Annotation:Petite cocarde
X:1 T:Petite Cocarde (Small roundel) M:2/4 L:1/8 B:J.A. Boucher – “Le Repertoire du Violoneux” (1933, No. 98, p. 48) B:“Le Repertoire du Violoneux” (Nouvelle édition 2018 par Jean Duval) [1] K:G B/c/|dB eB|dc/d/ c/B/A/B/|cA dA|cB/c/ B/A/B/c/|dB/d/ gf/g/|fe A>B|c/d/e/f/ g/a/g/f/|1 g2z:|2g2z2|| |:[M:3/4]D/F/A/c/ dd eA|A/c/e/g/ fd dz|D/F/A/c/ dd e>g|[M:4/4]ba g/f/e/g/ fd dz| [M:3/4]D/F/A/c/ dd eA|A/c/e/g/ fd dz|D/F/A/c/ dd e>g|[M:4/4] ba g/f/e/g/ fd g2:|
PETIT COCARDE (Small roundel). French-Canadian, Schottische (2/4 and 3/4 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. The first strain is in 2/4 time and plays like a schottische, however, the second strain is predominantly 3/4 time but switches to common time at the end of each musical phrase. The first strain, as researcher Jean Duval notes, is shared with several other tunes, beginning with "Bridesmaid Schottische" in Kerr's Merry Melodies vol. 4 (c. 1880's). In Quebec, the same part is also to be found as the first strain of Joseph Allard's "Reel boule de neige (1)" AKA "Quadrille fèves au lard", and as the second strain of Isidore Soucy's "Quadrille canadien -- 1ère partie" and Allard's earlier "Quadrille français."