Rise to fame (1977–1984) In 1977 several former members of a group called the Levee Band, who had been playing as studio players in the Bayou-located
Studio in the Country and as backup for local artists like
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and
Clifton Chenier, signed a deal with
Capitol Records as The Jeff Pollard Band. The band had just returned from touring the United States and Africa with Brown through an arrangement with the
US State Department. Leon Medica, the band's producer and bassist, had presented a demo tape to Paul Tannen at
Screen Gems-
EMI while doing a session in
Nashville and making trips to
Colorado to contribute bass parts to a
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album at
William McEuen's
Aspen Recording Society studios. McEuen, Tannen and Attorney John Frankenheimer helped Medica secure the contract with Capitol. By early 1978, they had changed their name to Louisiana's LeRoux, which refers to
roux, a
Cajun gravy base used to make
gumbo. The band was originally composed of Jeff Pollard (vocals, guitar), David Peters (drums, percussion, backing vocals), Leon Medica (bass, backing vocals), Tony Haselden (vocals, guitar), Rod Roddy (vocals, keyboards, synthesizers) and Bobby Campo (horns, percussion, violin, backing vocals). All of the songs on their self-titled 1978 debut album were sung and written by Pollard, except "New Orleans Ladies", which was written by Hoyt Garrick with a contribution by Medica. It reached No. 59 on the
Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1978. Two more albums followed (''Keep the Fire Burnin'
in June 1979 and Up'' in June 1980), but after neither was able to expand the band's fan base, they were dropped by Capitol. During the height of their popularity, LeRoux performed on
Solid Gold,
The Midnight Special and ''
Don Kirshner's Rock Concert'' (the late-night television music shows that were popular at that time). They also appeared with many classic rock bands, including:
The Allman Brothers Band,
Wet Willie,
Journey,
Kansas,
Heart,
The Doobie Brothers,
Charlie Daniels Band,
Foreigner,
Marshall Tucker Band,
Outlaws,
ZZ Top and more. Starting with the Jai Winding-produced
Up, they moved away from their more funky R&B sound towards a more late-70s/early-80s
album-oriented rock style and dropped "Louisiana's" from their name, becoming simply "LeRoux". In 1981 they signed with
RCA and issued their fourth LP,
Last Safe Place (January 1982), which became their highest-charting album. The album spawned three charting
Billboard singles in 1982: "Addicted" (No. 7 Mainstream Rock), "
Nobody Said It Was Easy (Lookin' for the Lights)" (No. 18 Hot 100) and "Last Safe Place on Earth" (No. 77 Hot 100). Other changes were in store as Campo and Pollard both quit later that year, with the former returning to school to complete his master's degree in music and the latter renouncing rock music to enter the
Baptist Christian ministry, where he remains today. Former Trillion singer
Fergie Frederiksen and guitarist Jim Odom (a local native, who had just attended
Berklee College of Music) came on board in the summer of 1982, taking over for Pollard on the fifth album,
So Fired Up (which was released in February 1983). The album contained the minor-charting "Carrie's Gone" (No. 81 Hot 100), which Odom and Frederiksen had written after Frederiksen's breakup with actress
Carrie Hamilton,
Carol Burnett's daughter. The music video for the album's second single "Lifeline" also received MTV rotation, and was covered by Bobby and the Midnites and
Uriah Heep. "Wait One Minute", another song from this album, was widely aired and favored by fans. Some young people know the band mainly for this beautiful ballad. It wasn't enough to keep them from being dropped by RCA, however, and the band called it quits by 1984. Frederiksen, who had already been working with another project called Abandon Shame, then stepped in to replace (former Levee Band member)
Bobby Kimball in the band
Toto.
Later years (1985-present) In March 1985 Leon Medica and Tony Haselden were part of a
USO organized traveling rock outfit that entertained US military troops in Europe, called 1st Airborne Division Rock and Roll. Later in 1985, most of the band (sans Pollard & Frederiksen) got back together to do annual concerts in and around New Orleans with new singer Randy Knapps. Peters and Odom were also part of the group Network, who recorded the song "Back in America" for the movie
European Vacation that came out that same year. Medica and Knapps were part of another edition of 1st Airborne Division Rock and Roll that went to the
Indian Ocean and Europe in September through October 1986. And after releasing a greatest hits compilation entitled ''Bayou Degradable: The Best of Louisiana's LeRoux'' in July 1996, the band decided to play more live shows in the southern U.S. and along the Gulf Coast and have been doing so ever since. By 1997, new members Kenneth J. "Boo" Pourciau (drums,
backing vocals), Nelson Blanchard (keyboards, backing vocals) and Steve Brewster (percussion) came in to sub for Peters, Roddy and Campo, whenever the increased tour schedule conflicted with their other duties. Shortly thereafter, Campo left the band again and Mark Duthu replaced Brewster later that year. In 2000 the newer members appeared alongside Knapps, Haselden, Medica, Peters, Odom and Roddy on a new release, ''Ain't Nothing but a Gris Gris''. The CD, which was a return to the funkier sound of the band's first two albums, featured ten tracks – "all written or co-written by members of LeRoux", according to the back cover. The CD was produced by Medica with Odom credited as an Associate Producer. The group had also hoped to bring back Fergie Frederiksen to do another album that was more in step with the early 80s
album-oriented rock sound of their 1983 release
So Fired Up, but it never came to pass and Frederiksen died from
liver cancer on January 18, 2014 at his home in
Mound, Minnesota. Knapps left the group at the end of 2005 and Courtney Westbrook was lead singer in 2006 before Terry Brock (formerly of Network) took over in 2007. After the group's heyday, guitarist Tony Haselden became a Nashville songwriter in the late-1980s and penned the country hits "
It Ain't Nothin'" for the late
Keith Whitley, "
That's My Story" for
Collin Raye, "
Mama Knows" for the group
Shenandoah and many others. Bassist and producer Leon Medica resided in Nashville for many years and was in high demand as a studio musician and songwriter. Members of LeRoux backed up Tab Benoit on his
Brother to the Blues and
Power of the Ponchartrain CDs, recorded a live DVD and CD in Nashville with Tab in early May 2007 and toured nationwide with him in 2007 and 2008. On October 10, 2009, during their performance at Tab Benoit's "Voice of the Wetlands" Festival in
Houma, Louisiana, LeRoux was inducted into the
Louisiana Music Hall of Fame as their 50th inductee. In 2010 Terry Brock was replaced as lead singer by Keith Landry and David Peters was replaced by new drummer Randy Carpenter. LeRoux went back into Dockside Studio in May 2011 to record basic tracks for an album slated for release in 2012. This project included such diverse vocalists and musicians as
Bobby Kimball,
Steve Cropper,
Jimmy Hall and
Sonny Landreth, but was never released since the group felt the tracks "lacked chemistry." At the end of 2014, Leon Medica retired from live performing when he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. His place onstage in LeRoux has been assumed by new bassist Joey Decker. In early 2016, Terry Brock returned as the band's lead singer for another two years. In March 2018, after Brock once again departed, Jeff McCarty was announced as LeRoux's new lead singer. Right around the same time, the group began work on a new album with producer
Jeff Glixman. This album,
One of Those Days, was released in June 2020. Leon Medica succumbed to Alzheimer’s and died on June 9, 2024 at the age of 78. And after being sidelined from the band due to illness, Tony Haseldon also passed on May 16, 2025 at age 79. == Personnel ==