Bayou Blues

Musician Tab Benoit plays to save Louisiana鈥檚 wetlands.

Whether he鈥檚 playing nightclubs or talking environmental politics, Cajun bluesman 鈥檚 passions are grounded in the love and loss of people and places. A native of Houma, Louisiana, the Grammy-nominated artist is a leading advocate for the preservation and restoration of the Mississippi Delta. Benoit鈥檚 activism has earned him trips to testify before Congress, gigs at both the Democratic and Republican national presidential conventions, and the 2009 Governor鈥檚 Conservation Award from the Louisiana Wildlife Federation. Since founding the conservation group (VOW) in 2003, Benoit has worked tirelessly to keep wetlands loss in the public eye.

How did you get your start as an activist?

I was a flight instructor, and I flew over pipelines all over the coast. Our practice areas were over the swamp. Day after day I saw the adverse effects of messing with nature: islands and wetlands disappearing鈥攚e鈥檙e losing an acre an hour down here鈥攍eaks in the pipelines they wouldn鈥檛 fix. So I鈥檝e tried to get the word out about what鈥檚 happening and grow support for the wetlands.

What should people expect at the 8th Annual Voice of the Wetlands Festival in October?

It really is our rally, a call to action to get people involved and to see what鈥檚 happening in the delta. We give air tours and we give swamp tours, and we also have great music and Cajun food. Volunteers run it all.

What鈥檚 the crux of the VOW campaign?

The reality is that we as a country have sacrificed the Mississippi Delta for oil and shipping. That鈥檚 the bottom line鈥攖hat land is in the way of shipping so we have to get rid of it. We have destroyed the delta of the fourth-largest river on the planet for short-term monetary gains. That has to change from the top. That means the President and the Department of the Interior have to determine how we can have shipping without destroying the delta.

For your latest album, Medicine, you went to your bayou camp. Do you write better when you鈥檙e on the water?

That was always where I went to do my writing, in the swamp or in my boat or at the camp, somewhere out there. I hadn鈥檛 had a camp since hurricanes Lily and Rita destroyed my last ones, so I hadn鈥檛 done much writing. Last summer I put out a new floating camp so I can handle the high water. For me, it鈥檚 a productive place.