Music_of_Gascony Music_of_Gascony

Music of Gascony - Definition

Music of France
History (Timeline and Samples)
Regions
Alsace Auvergne
Aquitaine Pays Basque
Béarn Brittany
Burgundy Corsica
Gascony Languedoc
Limousin Lorraine
Picardy Poitou
Provence Rousillon
Awards
Charts
Festivals Montreaux Jazz Festival, Printemps de Bourges
Media
National anthem "La Marseillaise"
Overseas music
French Guiana - French Polynesia - Martinique and Guadeloupe - Mayotte - New Caledonia - Réunion - St. Pierre and Miquelon - Tahiti - Wallis and Futuna

Gascony is a region of France that has produced several well-known performers and composers of classical, folk and popular music. Gascon folk music is known for a kind of small pipes called boha, which have a rectangular chanter and drone combination, (this form is unique to Gascony), and are made out of sheepskin with the fleece showing. The wandering performers known as troubadours and jongleurs were well-established in Gascony. In modern days, the town of Merciac is home to an annual jazz festival, one of the biggest in France. The town of Mirande is also home to an annual festival (Le Country Musique), devoted to country music.

Gascony, like many regions of France, and elsewhere in Europe, underwent a roots revival in the early to mid 1970s. The beginning of this trend in Gacony can be traced to the release of Musique Traditionelle de Gascogne by Perlinpinpin Folc, a band formed in 1972 and led by Christian Lamau.

Some twenty years late, this revival continued with the repopularization of pastorales, an ancient form of musical theater. There is also a modern style, inspired by the jongleurs and troubadours of the region's history, called rappadoc, which uses various lyrical styles in satirical and topical performance.

Modern traditionally-styled bands from Gascony include Verd e Bleu.

Copyright 2009 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  :: Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the this Wikipedia article.