Annotation:Tous les deux pour la meme: Difference between revisions
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|f_annotation='''TOUS LES DEUX POUR LA MEME''' (Both for the Same One). Cajun, Waltz (3/4 time). USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB(Vocal)A(Vocal)AA'. The tune is the first that Cajun fiddler Dennis McGee learned to play the day he received his first instrument. Related tunes, according to Raymond François (1990), are Leroy "Happy Fats" LeBlanc's and Ervin Vin Bruce's versions of "La Valse de Sainte Marie," Blackie Forestier's "All for the Same" and Merlin Fontenot's "Les Maringouins." | |f_annotation='''TOUS LES DEUX POUR LA MEME''' (Both for the Same One). Cajun, Waltz (3/4 time). USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB(Vocal)A(Vocal)AA'. The tune is the first that Cajun fiddler Dennis McGee learned to play the day he received his first instrument. Related tunes, according to Raymond François (1990), are Leroy "Happy Fats" LeBlanc's and Ervin Vin Bruce's versions of "La Valse de Sainte Marie," Blackie Forestier's "All for the Same" and Merlin Fontenot's "Les Maringouins." | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version=Lawrence Walker (La.) [François]. | |f_source_for_notated_version=Lawrence Walker (La.) [François]. | ||
|f_printed_sources=François (Yé Yaille, Chère!), 1990; pp. 292-293. | |f_printed_sources=François (Yé Yaille, Chère!), 1990; pp. 292-293. | ||
|f_recorded_sources=La Louisiane Records LL-LP126, Lawrence Walker. | |f_recorded_sources=La Louisiane Records LL-LP126, Lawrence Walker. | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 04:25, 13 September 2023
X:0 T: No Score C: The Traditional Tune Archive M: K: x
TOUS LES DEUX POUR LA MEME (Both for the Same One). Cajun, Waltz (3/4 time). USA, southwestern Louisiana. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB(Vocal)A(Vocal)AA'. The tune is the first that Cajun fiddler Dennis McGee learned to play the day he received his first instrument. Related tunes, according to Raymond François (1990), are Leroy "Happy Fats" LeBlanc's and Ervin Vin Bruce's versions of "La Valse de Sainte Marie," Blackie Forestier's "All for the Same" and Merlin Fontenot's "Les Maringouins."