Ted Hefko

Ted Hefko and The Thousandaires stir up an intoxicating brew of the profound and the profane, of virtue and vice and most importantly the volatile in-between. Ted’s songs explore hope and hustlers, saints and strays, drifters and the down-and-out. The Thousandaires -- with Hefko on vocals, guitar and tenor sax -- bring these stories to life with the spontaneity of jazz, the rough-hewn, bare-bones tone of backwoods folk songs and the raucous vibrancy of classic Louisiana Rhythm and Blues. Their 2018 album, Gas Station Guru, has gotten great  press and radio airplay all over the world, and Down Below, was picked by a poll of Offbeat Magazine writers as one of the 50 best albums of 2021. Ted Hefko and The Thousandaires have had the honor of performing at New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, French Quarter Fest and venues far and wide from New Orleans favorite dive bars, to venues and festivals across the country. 

Born in Madison, WI, Ted began writing lyrics in the second grade and picked up the guitar and sax a couple years later. At eighteen, fresh out of high school, he caught a Greyhound bus to the Big Easy to follow his dreams. He earned a degree in Jazz Performance at UNO in 2000, where he got to study with Ellis Marsalis, Harold Battiste, Ed Petersen and Steve Masakowski. Ted toured nationally with jazz-jam band, Idletime featuring Aaron Wilkson (Honey Island Swamp Band), Tom Leggett, and Tyler Greenwell (Tedeschi Trucks Band). He moved New York City in 2003, and tried his hand at big city life, where he began leading his own jazz groups, writing originals and pulling in early influences like the blues, country and folk songs that he loved as a kid.  

Hefko released his first all-original album in 2009, Egyptland, a collection of scenes and stories set in New Orleans. This was followed by the jazzier and more playful, If I Walked On Water.  A few years later, he and his live band stopped in the Crescent City to record Distillations of The Blues. That stop rekindled his love for New Orleans.  

It’s been ten years since he returned to New Orleans, where his odd mix of talents and love of roots music really fit.  For more than two decades, Ted has plied his trade as a saxophonist, clarinetist, vocalist and strummer of guitars, but first and foremost he is a songwriter, rooted in the blues. 

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Deceased: 
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