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Cajun

Cajun
MSRP: $15.98
Your Price: $5.00
Savings: $ 10.98 ( 69% )
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Manufacturer: Putumayo World Music
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Additional Cajun Information

Forming a trilogy of sound with 1999's Putumayo releases Louisiana Gumbo and Zydeco (one of the label's biggest sellers of all time), Putumayo Presents Cajun may prove redundant for serious enthusiasts of the genre yet is an excellent starting point for newer listeners. Southwestern Louisiana Cajun culture, born of the French Acadians displaced when their homeland was taken over by the British in the mid-1700s, is celebrated for both its food and its music. The tunes are often folk ballads, lullabies, and dance music like waltzes or two-steps. Cajun music is related to but distinct from zydeco; both feature the accordion as lead instrument, but the latter incorporates electric guitar and pays a greater debt to rhythm & blues than does the older-fashioned acoustic stylings of the former. To that end, there is still a great deal of room for an influx of influences in Cajun music, such as the country flavor of the Jambalaya Cajun Band's version of the popular "Les Flammes d'en Fer" as it appears on this collection. David Doucet, of Beausoleil, one of the genre's better-known groups, contributes a bluegrassy version of "Balfa Waltz," one of several of the compilation's references to Cajun music great Dewey Balfa and his family of players. Doucet's turn here features guitar in the lead and the appearance of Josh Graves on Dobro. Elsewhere there is a great deal of fiddle-accordion pairings in the traditional manner of the style, with bits of Texas swing, Creole, and zydeco to spice it all up quite handsomely. --Paige La Grone

 

What Customers Say About Cajun:

Acadie À la Louisiane - Bruce Daigrepont ~2:583. Oranger - Marce Lacouture ~ 4:018. Ray Charles is not the artist on track 2It is Bruce Daigrepont1. Beau Geste - Hadley J. Lafayette Breakdown - Cajun Playboys ~ 3:1012. Let's Dance Two-Step - Al Berard, Errol Verret ~ 2:444. Corner Post - Mamou Playboys, Steve Riley ~ 2:437.

Balfa Waltz - David Doucet ~ 3:4610. Pont de Vue - Filé ~ 3:302. Tracas de Todd Balfa - Balfa Toujours ~ 3:339. Jolie Bassette - Charivari ~ 3:455. Castille ~ 3:506. Hey la Bas - Pott Folse ~ 2:2811. Flammes d'Enfer - Jambalaya ~ 3:50

This is a great collection of cajun music. I recommend this to anyone who likes Cajun music or Acadian music. There is everything to like about every piece in this CD.

My family just loves the upbeat style of the music on this CD. It's real "get up and dance" music. The musicians are exceptionally talented, the tunes are familiar, and the CD quality is perfect.Highly recommended for Cajun and Zydeco music lovers.

Most of the songs are not major parts of the Cajun repertoire, but nor are they long-lost gems, they seem to just be random picks. Why are all of the bands here modern, why not include a few tracks from the Balfa Brothers, Nathan Abshire, Wade Fruge', Dennis McGee or other venerable Cajun musicians.

This one falls somewhere in the middle. Putumayo's collections are hard to predict; some of them are outstanding, some mediocre.

For example, why is the version of the Balfa Waltz (one of Cajun music's most beautiful song) performed by David Doucet, a guitar player, instead of Balfa Toujours (led by Christine Balfa, whose uncle wrote the song), or the Balfa Brothers themselves. Most of the bands on here are "modern" Cajun bands: Steve Riley and the Mamou Playboys, Balfa Toujours, Charivari, David Doucet (of Beausoleil).

These are all excellent bands; the song selections from them seem a little odd though. This isn't a bad collection, but it's a relatively random sampling of mostly modern acts.

Enjoy it for what it is, but there are better Cajun collections out there.

Besides the everywhere present Afro-American influence the French zest for life is dominantly. Well, since hurricane Katrina almost had wiped off the city of New Orleans, one should look, what sort of power gives this region such an energy-loaded cultural identity - and perhaps also will help this area to come onto the feet again: the Cajun music. The French Acadians in the mid-1700s had been expelled from Canada until they settled in the deep South, nearby the Bayou marshes. Like Bluegrass music the Cajun music really seems to burst with vitality. The sound is frequently inked by the accordion, but of course there are also electrical guitars, violins or a National Steel / Dobro in some bands. On their "Fais Do Do" Saturday evening parties the "Acadians" saved their original joy in life. One does not have to break out in dancing ecstatically at once, but one should protect his optimism against floods of any type with levees, supported by this music,.

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