Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

Laride

barndance

Key signature: Aminor

Submitted on June 3rd 2005 by ceolachan.

This tune has been added to 16 tunebooks.

Also known as La Ridée, Laridé, Ridée, Ridee.

Recordings of a tune by this name:

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

X: 1
T: Laride
M: 4/4
L: 1/8
R: barndance
K: Amin
cA B2 (3BcB A2 | Bc (3ded cd e2 | cA B2 (3BcB A2 | ce (3ded ce A2 |
Ae dB ce A2 | (3cBA Bd (3cBA B2 | Ae dB ce A2 | (3cBA Bc (3dcB A2 |
|: cA B2 (3BcB A2 | Bc (3ded cd e2 | cA B2 (3BcB A2 | ce (3ded ce A2 :|
|: Ae dB ce A2 | (3cBA Bd (3cBA B2 | Ae dB ce A2 | (3cBA Bc (3dcB A2 :|

Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments
Laride sheetmusic
Details ABC Sheetmusic Comments

I play this with the repeats but have heard it also as first given here, without repeats...

# Posted on June 3rd 2005 by ceolachan

Wouldn't you know it, back to contribute and I screw up. I can only say there is much tragedy still keeping the two of us distracted and a little out of it... The ABCs are corrected. I got that last triplet wrong, it doesn't jump up to a high 'a' but continues the direction down to the low 'A' = (3cBA

# Posted on June 3rd 2005 by ceolachan

Welcome back ceolachan

Nice tune. Where does it come from? Is it a Breton piece? Sounds a bit that way.

# Posted on June 4th 2005 by greg.box

Breizh / Breton - love the stuff, hypnotic, the music and the dance, great craic. We miss the place and need to get a fix soon. We had the fortune to base ourselves there for awhile. Sometimes the lines at a Fez Nos, like in an An Dro, were unbeliveably long, massive. People just came as they were and those few who pickled themselves into a stupor and ended up passed out or sick on the floor or road, well, we just carefully and considerately maneuvered our way around them. There were a few costumed to the hilt, and some 'sticklers', the sort that make faces and push if you haven't got the dance style to meet their requirements, but only a very few of either of these sorts, maybe one out of a hundred. The bands and the dancers and singers were mostly as you'd meet them on the street. It is a lovely and alive tradition, and in many cases without the pomp and pretense, or disneyfication, that 'modern ways' can have with something good, that tendency to be obsessive and to 'spoil', or to turn something into a select 'clique'. We found it open and welcoming, and that is true for France as a whole, except for a rare few, and the militaristic Gendarmes. The food, drink and hospitality are on the whole great, though I was surprised at how difficult it was to find decent coffee beans...

# Posted on June 4th 2005 by ceolachan

It was the "welcome back" and a splitting headache that made me 'effuse'... Thanks for the 'welcome' Greg, much needed and appreciated...

# Posted on June 4th 2005 by ceolachan

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