Annotation:Valcartier Set Part One: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title=https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:Valcartier_Set_Part_One > | |||
'''VALCARTIER SET''' (Part One). AKA - "[[Partie de set de Valcartier]]." French Canadian, Quadrille. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBAA'BB' (Reiner & Anick): AA’BB’CC (Remon & Bouchard). The melody is the first part of a six part quadrille, known in Valcartier, Québec, as "the set." Valcartier is a rural community north of Québec City that was settled primarily by Irish and Scottish immigrants, descendants of whom retained influences from those countries in their music. The source for the tune, accordion player Keith Corrigan, learned it from two different relatives, each of whom had a separate second strain, and he played it with both second strains. This is the form that was popularized and is most often heard today. Guy Bouchard also notes that a Valcartier set is made up of six figures, but says that this tune is usually played for the second figure. | |f_annotation='''VALCARTIER SET''' (Part One). AKA - "[[Partie de set de Valcartier]]." French Canadian, Quadrille. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBAA'BB' (Reiner & Anick): AA’BB’CC (Remon & Bouchard). The melody is the first part of a six part quadrille, known in Valcartier, Québec, as "the set." Valcartier is a rural community north of Québec City that was settled primarily by Irish and Scottish immigrants, descendants of whom retained influences from those countries in their music. The source for the tune, accordion player Keith Corrigan, learned it from two different relatives, each of whom had a separate second strain, and he played it with both second strains. This is the form that was popularized and is most often heard today. Guy Bouchard also notes that a Valcartier set is made up of six figures, but says that this tune is usually played for the second figure. [[File:corrigan.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Keith Corrigan (accordion)]] | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version=accordion player Keith Corrigan (Valcartier & Sainte Foy, Québec) via Lisa Ornstein & Denis Pepin [Reiner & Anick]. | |||
|f_printed_sources=Reiner & Anick ('''Old Time Fiddling Across America'''), 1989; p. 63. Remon & Bouchard ('''Airs Tordus: Twenty-five Crooked Tunes, vol. 2'''), 1997; No. 12. | |||
|f_recorded_sources= | |||
|f_see_also_listing=Hear Andy Cutting and Chris Wood's version at youtube.com [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvszX9ZTRwk]<br> | |||
[[File:corrigan.jpg| | |||
Hear Andy Cutting and Chris Wood's version at youtube.com [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvszX9ZTRwk]<br> | |||
Eric Lortie's Identitairs Québécois [http://www.mustrad.udenap.org/tounes/TQ260_valcartier_set_1ere_partie.html]<br> | Eric Lortie's Identitairs Québécois [http://www.mustrad.udenap.org/tounes/TQ260_valcartier_set_1ere_partie.html]<br> | ||
}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:31, 18 January 2021
X:1 T:Valcartier Set Part One M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Quadrille S:Keith Corrigan Z:Transcribed by Steve Fry K:D F ABA|:"D"FDF "Ebdim"ABA|"Em"GFG BGG|"Em7"cGG "A"~B2A|"D"dzF "C#+"ABA| "D"FDF "A#dim7"ABA|"Em" GFG BGG|"Em7"cGG {c}"A"BGE|1 [M:9/8]"A"DFA "D"dzF "C#+"ABA:|2[M:9/8]+alCoda+ O "A"DFA "D"dzA "C#+"ABc|| |:[M:6/8]"D"dff "D#dim"Add|"Em"~cBc "A"GBc|1[M:9/8] "A"dfe "D"dzA "C#+"ABc:|2 "A"dfe "D"dzF "C#+"ABA +D.S.+O|| O "A"DFA dAF|:"Em"E2F "Em/D"GFE|"A/C#"c3 {d}"A/G"c2B|"F#m"ABA "F#m/A"AFA|"Bm"d2d "B7/D#"dAF| "Em"E2F "E7/D"GFE|"A/C#"c3 "E/B"~c2B|"A7"ABA "C#+"GFE|1 "D"DFA dAF:|2[M:9/8]"D"DFA dzF "C#+"ABA||
VALCARTIER SET (Part One). AKA - "Partie de set de Valcartier." French Canadian, Quadrille. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AA'BBAA'BB' (Reiner & Anick): AA’BB’CC (Remon & Bouchard). The melody is the first part of a six part quadrille, known in Valcartier, Québec, as "the set." Valcartier is a rural community north of Québec City that was settled primarily by Irish and Scottish immigrants, descendants of whom retained influences from those countries in their music. The source for the tune, accordion player Keith Corrigan, learned it from two different relatives, each of whom had a separate second strain, and he played it with both second strains. This is the form that was popularized and is most often heard today. Guy Bouchard also notes that a Valcartier set is made up of six figures, but says that this tune is usually played for the second figure.