Annotation:Gaspé Reel (1)
X:1 T:Reel de Gaspé T:Gaspé Reel [1] M:C| L:1/8 N:Accordion version played by Louis-Philippe Pharand. D:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kU3AZ3gfkEg Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D [A3f3]f e2dd|AAzA (B/c/B) A2|[B3g3]g ff (e/f/e)|BABc (B/c/B) AA| [A3f3]f eedd|AAzA (B/c/B) AA|gggg ff (e/f/e)|1BABc d3e:|2B2c2 d3d|| |:eeff gggg|ffg2aaaa|eeff g2 (e/f/e)|BABc (B/c/B) AA| eAef gfeg|fefg a2aa|[B2b2]ba zg (e/f/e) |1B2c2 d3d:|2B2c2 d3f|| |:eA (3cBA eAAf|edcA Bcdf|eA (3cBA eAdf|1ed (B/c/d) cAAf:|2 ed (B/c/d) cAA2||
GASPÉ REEL [1] (Reel de Gaspé). AKA and see "Apex Reel," "Quadrille du peuple 1ère partie." French-Canadian, Reel; New England, Polka. D Major ('A' and 'B' parts) & A Major ('C' part). Standard tuning (fiddle). AB (Silberberg): AABB (Miller & Perron, Sweet, Welling): AA'BB' (Phillips): AABBCCBB (Brody): AA'BB'CA"A"'B"B"' (Begin). Named for Québec's picturesque Gaspé Peninsula, which forms the east bank of the St. Lawrence River as it spills into the Atlantic. The 'C' part is actually a strain of "Money Musk." Louis Beaudoin (Burlington, Vt.) learned the first two parts of the tune from a friend named Joe Danis, but heard the three-part version from Fortuna Vachon (Thetford Mines, Québec). Beaudoin played a the third part to the tune, a strain from the Scottish reel "Money Musk", as in the 1929 recording by fiddler Isidore Soucy and accordion player Donat Lafluer, where "Gaspé" is the first figure of a quadrille under the title "Quadrille du peuple 1ère partie."