Cajun fiddle (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Cajun fiddle" in English language version.

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alexanderstreet.com (Global: low place; English: low place)

lfs.alexanderstreet.com

archive.org (Global: 6th place; English: 6th place)

books.google.com (Global: 3rd place; English: 3rd place)

folkstreams.net (Global: low place; English: low place)

  • Aginsky, Yasha; producer (1983). Les Blues de Balfa (16 mm film). Aginsky Productions with Les Films Cinetrie and Les Films d'Ici. OCLC 24289884. Archived from the original on 2010-01-09. Retrieved 2011-09-11. We are here to tell you a little bit about what a Cajun is. A Cajun is a person who his homeland was France. Went into Nova Scotia, at the time Acadia, and settled there and was there for about a hundred years, and afterwards the British took over the territory and then the French-speaking people, the French descendants, known as the Acadians, came down to the South-Western part of Louisiana, and that was back in 1755. So over all of these years, your language, and your music has been preserved from daddy to son or daddy to daughter or momma to daughter.

louisianafolklife.org (Global: low place; English: low place)

smithsonianfolkways.org (Global: low place; English: low place)

media.smithsonianfolkways.org

  • Dôle, Gérard; Vadunthun, Marie-Paule; D. S. Smith (1982). "Bayou Memories: Louisiana French Folk Songs and Dance Tunes" (PDF). Folkway Records. OCLC 51479374. Retrieved 2011-09-11.

web.archive.org (Global: 1st place; English: 1st place)

  • Aginsky, Yasha; producer (1983). Les Blues de Balfa (16 mm film). Aginsky Productions with Les Films Cinetrie and Les Films d'Ici. OCLC 24289884. Archived from the original on 2010-01-09. Retrieved 2011-09-11. We are here to tell you a little bit about what a Cajun is. A Cajun is a person who his homeland was France. Went into Nova Scotia, at the time Acadia, and settled there and was there for about a hundred years, and afterwards the British took over the territory and then the French-speaking people, the French descendants, known as the Acadians, came down to the South-Western part of Louisiana, and that was back in 1755. So over all of these years, your language, and your music has been preserved from daddy to son or daddy to daughter or momma to daughter.

worldcat.org (Global: 5th place; English: 5th place)

search.worldcat.org

  • Dôle, Gérard; Vadunthun, Marie-Paule; D. S. Smith (1982). "Bayou Memories: Louisiana French Folk Songs and Dance Tunes" (PDF). Folkway Records. OCLC 51479374. Retrieved 2011-09-11.
  • Aginsky, Yasha; producer (1983). Les Blues de Balfa (16 mm film). Aginsky Productions with Les Films Cinetrie and Les Films d'Ici. OCLC 24289884. Archived from the original on 2010-01-09. Retrieved 2011-09-11. We are here to tell you a little bit about what a Cajun is. A Cajun is a person who his homeland was France. Went into Nova Scotia, at the time Acadia, and settled there and was there for about a hundred years, and afterwards the British took over the territory and then the French-speaking people, the French descendants, known as the Acadians, came down to the South-Western part of Louisiana, and that was back in 1755. So over all of these years, your language, and your music has been preserved from daddy to son or daddy to daughter or momma to daughter.
  • Balfa, Dewey; Tracey Schwarz (1982). "Cajun Fiddle Old and New with Dewy Balfa" (PDF). Folkway Records. OCLC 51479374. Retrieved 2011-09-11.

youtube.com (Global: 9th place; English: 13th place)