Annotation:Cotillon de Stoneham
X:1 T:Cotillon de Stoneham S:Pit Jornoch/Pierre Verret (1863-1937) M:C| L:1/8 N:The first measure is played only at the beginning:repeats thereafter are N:indicated by the D.S. D:Jean-Marie Verret –"Rend Hommage à Pit Jornoch 1863-1937" (1990) D:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfFrL4KeELs Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D ffaf e2d2||SA2d2f3f|ggag f2e2|fafe d3e| ffaf e2d2|A2d2f2ee|e2a2 c3d |edcB AA3| [Bg]gag f2ee|fafe d4 |eefe d2e2|fefb a2ff| f2f2 fefb|agfe dcde|ffdf eAce|d3d dAAA|| a3a afed|B2G2 [G2B2] c2|B4 B2GB|d2 de dcBA| ^GABc defg |Obage dfAd ||f2gf e2 d2S| O"ending"bage d3A|BAFA A,2C2|D4 z4|]
COTILLON DE STONEHAM. French-Canadian, Country Dance Tune (cut time). D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. Stoneham-et-Tewkesbury is a township located north of Québec City, named in 1792 by Philip Toosey, who was granted some 70 acres of land that formed the beginning of the village that he named Stoneham after the namesake village in Suffolk, England, where he came from. By 1920, when young Jules Verret (1916-1982) was being tutored on the violin by Pit Jornoch, Stoneham had grown to become an important commercial center of northern Quebec.