Annotation:Cobbler's Reel (1)
X: 1 T: Reel du petit cordonnier T: Tou d'un coup tu maries ma fille R: reel N: Un reel mais avant tout une chanson. F: http://mustrad.udenap.org/partitions/TQ400.jpg Z: 2010 John Chambers <jc:trillian.mit.edu> M: C| L: 1/8 F:http://jc.tzo.net/~jc/music/abc/Quebec/reel/ReelDesVieillesFilles_G.abc K: G |: B2d2 g4 | fgaf g2g2 | e2g2 f4 | gfeg f2f2| B2d2 g4 | fgaf g2g2 | B2d2 fgfe | dcBA G4 :| |: BcdB G2G2 | BcdB d2c2 | ABcA F2FF | ABcA e2d2 | BcdB G2G2 | BcdB d2c2 | ABcA F2fe | dcBA G4 :|
COBBLER'S REEL [1] (Reel du cordonnier). AKA - "Reel du p'tit cordonnier." AKA and see "You Married My Daughter but Yet You Didn’t." Canadian, New England; Reel. G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. Perhaps the original title for the tune, however it has had longevity as a Québec folk-song under the title "Tout d'un coup tu maries ma fille." "Cobbler's Reel", or "Reel du p'tit cordonnier", was popularized by the playing and singing of accordion great Tommy Duchesne (1909-1986, originally from Saguenay, Quebec), Oscar Tiffault and others. The chorus goes:
Tout d'un coup tu maries ma fille,
Tout d'un coup tu la maries pas;
Tout d'un coup tu pars en Egypte,
Tout d'un coup tu restes au Canada.
The reference to Egypt could stem from the 1956 Suez Canal crisis, in which Canadians formed some of the peacekeeping force established by the U.N., or to late 19th/early 20th century Anglo-Franco Colonial excursions to Egypt and the Sudan.