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  2. Eh, La Bas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eh,_La_Bas

    Eh La Bas is a traditional New Orleans song.Originally it was sung with Cajun lyrics but was later given French lyrics and the common title from the French lyrics. There have been numerous versions, including English lyrics that refer to both the Cajun and French versions, and all employ a call and response.

  3. LRC (file format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LRC_(file_format)

    The original LRC format (sometimes called the Simple LRC format) is formed of two types of tags (time tags and optional ID tags), with one tag per line.Time tags have the format [mm:ss.xx]lyric, where mm is minutes, ss is seconds, xx is hundredths of a second, and lyric is the lyric to be played at that time.

  4. Cajun music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cajun_music

    Early song lyrics were entirely in Cajun French. Though songwriting in French is still common, today some Cajun music is sung in English with younger singers and audiences. Traditional Cajun instruments: tit-fer, Cajun accordion, and a fiddle. In earlier years, the fiddle was the predominant instrument. Usually two fiddles were common, one ...

  5. History of Cajun music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Cajun_music

    When bands like the Balfa Brothers, Octa Clark and Hector Duhon, and the black Creole band Bois-Sec Ardoin and Canray began to appear and perform at prestigious national folk festivals like the Newport Folk Festival, the University of Chicago Folk Festival, and the National Folklife Festival, they inspired renewed interest in Louisiana in Cajun ...

  6. My Big John - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Big_John

    The song is told from the point of view of the "Cajun Queen" that drove John away – her search for him, then discovering about his death. The song follows the same format as "Big Bad John" except that the chorus intoning the title periodically is made up of male voices and is sung in a different key; unusually for "answer songs", the composer of the original - Jimmy Dean, in this case - is ...

  7. Evangeline Made: A Tribute to Cajun Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evangeline_Made:_A_Tribute...

    Music critic Richie Unterberger, writing for AllMusic, gave the album 4 of 5 stars, writing: "The production is understated and sympathetic, as it's neither hardcore Cajun music nor Cajun music that's been bleached into pop… Purists might find this something of a sellout, a dilution of the real and rawer thing for ears unaccustomed to the ...

  8. Wayne Toups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne_Toups

    Wayne Toups (born October 2, 1958, in Crowley, Louisiana) is one of the most commercially successful American Cajun singers. [2] He is also a songwriter. Wayne Toups has been granted numerous awards and honors throughout his career including 2010 Festivals Acadiens et Créoles dedicated in his name, Offbeat Magazine Album of the Year recipient.

  9. Tit Galop Pour Mamou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tit_Galop_Pour_Mamou

    "Tit Galop Pour Mamou" (English: either Canter to Mamou or Giddy-Yap to Mamou) is a Cajun folk song with words and music by Dewey Balfa. The tune behind Joe South's "Games People Play" resembles the tune of "Tit Galop Pour Mamou" to some extent. A recording of the song by Mamou Master was used on the soundtrack of the 1991 film Scorchers. [1]