27 January 2009

by Donna Hébert

(“Why I Play Franco-American Fiddle Music,” reprinted from Le forum, Franco American Centre, UMaine/Orono: June 1998 and The Muse of Joy and Sorrow: Why We Play the Fiddle, Donna Hébert, ed.)

MAINE TOUR with guitarist Max Cohen

April 17 afternoon concert: UMaine Orono

April 17 evening house concert: Bowdoin

April 18 workshop: Bowdoin

April 18 evening house concert: Bangor

April 19 workshop: Gorham

As I ponder what the music I play means to me, I know that, having heard my mother’s music and seen her family’s musical house parties as a child, I would not feel settled or satisfied until I had made it a large part of my adult life.

Peggy and her Range Riders - ca. 1939

Peggy and her Range Riders - ca. 1939

My mother’s French immigrant family is very musical. While they gave up their language to assimilate and avoid discrimination, the music remained as a viable outlet for culture. Five of my her seven siblings played, as did both my maternal grandparents – fiddle, accordion, guitar, mandolin. My mother sang and played the tenor banjo in bands in the thirties and forties, with her sister.  Their strict father fetched her and her sister, Theresa, home from Boston because, “nice girls didn’t go live in the city and become musicians.” They were good pickers too, and did a lot of harmony yodeling in their act. I recall my mom trying to teach me to yodel before my voice ever broke! She played tunes on the banjo, as well as backing up songs.

So, as a child, while I didn’t play “Franco-American music,” I listened and learned technique and other musical skills. At 22, I was re-introduced to fiddle music through Dudley Laufman’s Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra, and what should I find but a re-creation (on a larger scale – not the kitchen but a town hall) of my grandmother’s kitchen soirées. I was hooked. About a third of the tunes had French names, but it wasn’t quite what I remembered.

Louis Beaudoin - 1976

Louis Beaudoin - 1976

Then, after a year or so of sitting in at Dudley’s dances, I travelled to Barre, Vermont to see a fiddle contest at the invitation of my mother’s cousin, Clem Myers, who founded the Northeast Fiddlers’ Association. Well when I walked in, they were setting up for a band to play. When Louis Beaudoin of Burlington, VT sat down on the stage, started clogging with his feet and began to play with members of his family, I was transported back to my grandmother’s kitchen junkets. I knew what I wanted. And I was beginning to know who I was.

Later that year, at the French Club in Waltham, MA, I met Gerry Robichaud, an Acadian fiddler from Waltham MA, who’d come to the “Boston States” from Moncton, New Brunswick in the sixties. I heard some of my uncle’s fiddling in Gerry’s playing, which had a smoother, more rolling sound than Louis’ Québécois swing. I wanted both sounds. The Acadian and the Québécois sounds made me happy, made me feel “at home” in the music. They excited me. I loved Irish and Scottish music, and New England dance tunes, but the French music made me grin like a fool, and I wanted to play it with the swing, the rhythms that came so naturally to Louis Beaudoin. With the French tunes, I was home.

I loved Louis and Gerry as people and as musicians. Both the Beaudoin and Robichaud families welcomed me into their homes. In fact, it was like going as a child to visit on Sunday, which we’d always done. We’d go take a ride and drop in on a relative. Sometimes there would be music, always someone would be playing whist or gin rummy. Everyone brought food and news and shared both. So, woven in with the food and the visits with members of the Beaudoin family each time I was there (Louis had five daughters!) was the most incredible music. “Hey Donna, you know this one?” he’d say, and be off on another great tune. I’d scramble to put down my food and drink, grab my fiddle and try to follow him.

Seated foot-clogging

Seated foot-clogging

Sometimes all I got was the rhythm of the tune as I tried to follow him through a crooked patch with extra beats. Other times I was able to play along with him in his incredibly danceable groove. What a gift that was, to be carried along by Louis’ rhythms, with his brother, Willie Beaudoin on guitar and daughter Lisa on feet and piano. Like a tidal wave, it carried me farther into the heart of the music than I ever could have come by myself. And suddenly, instead of looking at the music from the outside, I was playing from inside where all the music really was. It was as though, in an instant, I had gone from looking at a tree to being the tree. My world was forever changed.

I came back to Louis Beaudoin’s soirées whenever I could until his death. And by then, I had also recorded an album for Alcazar with Gerry Robichaud, his brother Bobby Robichaud, and Tony Parkes. Working with Gerry to prepare for this album gave me a lot of time to watch and listen to him play. His groove was different, smoother, a little faster. And his tunes were terrific! So, after a year and a half of playing with Gerry every week, his style had begun to creep into mine, which was fine by me. It’s still there in my playing, as is “le swing” that I got from Louis Beaudoin, and that old fiddling sound that I first heard in my grandmother’s kitchen.

So what does all this say about the music that I play and what it means to me? Well, I have chosen to make fiddle music, and particularly Franco-American fiddle music – its performance, documentation and transmission through teaching – my life’s work. And if this music is so essential to the lives of so many – myself, Josée Vachon, Gerry Robichaud, Joe Cormier, Louis Beaudoin, and so many others, then it is indeed vibrantly alive. The fact that young people are learning about their Franco-American cultural heritage through music, and that they are as excited about the songs, tunes and dances as I was then and still am now, reassures me that our culture lives.

UPDATED 1/27/09 . . .

Beaudoin Legacy 2008 concert CD: Une bonne soirée

Beaudoin Legacy 2008 concert CD: Une bonne soirée

Now, for three years since 2006, I’ve been playing music again with the Beaudoin family! Louis’ music has come full circle as I teach Louis’ grandson Glenn Bombardier his grandfather’s tunes. I’ve also connected them with other folks like Daniel Boucher and George Wilson, which led to us forming The Beaudoin Legacy group. And now Glenn is passing the music on to his niece. We even performed at the Lowell and American Folk Festivals and are involved in Vermont’s Quadricentennial celebrations with Québec.

Louis and Julie are both gone now. We lost Julie recently when she passed away while visiting the Grand Canyon in April 2008. We have a wonderful recording of her last performance with us on March 29, 2008 at the Blackstone River Theatre in Cumberland RI (click CD cover for more information). Their great grandchildren are learning the tunes and dances and songs of their heritage, drumming with spoons, learning new instruments and dance steps. And so the circle is unbroken!

© 1998, 2001, 2002, 2009 Donna Hébert

Printed June 1998 in Le Forum, The Franco American Center, University of Maine at Orono

Comments are closed.

viagra in spain
viagra discount sale
viagra gel
viagra online
buy discount viagra
indian cialis
cialis and ketoconazole
canada online pharmacy propecia
cialis price in canada
pfizer soft viagra
cialis arterial fibrillation
viagra next day delivery
discount propecia propecia
viagra in india
cialis professional no prescription
canada viagra generic
cialis sales uk
viagra buy
cialis usa
discount drug propecia
canadian pharmacy viagra legal
buy propecia online cheap pharmacy
how does viagra work
liquid propecia
viagra 100mg england
order cheapest propecia online
cialis price 100 mg
online pharmacy propecia
viagra free
viagra dose
woman and cialis
mexico viagra
canada viagra
cialis philippines
purchase cialis cheap
viagra label
viagra cialis online sales
buy cheap online propecia
uk propecia sales
ordering propecia
real viagra pharmacy prescription
china viagra
buy cialis fedex shipping
low price cialis
viagra perscription
propecia for hair loss
cost of cialis
online propecia prescription
combine cialis and levitra
lowest price for propecia
price check 50mg viagra
cialis 30 mg
cialis strenght mg
viagra for women
best price for propecia
viagra prescription
usa cialis sales
buy viagra cialis levitra
cialis no rx
purchase cialis us
levitra vs cialis
viagra non prescription
canadian propecia rx
viagra canada
canadian generic viagra online
cialis 20 mg
brand name cialis overnight
cialis express delivery
us cialis
buy viagra line
cialis levitra sale viagra
get propecia online pharmacy
viagra for cheap
cheap viagra online
lowest propecia prices
buy propecia uk
buy cialis us
cialis canada
cialis next day
real cialis
viagra mexico
effects of cialis
buy cheap uk viagra
cialis no prescription
order propecia pill
generic propecia sale
cialis herbal
get viagra fast
info viagra
viagra lawyers
cialis soft tablets
cialis headaches
cialis buy on line
buy online propecia
how much is viagra
buy levitra online viagra
buy mg propecia
viagra samples
buy cialis once daily
purchase propecia
generic cialis canadian
buying cialis online
buy viagra
viagra pills
generic cialis sale
cialis low price
ordering viagra overnight delivery
cialis levitra
order viagra
low cost propecia
how to get viagra
buy cialis canada
purchase cialis
viagra fast delivery
should i chew cialis
canadian drugs propecia
cialis fast delivery
viagra costs
get cialis
what is cialis
order propecia
viagra blister 4
levitra viagra online
real viagra without prescription
cialis daily
best price generic propecia
baldness male propecia
online propecia sales
online prescription propecia
cialis for women
canada viagra pharmacies scam
best price for propecia online
cialis endurance
cialis mastercard
cialis order
brand viagra professional
next day viagra
usa cialis
real viagra online
viagra canadian pharmacy dosage
best price propecia
cialis soft
generic propecia viagra
professional cialis
viagra tablet weight
mail order propecia
viagra prescriptions
best price on propecia
viagra and cialis for sale
generic viagra online