ABC News January 2, 2025

Music brings New Orleans' French Quarter back to life

WATCH: Music returns to New Orlean's French Quarter after truck attack

The quiet in New Orleans' famous French Quarter early Thursday morning was first cut by crews sweeping up trash -- then power washing Bourbon Street.

The goal was to reopen it to pedestrians by the time the Sugar Bowl kicked off nearby, 36 hours after the New Year's Day tragedy.

At 2 a.m. Thursday, mangled metal that once stood as barricades lay scattered on a Bourbon Street that otherwise looked like the aftermath of any other New Orleans celebration -- littered with beads, confetti, takeout containers, and bottles of booze.

By 6 a.m., Bourbon Street was clean.

Ashley Riegle/ABC News
Bourbon Street is shown on the morning of Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans.
MORE: New Orleans attack latest: Police don't believe any other suspects involved, FBI says

As the sun rose, businesses reopened, and a steady stream of tourists started filling the French Quarter.

Although it was a sunny 60-degree day, a cloud of anxiety weighed on the crowd, and the streets stayed relatively quiet.

Then, around 11 a.m., we heard our first trumpet.

Street musicians, known as buskers, are part of the fabric of New Orleans. Groups of people stopped to listen to The Ohlson Family Roadshow band as they played along Royal Street.

They thanked those who offered tips and implored all to donate to funds for the victims of the terror attack.

Ashley Riegle/ABC News
A band plays in the French Quarter of New Orleans on Jan. 2, 2025.
MORE: What we know about the victims of the New Orleans attack: 'So beautiful and full of life'

Aoleoin Broomfield was scheduled to play after The Ohlson Family Roadshow. Born and raised in New Orleans, she told ABC News she's happy officials decided to reopen the French Quarter in just one day.

"I still feel like we're reeling from the aftereffects of Katrina, and even COVID," she said. "We lost a lot of tourism, and a lot of businesses closed down during COVID. I hate to see another thing happen."

City and state officials also pushed for a swift return to everyday life in defiance of terrorism fears. Law enforcement deployed additional assets to the French Quarter and Caesars Superdome, according to Louisiana GOP Gov. Jeff Landry.

Ashley Riegle/ABC News
A man kneels in front of flowers and beads left in memorial to the victims of the Bourbon Street attack, in New Orleans, on Jan. 2, 2025.
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New barriers were put in place along Bourbon Street as reinforcements and, in a way, reminders.

Trevor Hughes/USA Today Network via Imagn Images
Doreen Ketchens plays with her band, Doreen's Jazz New Orleans band, performing for tourists in New Orleans' French Quarter on Jan. 2, 2025.

After Georgia played Notre Dame for a spot in the college football semi-finals, fans would flock to he French Quarter after the final whistle, with a reason to celebrate once again.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
A man plays trumpet near crosses set up as a memorial near Bourbon Street on Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans, Louisiana, the day after an attack by a man driving a truck down Bourbon street in the French Quarter.

A night that ends with street sweepers cleaning up Bourbon Street's usual litter and a morning that begins with buskers playing in the streets would ensure an even greater victory for the city of New Orleans and its enduring resilience.

"[Music] takes your mind off everything going on, even though it's temporary," Broomfield said. "It's healing," she told us.

"I just want things to be normal even though it’s not normal. So, I like playing out here just so I can feel a little bit normal,” she said.