Riley, who lives in Lafayette, began playing accordion when he was 13. After a three-year apprenticeship playing accordion in the band of fiddle playing Cajun legend Dewey Balfa, Riley formed his own group when he was 18.
The Mamou Playboys have spent their entire recording career at Rounder Records. 1994's Live! includes a pair of Clifton Chenier zydeco tunes, but in the main, the band tackles traditional Cajun tunes by the likes of Dewey Balfa, Iry Lejeune, D.L. Menard, and Aldus Rogers. Standard Cajun tunes are showcased gloriously on 1993's Trace of Time, an album produced by Al Tharp of Beausoleil, while more acoustic, folky material is featured on 1992's Tit Galop Pour Mamou. The band's self-titled 1990 debut album, produced by Cajun blues-rocker Zachary Richard, also pays respect to the music that came before them, and includes tunes by the above-mentioned masters of Cajun music. Bayou Ruler followed in 1998, and Happytown, produced by C.C. Adcock, was released in 2001. Bon Rêve appeared in 2003, followed by Dominos in 2005. ~ Richard Skelly, Rovi