Annotation:Valse de Tasseau: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Valse_de_Tasseau > | |||
'''VALSE DE TASSEAU''' (Tasseau Waltz). Cajun, Waltz. USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part. Raymond Francois (1990) explains that ''tasseau'' is a Cajun word for sun-dried strips of meat, deriving from the Spanish word 'tasajo.' It is spicy and smoked and can be bought in local markets, being used for seasoning gumbo, sauce piquante, chicken, beans or okra etouffee. There is a community called Tasseau some seven miles southeast of Eunice, Louisiana, where the Indians at one time dried their stips of meat. See also the related song "[[Valse Penitentiare]]," by fiddler Leo Soileau and Moise Robin (La.) [Francois]. | |f_annotation='''VALSE DE TASSEAU''' (Tasseau Waltz). Cajun, Waltz. USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part. Raymond Francois (1990) explains that ''tasseau'' is a Cajun word for sun-dried strips of meat, deriving from the Spanish word 'tasajo.' It is spicy and smoked and can be bought in local markets, being used for seasoning gumbo, sauce piquante, chicken, beans or okra etouffee. There is a community called Tasseau some seven miles southeast of Eunice, Louisiana, where the Indians at one time dried their stips of meat. See also the related song "[[Valse Penitentiare]]," by fiddler Leo Soileau and Moise Robin (La.) [Francois]. [[File:Thibodeaux.jpg|260px|thumb|left|Ambronse Thibodeaux]] | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version=Gervais Quibodeaux & Ambronse Thibodeaux [Francois]. | |||
|f_printed_sources=Francois ('''Yé Yaille, Chère!'''), 1990; pp. 278-279. | |||
|f_recorded_sources=La Louisianne Records LL-119, Ambrose Thibodeaux - "More Authentic Acadian French Music." | |||
|f_see_also_listing= | |||
[[File:Thibodeaux.jpg| | }} | ||
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Latest revision as of 05:12, 7 February 2021
X:0 T: No Score C: The Traditional Tune Archive M: K: x
VALSE DE TASSEAU (Tasseau Waltz). Cajun, Waltz. USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). One part. Raymond Francois (1990) explains that tasseau is a Cajun word for sun-dried strips of meat, deriving from the Spanish word 'tasajo.' It is spicy and smoked and can be bought in local markets, being used for seasoning gumbo, sauce piquante, chicken, beans or okra etouffee. There is a community called Tasseau some seven miles southeast of Eunice, Louisiana, where the Indians at one time dried their stips of meat. See also the related song "Valse Penitentiare," by fiddler Leo Soileau and Moise Robin (La.) [Francois].