Posts tagged "French"

Giant Omelette Celebration, Abbeville, LA

The Confrerie D’ Abbeville welcomes you to Abbeville’s “5000 EGG” Giant Omelette Celebration! Our celebration is like no other festival.

This family oriented event including a kids’ world kicks off Saturday morning with a 3 mile walk through Historic Downtown Abbeville as the March of Dimes Walk-America begins.

Abbeville’s Magdaline Square with its majestic oaks and old fashioned gazebo is the setting for the 2 day Arts & Craft Show.

Stop and dance to some of Louisiana’s best music.

Antique farm implements provide a challenge to those competing in Saturday’s egg cracking contest.

The fun continues on Sunday with addition of the antique cars on display, along with more music guaranteed to get you dancing.

Grab your seat early for the procession of chefs, eggs and bread to the Giant 12 foot skillet where fun and follie are the order of day for those preparing the “5000 Egg” Giant Omelette.

For more information: http://giantomelette.org/

Video by Clare Major: http://claremajor.net

Duration : 0:2:47

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Posted by admin - June 15, 2011 at 3:19 pm

Categories: Cajun Culture   Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Cajun Visits

A series of five musical portraits of traditional Cajun master musicians at home in rural southwestern Louisana. The film, where the language spoken is an ever shifting mix of English and Cajun French, is a loving tribute to these musicians and their unique musical culture. This film is available on DVD from http://www.aginsky.com/cinema/yasha/Home.html

Duration : 0:1:57

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Posted by admin - April 15, 2011 at 10:52 pm

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Music

end of anime "Devil may cry"

Duration : 1 min 27 sec

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Posted by admin - March 12, 2011 at 1:49 pm

Categories: Cajun Music   Tags: , , , , ,

Festivals Acadiens et Creoles

Lost Bayou Ramblers performed at the 2010 Festival Acadiens et Creole.
Here’s a taste of what you may have missed (or a look back at the experience of a lifetime)!

Duration : 0:1:35

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Posted by admin - October 24, 2010 at 9:54 am

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Acadian-Cajun Early homes_0001.wmv

Louisiana Acadian (Cajuns) Homes
The Acadians (French: Acadiens, IPA: [akadj??]) are the descendants of the seventeenth-century French colonists who settled in Acadia (located in the Canadian Maritime provinces — Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island, Quebec, and in the US state of Maine). The settlers whose descendants became Acadians did not all come from the same region in France.
In the Great Expulsion of 1755-1763, mostly during the Seven Years’ War, British colonial officers and New England legislators and militia deported more than 14,000 Acadians from the maritime region in what could be called an ethnic cleansing . Approximately one third perished. Gradually, some managed to make their way to Louisiana, creating the Cajun population and culture after mixing with others
When the Acadians first arrrived in Louisiana, some put up quick, temporary shelters made of wood and palmetto leaves. The Native Americans had been building such dwellings for years. Built upon a pole frame, palmettos would be uses on the roof (as was straw in France and Acadia). Many also used palmetto for walls until wood could be cut.
When they had the time to build a more substantial structure, they often built homes by putting wood vertically into the ground for walls. These 2nd generation Acadian homes (1766-1827) were either poteaux en terre (post in ground) or planche debout (upright planks). The easiest of the two, poteaux en terre, was to cut logs, strip off the bark, and place it in a hole in the ground. The gaps between the logs would be filled with a mud and straw/moss mixture (bousillage). If they had the time and manpower, they might cut planks from the logs and place the planks vertically in the ground (planche debout) to make the walls (again, filling the gaps with bousillage). Roofs were covered with shingles or wood. These homes were built directly on the ground.
The Acadians soon learned that to build a wooden home on the ground was not the way to go. The occasional flooding and insect damage was terrible to these kinds of homes. Upon arriving in Louisiana, they noted that Creole homes were often built off the ground. This kept the home from water & insects and helped provide better ventilation. The 3rd generation Acadian home (1790-1850) was built on pillars of wood or brick. It was small, averaging about fifteen by twenty-five feet in size. Many had galleries in front. The chimney – made of bousillage at first, later of brick – was on one end of a one-room home. Two-room homes often had the chimney in-between the rooms.
The 4th generation Acadian home (1790-1920) was often larger that previous versions. By the mid-1800s, it was the common type of Acadian house. It has a gallery (porche on the front (and sometimes the back). This served two purposes. It gave them a place to sit to cool off and to socialize. It also allowed for a taller roof to provide room for storage and sleeping quarters. There were stairs to the atttic, usually located on the inside of homes in east Acadiana and outside the homes in west Acadiana. The upstairs sleeping area for the boys was called the garçonniere. The roof was covered with wood shingles at the beginning of this time period, but these were often replaced by corrugated tin roofing later in the 1800s. As the family grew, a separate but connected building was often built to the rear for kitchenspace or a bedroom. The windows had no glass, but were covered by wooden shutters. Some had two rooms side-by-side, with a front door opening up to each. One room was the common family room and kitchen, while the other room was a bedroom for the parents and daughters. As some Acadian families grew in size and wealth, larger homes with multiple rooms would be built.
As the 20th century progressed, most Cajuns began occupying contemporary housing styles, though some still have similar features to the old Acadian homes. Though there are a few 18th century Acadian homes scattered around south Louisiana, they are disappearing. This video of still pics represents only a portion of the snapshots I have collected of old Cajun homes. If you have any old pics your are willing to share with me, please email them to richarddeshotels@gmail.com.
Thanks

Duration : 0:5:9

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Posted by admin - September 28, 2010 at 5:14 pm

Categories: Cajun Culture   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Cajun Ratatouille Recipe : Sautéing Eggplant & Zucchini for Cajun Ratatouille

Learn from an expert how to sauté some eggplant and zucchini for Cajun ratatouille in this free recipe video on combining French and Cajun cuisine to make Cajun ratatouille.

Expert: David Postada
Bio: David Postada is Chef and owner of the Big Easy Catering company in Santa Barbara, California.
Filmmaker: Diana Bacon

Duration : 0:1:10

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Posted by admin - September 8, 2010 at 7:37 am

Categories: Cajun Food   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Cajun Music at Vermillionville, Lafayette, Louisiana

Here is some authentic Cajun music at the Vermillionville historical center in Lafayette, Louisiana. The melodian player is Nonc Jules Guidry and the guitar player is Burnel Mareau and they are singing a song in Cajun:

The mosquitos all ate my sweetheart,
All they left was the big toe.
I used the big toe to put a stopper on my whiskey jug,
(then he goes on to describe his family)
Your little brother looks like a frog,
Your sister looks like an elephant,
Your momma looks like the corner of a sidewalk,

You might also like my Steel Drum video from St. Lucia http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ggMqVqo5V0

Duration : 0:2:16

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Posted by admin - July 29, 2010 at 9:05 pm

Categories: Cajun Music   Tags: , , , , ,

Words of Life Cajun People/Language Movie Trailer

This is: Words of Life Cajun People/Language Movie Trailer c04790 [c04790t]

Other names for this language are: Acadian; Cadien; Cajan; Creole: Louisiana; Fran?ais Acadien; French, Cajun

This language is spoken in: United States of America (United States or America, Estados Unidos or América, États-Unis or Amérique, ‘Amelika-hui-pu-’ia or ‘Amelika-hui)

This movie concerns: movie movies video videos music song songs mp3 God Allah Jesus Christ real exist exists early life crucifixion tomb Bible Christian Christians church gospel injil hope help life Global Recordings Network language free world language movies man men woman women

For more information on this program see http://globalrecordings.net/program/c04790

……….

Duration : 0:4:55

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Posted by admin -  at 9:05 pm

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Cajun-music by The Balfa Doucet Brothers at Heleneholms Library

This is a performance by a Swedish Cajun-band, Balfa Doucet Brothers, who attends Heleneholms Gymnasium of Music in Malmö.

Fr.L:
Upright Bass: Jean-Henry Blenaird Doucet
Accordion % Vocal: Blanchard Pomee Leger T. Doucet
Slide-guitar & Vocal: Dugas-Allain Poirier Cabri-Cher Doucet
12-stringed Acoustic Guitar: Jean-Marie Bujeau Daigle-LeJeune Doucet
Washboard: Gumbo Savoie Sonnier Doucet
Three-stringed Banjo: Roy-Daigle Tayaut Coo Doucet

Duration : 0:4:53

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Posted by admin - May 30, 2010 at 12:57 pm

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Zydeco: Creole Music and Culture in Rural Louisiana

1986 Nick Spitzer film on African American dance-hall music in French-speaking southwest Louisiana, with Dolon Carriere, Armand Ardoin, and Alphonse Bois Sec Ardoin.

Music performed by Bebe Carriere, Eraste Carriere, Delton Broussard, The Ardoin Brothers, Jon Delafose and the Eunice Playboys, and Clinvin Jones and Friends.

Duration : 0:1:58

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Posted by admin - April 19, 2010 at 1:28 pm

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