Annotation:Quadrille de Beauharnois
X:1 T:Gigue des Touristes T:Quadrille de Beauharnois C:Joseph Allard M:6/8 L:1/8 Z:Bruce Osborne K:C e|"C"gec cBc|"G7"dBG G2 F|"C"EFG "Am"ABc|"D7"edc "G"d2 g|! "C"gec cBc|"G7"dBG G2 F|"C"EFG "F"ABc|"G7"dcB "C"c2:|! |:e|"C"gec c2 a|"F"age "C/E"c2 e|"C"gec cBc|"G7"dBG G2 g|! "C"gec c2 a|"F"age "C/E"c2 e|"C"gec "G7"BAB|"C"c3 -c2:|!
QUADRILLE DE BEAUHARNOIS. AKA and see "Gigue des touristes (1)." French-Canadian, Jig or Quadrille. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The jig if from the playing of Quebec fiddler Jospeh Allard (1873-1947), recorded for Victor in Montreal, Canada, in 1929. Allard re-recorded the tune in 1936, issued under the pseudonym "Maxime Toupin." The 'A' part of this melody resembles O'Neill's "Miss Blair’s Fancy," but there are not enough similarities to establish a direct association.
Beauharnois [1] is a town in Quebec, now within the Greater Montreal area.