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Country GentlemenClick on the tune title to see or modify Country Gentlemen's annotations. If the link is red you can create them using the form provided.Browse Properties <br/>Special:Browse/:Country Gentlemen
USA/Deep South"USA/Deep South" is not in the list (IRELAND(Munster), IRELAND(Connaught), IRELAND(Leinster), IRELAND(Ulster), SCOTLAND(Argyll and Bute), SCOTLAND(Perth and Kinross), SCOTLAND(Dumfries and Galloway), SCOTLAND(South Ayrshire), SCOTLAND(North East), SCOTLAND(Highland), ...) of allowed values for the "Has historical geographical allegiances" property.
COUNTRY GENTLEMEN. AKA - "Couche-Couche Apres Bruler" (Couche-Couche is Burning), "Don't Get Married," "Jeunes Gens de la Campagne." Cajun, Two-Step? USA, Louisiana. G Major. Standard tuning. 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 [1]," and Iry LeJeune's "Don't Get Married."
Source for notated version: Iry LeJeune (La.) [Francois].
Francois (Yé Yaille, Chère!), 1990; pp. 89-91.
Recorded souce: Goldband Records GB-LP7740, Iry LeJeune.