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| |f_label=Goldband Records GB-LP7740 | | |f_label=Goldband Records GB-LP7740 |
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| <p><font face="garamond, serif" size="4">
| | =[[ANNOTATION:{{PAGENAME}}|Tune annotations]]= |
| '''COUNTRY GENTLEMEN'''. AKA - "[[Couche-Couche Apres Bruler]]" (Couche-Couche is Burning), "[[Don't Get Married]]," "[[Jeunes Gens de la Compagne (1)]]." Cajun, Two-Step? USA, Louisiana. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). BB(Vocal)BBBB(Vocal)BBB(Vocal)BB. The alternate title is an old version of the tune. Couche-Couche derives from the Arabic word couscous, a concotion of salt, water and durum wheat semolina popular in France. Since wheat was not a Louisiana staple, cornmeal was substituted as the main ingredient (Francois, 1990). Related songs, identified by Raymond Francois (1990) are Jimmie Venable's "[[Jeunes Gens de la Compagne (2)]]," and Iry LeJeune's "[[Don't Get Married]]."
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| ''Source for notated version'': Iry LeJeune (La.) [Francois].
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| Francois ('''Yé Yaille, Chère!'''), 1990; pp. 89-91.
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| ''Recorded souce:'' Goldband Records GB-LP7740, Iry LeJeune.
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| | T: No Score |
| | C: The Traditional Tune Archive |
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| | =[[ANNOTATION:{{PAGENAME}}|Tune annotations]]= |
| '''© 1996-2010 Andrew Kuntz. All Rights Reserved.'''
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| Engraver Valerio M. Pelliccioni
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