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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.
The phrase is embodied in an old French lullaby, a song sung to children when putting them down for the night. Joshua Caffery, however, suggests the true derivation is more plausibly the dance call dos à dos (back to back), the do si do call of Anglo-American folk dance; and that sources such as Duhon are merely "repeating the same apocryphal ...
The Mardi Gras song, known in the local Cajun French as "La Danse de Mardi Gras" and "La Vieille Chanson de Mardi Gras ", [30] is a traditional tune sung by the participants, although the exact lyrics vary greatly from town to town. The melody of the traditional folk song is similar to melodies of the Bretons from the northern coast of France. [8]
"I Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans" by Vince Vance and the Valiants "I Know You Mardi Gras" by Wild Magnolias "I Love Louisiana" by Rosie Ledet "I Love New Orleans" by Ronnie Milsap "I Love To Wake Up In New Orleans" by Larry John McNally "I Love You Goodbye" by Thomas Dolby "I Might Be Awhile In New Orleans" by Johnny Russell
The Best of Cajun Hits Volume 3 (1978) Swallow LP 6033 [20] The Back Door (1980) Swallow LP 6038 [20] Cajun Saturday Night (1984) Rounder Select 0198 [20] No Matter Where You At, There You Are (1988) Rounder Select 6021 [20] Le Trio Cadien (1992) Rounder Select [21] Cajun Memories (1995) Swallow LP 6125 [21] Happy Go Lucky (2010) Swallow CD ...
Hand-rubbed and infused with Popeyes’ signature blend of “zesty” Louisiana-style seasonings, the Cajun Turkey may be frozen, but it’s precooked, so all you have to do is thaw, heat, serve ...
“You get to tilt the world a fraction — and I know: ‘Here is f----- Geldof banging on.’ But the instrument of this control, as corny as it may sound, is this thing — this OK tune.”
"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]