Annotation:Quadrille franco-américain fig. 5
X:1 T:Quadrille franco-américain fig. 5 T:Franco-American Quadrille, Fig. 5 S:J.O. & Albert LaMadeleine (1880-1973, Montreal) M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig N:The last figure of the quadrille--what else but "Yankee Doodle" D:Starr 15386 (78 RPM), J.O. & Albert LaMadeleine (1928) D:http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/m2/f7/15718.mp3 N:http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/films-videos-sound-recordings/virtual-gramophone/Pages/Item.aspx?idNumber=1007648641 Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D DFA AFA|dcB {Bc}B2A|DFA AFD|EFE EFE| DFA AFA|dcB A2g|fef gec|ABc d2:| |:DFA dfa| agf e2g|fdf afd|c[ce][ce] [ce][ce][ce]| DFA dfa| agf e2f|gfg bgc|edd [d3f3]:|]
QUADRILLE FRANCO-AMÉRICAIN FIG. 5. French-Canadian, Jig (6/8 time). Researcher Jean Duval finds "Quadrille Franco-American fig. 5" to be a version of the Irish jig "Girls of Banbridge (The)." He notes that Montreal fiddler Joseph Allard also recorded a version of the tune, albeit somewhat dissimilar to La Madeleine's version, in April, 1928 as "Reel du berger" and again in December, 1936, as "Reel des paroissiens." Duval also suspects that this piece served as inspiration to La Madeleine's later composition "Manon," composed in for his granddaughter of that name who was born in 1967.