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"it ain't nothin' but a party"
-- Jeffrey Broussard
JUST A
**REMINDER**
SWAMP STOMP
IS BACK
(by popular demand)
SWAMP STOMP RETURNS
featuring
Jeffrey Broussard & The Creole Cowboys
from Lafayette, LA
TOMORROW EVENING
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13,2011
THE ADELPHIA MUSIC HALL
2ND STREET, DOWNTOWN MARIETTA
CAJUN DANCE LESSONS 430PM
SHOWTIME 5PM
EARLY SUNDAY SHOW
We
are proud to announce "Swamp Stomp" is back. It's been several years
since we had Swamp Music brought in from Southwestern Louisiana. The
Galley/Adelphia Music Hall, 203 Second Street, Marietta, has agreed to
open up just for us on Sunday, November 13 with Jeffrey Broussard &
The Zydeco Cowboys performing. The band is one of the top Zydeco acts
touring today. We booked them on a routing date on a Sunday for a
reasonable price.
The Galley has
agreed to a limited menu which will include some Cajun specials. Doors
open at 4 PM, dance instruction starts at 4:30 PM and showtime is 5 PM.
Jeffery and his band will perform two 75 minute sets. We need your
support for this show so we can continue to bring you these most
desirable art forms. If you have never been to the Galley/Adelphia Music
Hall, you will be impressed with the venue. It was built as a music
venue and not an afterthought.
Cover charge is $15 per person or $25 per couple. Advance tickets may be purchased at The Galley, or by calling 740-374-8278,
or by going online to "thegalleymarietta.com." Tickets will also be
offered at the door. For more information call Cobbler John afternoons
and evenings at 740-376-0222. Visit us on the web at bjfm.org.
PLEASE COME OUT AND SUPPORT THIS SPECIAL EARLY SUNDAY SHOW
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WHAT IS ZYDECO?
Zydeco
is a form of uniquely American roots or folk music. It evolved in
southwest Louisiana in the early 19th century from forms of "la la"
Creole music. The rural Creoles of southwest Louisiana and southeast
Texas still sing in Louisiana Creole French. Zydeco combines elements of
an even older American musical style which began in the late 1700s:
Cajun music, which comprises French fiddle tunes, Irish Celtic fiddle
tunes, German button accordion, Latin rhythms, and Appalachian styles.
Zydeco music was born in the late 1860s as a blend of Cajun music and
two other "new" American music styles: blues and rhythm and blues.
Haitian rhythms were also added, as Haitian natives moved to Louisiana
to help harvest the new cash crop - sugarcane. Zydeco (French, from the
phrase: "Les haricots ne sont pas salés", means "the snap beans aren't
salty". This phrase is a colloquial expression that means 'I have no
spicy news for you.'[citation needed] It has alternatively been referred
to as meaning "I'm so poor, I can't afford any salt meat for the
beans." When spoken in the regional French, it is spoken thus:
"leh-zy-dee-co sohn pah salay...")
--Thank you Wikipedia
zydeco music
is a relatively new genre of world music. It is the shared music of
the Cajuns and the Creoles, as well as blues, jure' (syncopated a
cappella religious songs), and in more recent years, zydeco has taken
many cues from R&B and even hip-hop, proving that it's a constantly
evolving genre.Zydeco is a form of uniquely American roots or
folk music. It evolved in southwest Louisiana in the early 19th century
from forms of "la la" Creole music. The rural Creoles of southwest
Louisiana and southeast Texas still sing in Louisiana Creole French.
Zydeco combines elements of an even older American musical style which
began in the late 1700s: Cajun music, which comprises French fiddle
tunes, Irish Celtic fiddle tunes, German button accordion, Latin
rhythms, and Appalachian styles. Zydeco music was born in the late 1860s
as a blend of Cajun music and two other "new" American music styles:
blues and rhythm and blues. Haitian rhythms were also added, as Haitian
natives moved to Louisiana to help harvest the new cash crop -
sugarcane. Zydeco (French, from the phrase: "Les haricots ne sont pas
salés", means "the snap beans aren't salty". This phrase is a colloquial
expression that means 'I have no spicy news for you.'[citation needed]
It has alternatively been referred to as meaning "I'm so poor, I can't
afford any salt meat for the beans." When spoken in the regional French,
it is spoken thus: "leh-zy-dee-co sohn pah salay...")
--Thank
you Wikipedia zydeco music is a relatively new genre of world music. It
is the shared music of the Cajuns and the Creoles, as well as blues,
jure' (syncopated a cappella religious songs), and in more recent years,
zydeco has taken many cues from R&B and even hip-hop, proving that
it's a constantly evolving genre.
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