Showing posts with label Cabrette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabrette. Show all posts

2.1.11

Dansons la bourrée!


Dansons la bourrée!
Muisque & Tradition Vol. 1


Tracks:

Robert Bras - Roland Brunel

1 - Les garçons de la montagne
2 - La montagnarde

Marcel Pelat-Charly - Joseph Ruols

3 - Les cinq noisettes
4 - La bourrée à Joseph

Charly Charbonnier- Didier Pauvert

5 - Bourrée du Fridefont
6 - La bourrée du Falgoux

Louis Rispal - Gabriel Chiva

7 - La bourrée du Louis
8 - La tricoutado
9 - La bourrée des familles

Tonin Troupel - Claude Descombels

10 - La bourrée en Auvergne
11 - La bourrée de Royat
12 - Le tourniquet

Jean-Claude Labouchet - Denis Salesse

13 - La bourré de bouteilles

Duo cabrette/accordéon:

Cabrette: 
Roland Brunel, Joseph Ruols, Didier Pauvert, Louis Rispal, Claude Descombels, Denis Salesse

Accordéon: 
Robert Bras, Marcel Pelat-Charly, Charly Charbonnier, Gabriel Chiva, Tonin Troupel, Jean-Claude Labouchet
 
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The bourrée (also borrèia) is a dance of French origin common in Auvergne and Biscay in Spain in the 17th century. It is danced in quick double time, somewhat resembling the gavotte. The main difference between the two is the anacrusis, or upbeat; a bourrée starts on the last beat of a bar, creating a quarter-bar anacrusis, whereas a gavotte has a half-bar anacrusis. It often has a dactylic rhythm. In his Der Vollkommene Capellmeister (Hamburg, 1739), Johann Mattheson wrote of the bourrée, "its distinguishing feature resides in contentment and a pleasant demeanor, at the same time it is somewhat carefree and relaxed, a little indolent and easygoing, though not disagreeable".

Composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel, and Frédéric Chopin used the musical form of the bourrée. The dance survives to this day in the Auvergne and has been successfully "exported" to the UK and other countries. The bourrée of lower Auvergne, also called Montagnarde, is in triple time, while that of high Auvergne is in double time.
 
  

21.12.10

L'Âge d'Or de la cornemuse d'Auvergne

 
Cabrette
L'Âge d'Or de la cornemuse d'Auvergne

Enregistrements historique 1895-1976
Réalisateur: Eric Montbel
1993

Tracks:

01. Victor Allard. Joseph Aigueperse - Allard La Grondo   02:27
02. Antoine Bouscatel - Sur Lo Cans D'andouno Bouscatel   02:30
03. André Vermerie - Vermerie Roc Carlat   01:15
04. Antoine Bouscatel. Jean Sanit - Bousca Polka   02:30
05. Martin Cayla - Cayla Bour Familles   02:58
06. Victor Allard, Guéniffet - Allard Corn Marmignol   02:02
07. Antoine Bouscatel - Bousca Tyrol   02:57
08. Antoine Bouscatel, Fredo Gardoni - Bousca Flor De Ginesta   02:49
09. Jean Bonal, Jean-Marie Guyot - Bonal Portas Chopina   01:46
10. Pierre Ladonne - Ladonne Bourrée À   01:30
11. Jean Bergeaud - Bergeaud Marc Nuptiale   03:41
12. Antoine Bouscatel? - Bousca Marche   02:51
13. Victot Allard, Joseph Aigueperse - Allard Aiguep Escloupett   01:45
14. Leon Chanal - Chanal Regret   02:01
15. Antoine Bouscatel - Bousca Regret M Nuptial   02:46
16. Lo Merle - Le Merle Bourrée   01:08
17. André Vermerie - Vermerie B Du Merle   01:12
18. Antoine Bouscatel, Fredo Gardoni - Bousca Cantal Mignonett   02:47
19. Martin Cayla - Cayla La Demenon L N Nobi   03:06
20. Pierre Ladonne - Ladonne Jolie Musette   01:21
21. Jean Bergeaud - Bergeaud Mourailhado   01:18
22. Antoine Bousca, Emile Gineston - Bousca Polk Piquée   02:55
23. Jean Bonal, Jean-Marie Guyot - Bonal Valse D'auv   02:21
24. Antoine Bouscatel, Jean Sanit - Bousca Scottish   02:27
25. Antoine Bouscatel - Bousca Dans Le Verger   03:21
26. Antoine Bouscatel - Bousca La Calha   02:40
27. Alexander Cros - Cros Tournijaire   02:37
28. Jean Bergeaud - Bergeaud La Rapide   01:40
 
♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫
        
        
♫☆`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•☆♫`*♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫
 
The cabrette (French: literally "little goat", alternately musette) is a type of bagpipe which appeared in Auvergne, France in the 19th century, and rapidly spread to Haute-Auvergne and Aubrac.

The cabrette consists of a chanter for playing the melody, and a drone. Though descended from earlier mouth-blown bagpipes, bellows were added to the cabrette in the mid-19th century. It is said that Joseph Faure, of Saint-Martin-de-Fugères en Haute-Loire, first applied a bellows to the cabrette. Faure, a carpenter stricken with lung disease, was inspired when he used a bellows to start a fire.
 
Antoine Bouscatel (1867-1945)
"le roi des cabrettaires"
  
 

Histoire de la Cabrette