Annotation:Clog du couronnement
X:1 T:Clog du couronnement M:C| L:1/8 R:Clog S:Albert Allard ( Montreal, Québec) D:Starr 16046 (78 RPM), Albert Allard (1937) F:http://amicus.collectionscanada.gc.ca/gramophone-bin/Main/ItemDisplay?l=0&l_ef_l=-1&id=40451.375785&v=1&lvl=1&coll=24&rt=1&itm=31394963&rsn=S_WWWdhaJbPSse&all=1&dt=AW+%7Ccouronnement%7C&spi=-&rp=1&v=1 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D FG|AFAd BGBd|AFAd (f/g/f)ed|efgf edcd|(3efe (3dcB A2FG| AFAd BGBd|AFAd (f/g/f)ed|efgf edce|d2f2d2:| |:ef|gfge cABc|dcde (f/g/f)ef|gfge cABc|(3efe (3dcB A2FG| AFAd BGBd|AFAd (f/g/f)ed|efgf edce|d2f2d2:|]
CLOG DU COURONNEMENT (Coronation Clog). AKA and see "Buck From the Mountain," "Hanover Hornpipe," "McElligott's Fancy," "Minstrel's Fancy," "Pioneer Hornpipe." French-Canadian, Reel (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The tune, with an Irish provenance and normally played as a hornpipe, was recorded as a reel for Starr Records in Montreal in 1937 by fiddler Albert Allard, backed by guitarist Tony Ouellette. A few years earlier the pair had partnered with accordion player Tommy Duchesne (1909-1986, born in Val-Jalbert on Lac-Saint-Jean) to form Les Chevaliers De Folklore, but all continued to record on their own as well.