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  2. French-Canadian music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French-Canadian_music

    French-Canadian folk music is generally performed to accompany dances such as the jig, jeux dansé, ronde, cotillion, and quadrille. The fiddle is perhaps the most common instrument utilized and is used by virtuosos such as Jean Carignan , Jos Bouchard , and Joseph Allard .

  3. La Bolduc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Bolduc

    Bolduc often used the technique of the enumerative song, which lists something such as foods or tasks. [8] This technique was traditional in French-Canadian folk songs, derived from similar French traditions. Bolduc also employed the traditional French folk song style of the dialogue song, usually a duet with a man, where the song is a ...

  4. Category:Canadian folk songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Canadian_folk_songs

    Canadian folk rock songs (16 C, 3 P) A. Susan Aglukark songs (1 P) B. La Bolduc songs (1 P) C. Bruce Cockburn songs (3 P) Leonard Cohen songs (28 P) F. Nelly Furtado ...

  5. Music of Quebec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Quebec

    Sierra Norteña: the Influence of Latin Music on the French-Canadian Popular Song and Dance Scene, Especially as Reflected in the Career of Alys Robi and the Pedagogy of Maurice Lacasse-Morenoff. Montréal: Productions Juke-Box, 1994. 13 p. N.B. Published text of a paper prepared for, and presented on, on 12 March 1994, the conference, Popular ...

  6. Alouette (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alouette_(song)

    Many of the songs favoured by the voyageurs have been passed down to the present era. "Alouette" has become a symbol of French Canada for the world, an unofficial national song. [3] Today, the song is used to teach French and English-speaking children in Canada, and others learning French around the world, the names of body parts.

  7. Canadian folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_folk_music

    Canadian folk music has a long history, dating from the 16th and 17th centuries, mostly derived from the music of early settlers and much earlier from the music of indigenous people. Folk music thus differentiates between traditional and contemporary.

  8. Music of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Canada

    Folk music was still thriving, as recounted in the poem titled "A Canadian Boat Song". The poem was composed by the Irish poet Thomas Moore (1779–1852) during a visit to Canada in 1804. [41] "The Canadian Boat Song" was so popular that it was published several times over the next forty years in Boston, New York City and Philadelphia. [4]

  9. À la claire fontaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/À_la_claire_fontaine

    "À la claire fontaine" (French: [a la klɛʁ(ə) fɔ̃tɛn]; lit. ' By the clear fountain ') is a traditional French song, which has also become very popular in Belgium and in Canada, particularly in Quebec and the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.

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