Annotation:Reel de mon grand-père (2)
X:1 T:Reel de mon grand-père [2] N:From fiddler Roger Desjaies, via a tutorial by his grandson, Sébastien N:Deshaies (Shawinigan, Québec), who identifies it as an amalgam of N:J.O. Albert La Madeleine's "Trois petits coups d'archet" and Joseph N:Allard's "Reel boule de neige". M:C| L:1/8 D:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k5hsaRHqOvg Z:AK/Fiddler's Companion K:G DG|B2 G2 D2 G2|B3B B2AB|c2A2 F2A2|[E3c3][Ec][E2c2]d-c| B2 G2 D2 G2|B3B {d}B2AB|c2A2 E2F2|A2G2 {GA}G2:| Bc|:d2-B2g2B2|d2-c2 {d}cBAB|c2A2 {fa}f2ef|e2d2 dcBc| d2-B2g2B2|d2-c2 {d}cBAB|c2A2f2 {a}fe|1dcBA GABc:|2dcBA G2||
REEL DE MON GRAND-PÈRE [2]. French-Canadian, Reel (cut time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB. "Reel de mon grand-père [2]" is from the playing of fiddler Roger Deshaies via his grandson, Sébastien Deshaies (Shawinigan, Quebec). The first strain of "Reel de mon grand-père [2]" is shared with A.J. Boulay's "Quadrille de Berthier 2ème partie" and is similar to the second strain of J.O. Albert La Madeleine's "Trois petits coups d'archet." Meanwhile, the second strain of "Reel de mon grand-père [2]" is cognate with the first strain of Joseph Allard's "Reel boule de neige (1)" (the strain is also found in Kerr's Merry Melodies in "Bridesmaid Schottische").