- French-Canadian music
French settlers brought music with them when inhabiting what is now
Quebec and other areas throughout Canada. Since the arrival of French music in Canada, there has been much intermixing with theCeltic music of Anglo-Canada.French-Canadian folk music is generally performed to accompany dances like the
jig ,jeux dansé ,ronde , cotillion, andquadrille . Thefiddle is a very common instrument, played by virtuosos likeJean Carignan ,Jos Bouchard , andJoseph Allard . Other instruments include the German diatonicaccordion , played by the likes ofPhilippe Bruneau andAlfred Montmarquette ,spoons ,bone s, andJew's harp s.French immigrants to Quebec established their musical forms in the future province, but there was no scholarly study until
Ernest Gagnon 's 1865 collection of 100 folk songs. In 1967,Radio-Canada released "The Centennial Collection of Canadian Folk Songs " (much of which was focused on French-Canadian music), which helped launch a revival of Quebec folk. Singers likeYves Albert ,Edith Butler , and, especially,Félix Leclerc andGilles Vigneault , helped lead the way. The 1970s saw purists likeLa Rêve du Diable andLa Bottine Souriante continued the trend. As Quebec folk continued to gain in popularity, artists like Harmonium,Kate and Anna McGarrigle ,Jim Corcoran ,Bertrand Gosselin , andPaul Piché found a mainstream audience.Since 1979, Quebec music artists have been recognized with the
Felix Award .ee also
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Music of Quebec
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