Bebe Creole: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m (Text replace - "<b>USA</b>/Deep South" to "USA(Deep South)") |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
|f_accidental=2 sharps | |f_accidental=2 sharps | ||
|f_mode=Ionian (Major) | |f_mode=Ionian (Major) | ||
|f_history= | |f_history=USA(Deep South) | ||
|f_structure=A(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A | |f_structure=A(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A | ||
|f_book_title=Yé Yaille Chère! | |f_book_title=Yé Yaille Chère! |
Revision as of 13:46, 9 April 2012
<abc float="left">
%REPLACE THE NEXT 5 (FIVE) LINES WITH YOUR ABC NOTATION CODE
X:1
T: No Score
K:G
%% simply paste your ABC code here!
%% the rest, after the closed tag, is for formatting and copyright issues
</abc>
BEBE CREOLE (Creole Baby). Cajun, Waltz. USA, southwestern Louisiana. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). A(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A(Vocal B)B(Vocal A)A. Raymond Francois explains that the term Creole refers to having origins in the French part of Louisiana. He notes the term has shifted meaning along racial lines only in modern times, with blacks from the region now referring to themselves as Creole while whites call themselves Cajun (formerly a derogatory term). A related song is "C'est Pas la Peine Tu Brailles."
Printed source: Francois (Yé Yaille, Chère!), 1990; pp. 43-46.
Source for notated version: Dennis McGee (La.) [Francois].
Recorded source: Old Timey Records OT-108, Dennis McGee.
__NORICHEDITOR__