Blues Instrumental Group by both Billboard and Record World magazines, honoring their innovative instrumental tracks that topped R&B charts, including the single "Cissy Strut," which peaked at number 4 on the Billboard R&B chart.[17][100] This accolade underscored their early impact on the New Orleans funk scene during a period when they released multiple chart successes.In 2013, The Meters were awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Big Easy Music Awards, a key honor in the New Orleans music community that celebrated their foundational role in shaping local funk traditions and their lasting legacy in the city's cultural landscape.[101]The band's most prominent national recognition came in 2018 with the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award from the Recording Academy, presented during the Special Merit Awards ceremony associated with the 60th Annual Grammy Awards. This award acknowledged their groundbreaking work in pioneering funk rhythms and grooves that influenced generations of musicians, highlighting albums like The Meters (1969) and Rejuvenation (1974).[102]
Nominations and honors
The Meters have been nominated for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame four times, in 1997, 2013, 2014, and 2017, but have not been inducted as of 2025.[103] Fan-driven petitions and advocacy campaigns have highlighted their foundational role in funk music during these nomination cycles, yet the band remains outside the hall.[104]The band has received no direct Grammy Award nominations for their own recordings, though members contributed to Grammy-nominated projects through collaborations.[105]In recognition of their contributions to Louisiana's musical heritage, The Meters were inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2006.[106] The group has also received ongoing tributes at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, including annual performances celebrating their catalog and a special 2024 event marking the 50th anniversary of their album Rejuvenation, featuring original members George Porter Jr. and Leo Nocentelli alongside Dumpstaphunk at the Civic Theatre.[36]Individual members have garnered additional honors, such as drummer Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste's induction into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame for his innovative rhythms. The Meters and Modeliste have also received BMI Awards for sampled works, including honors in the 2000s for tracks like Young Gunz's "Can't Stop, Won't Stop" (2005), which incorporated Modeliste's drum patterns and topped Billboard's Hot Rap Songs chart, leading to a 2014 BMI recognition for most-performed urban songs.[107]In 2025, surviving members of The Meters, including George Porter Jr., participated in "A Dream We Dreamed: A New Orleans Tribute to Phil Lesh" at the Joy Theater on May 1, serving as an honorary nod to their shared funk legacy with the Grateful Dead bassist during Jazz Fest.[37]
Discography
Studio albums
The Meters' early studio output, released during their Josie Records era, emphasized tight instrumental funk grooves rooted in New Orleans R&B traditions. Their self-titled debut album, The Meters, arrived in July 1969, produced by Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn at Cosimo Matassa's Studio in New Orleans, and featured raw, syncopated tracks such as "Sophisticated Cissy" and "Cissy Strut," the latter becoming a breakthrough single that highlighted the band's percussive bass and guitar interplay.[108] Later that year, they followed with Look-Ka Py Py in November 1969, also produced by Toussaint and Sehorn, showcasing similarly minimalist funk in songs like the title track and "Little Old Money Maker," which captured the group's telepathic rhythm section dynamics without vocals or overdubs.In 1970, Struttin' continued the instrumental focus on Josie, with Toussaint and Sehorn handling production once more; standout cuts included "Chicken Strut" (also known as "Chicken Scratch") and "Same Old Thing," reinforcing the band's reputation for infectious, groove-driven compositions that influenced subsequent funk acts.[13] By 1972, Cabbage Alley marked a transitional effort on the same label, produced by Toussaint and Sehorn, introducing subtle vocal elements alongside instrumentals like "Chug Chug Chug" and "Cabbage Alley," reflecting the band's evolving sound amid lineup stability. These Josie releases collectively peaked modestly on charts, with the debut reaching No. 108 on the Billboard 200 and No. 23 on the R&B albums chart.Shifting to Reprise Records in 1972 after a label deal, the band self-produced later works but retained Toussaint for initial efforts, expanding their palette with more prominent vocals. Rejuvenation (1974) exemplified this growth, produced by Allen Toussaint and the band, featuring hits like "People Say" and "Hey Pocky A-Way," and it climbed to No. 128 on the Billboard 200, underscoring their commercial peak through layered funk arrangements. Fire on the Bayou (1975), produced by Toussaint, incorporated percussionist Cyril Neville and delivered the title track as a radio staple, blending Mardi Gras rhythms with psychedelic funk edges.The Reprise period concluded with Trick Bag in 1976, produced by Toussaint, highlighting tracks like the title song and "Hang 'Em High," amid subtle shifts toward jazzier textures. New Directions (1977), following Art Neville's temporary departure, was helmed by producer David Rubinson and explored fusion influences in pieces such as "Be My Lady" and "No More Okey Doke," signaling a brief experimental phase before the original lineup's dissolution.In 2025, reissues of several studio albums were released, including colored vinyl editions of The Meters, Look-Ka Py Py, Struttin', and Fire on the Bayou by Jackpot Records.[109]
Year
Album
Label
Producer
Key Tracks
1969
The Meters
Josie
Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn
"Sophisticated Cissy", "Cissy Strut"
1969
Look-Ka Py Py
Josie
Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn
"Look-Ka Py Py", "Little Old Money Maker"
1970
Struttin'
Josie
Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn
"Chicken Strut", "Same Old Thing"
1972
Cabbage Alley
Josie
Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn
"Chug Chug Chug", "Cabbage Alley"
1974
Rejuvenation
Reprise
Allen Toussaint and The Meters
"People Say", "Hey Pocky A-Way"
1975
Fire on the Bayou
Reprise
Allen Toussaint
"Fire on the Bayou", "They All Ask'd for You"
1976
Trick Bag
Reprise
Allen Toussaint
"Trick Bag", "Hang 'Em High"
1977
New Directions
Reprise
David Rubinson
"Be My Lady", "No More Okey Doke"
Live recordings and compilations
The Meters' live recordings capture the band's signature tight grooves and improvisational energy in performance settings, providing fans with insights into their dynamic stage presence beyond the studio. One of the earliest and most celebrated official live releases is Uptown Rulers! (Live on the Queen Mary), recorded on March 24, 1975, during a private "Venus and Mars" party hosted by Paul and Linda McCartney aboard the RMS Queen Mary ship in Long Beach, California, and issued by Rhino Records in 1992.[110] This 11-track set features extended renditions of staples like "Fire on the Bayou," "Africa," and medleys incorporating "Cissy Strut" and "Cardova," highlighting the group's interplay during their Reprise Records era.[111] Additional live material from the 1970s, including performances from the Cabbage Alley tour period in 1972, has appeared as bonus tracks on reissues, such as those preserving raw, audience-recorded sets from New Orleans venues that emphasize their raw funk delivery.[112]In the late 1990s and 2000s, reunion lineups under names like The Funky Meters released or authorized several live documents from festival appearances and club shows, often blending originals with extended jams. A notable example is the bootleg-turned-official release Funky Miracle (Live at the Moonwalker Vol. 2), featuring the core members with guest horns performing classics like the title track and "Sehorn's Farm Book A" in a high-energy format recorded during a 1970s-style revival tour.[113] Festival sets from the 2000s, including appearances at events like the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, were compiled into limited-edition live albums that showcase evolving lineups with added percussion and horns.[114]In 2025, Live at Great American Music Hall, San Francisco was released for Record Store Day (April 12, 2025), a double LP capturing a previously unreleased performance with the classic lineup, including tracks not heard before in official releases.[115]Compilations and singles collections have been essential in consolidating The Meters' prolific output of 45s and album tracks, often serving as entry points for new listeners. The earliest major compilation, The Best of the Meters (1975, Reprise Records), gathers key singles from their Josie years, including "Sophisticated Cissy" b/w "Sehorn's Farm Book A" (1968) and "Stretch Your Rubber Band" (1971), emphasizing their instrumental funk foundations.[116] The comprehensive 2-CD set Funkify Your Life: The Meters Anthology (1995, Rhino Records) offers a chronological overview spanning 1968–1977, with 43 tracks drawn from studio albums and non-album B-sides, such as "Zony Mash" and "Tippy-Toes," illustrating their evolution from raw R&B to polished grooves.[117]Later retrospectives focus on singles, like A Message from the Meters (2005 reissue by Charly Records), which compiles 18 tracks including charting cuts such as "Jungle Man" (1975, peaking at #21 on the R&B chart) and non-album B-sides that highlight vocal additions from Cyril Neville.[118] Post-reunion reissues, including the 2024 50th-anniversary edition of Rejuvenation (Warner Records), incorporate bonus live tracks from 1970s performances, such as alternate takes of "People Say" and "It Ain't No Use," to commemorate the album's enduring impact.[119] These collections underscore the band's influence through accessible formats, prioritizing their hit-driven singles over deep cuts.