Bowing Down Home Oral History Transcripts
File: mackenziesheila06-oh-youngfiddlers_M.mp3
Speakers:
SM – Sheila MacKenzie
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
SM: There's definitely a lot less older fiddlers out. You'd go to the ceilidh in Monticello on Sunday night and you'd have George [MacPhee] and you'd have a couple of other
banksreg06-oh-changesfidmusic_M.mp3
Speakers:
RB – Reg Banks
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
RB: There's an awful lot of the old-time tunes you don't hear the younger people playing at all. They play more waltzes and more songs and this kind of thing, but the real old tunes you don't
File: gaudetdavid06-oh-declineandrevival_M.mp3
Speakers:
DG – David Gaudet
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
DG: When I was growing up to be a fiddler, there wasn't many around then. There's wasn't a big demand then. I wouldn't even take the fiddle to a party if there was a bunch my age
File: doucettejoe-oh-frolics.mp3
Speakers –
JD: Joe Doucette
KP – curator Ken Perlman
JD: Tell you how they worked. Supposin' that you had a piece of wood to cut and you were alone. Well they'd make what they called a bee. He'd ask a bunch of men or they'd offer themselves.
File: farrellleo06-oh-frolics_M.mp3
Speakers:
LF – Leo Farrell
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
KP: Did they have frolics in your day?
LF: Yeah, choppin' frolics. All the neighbors go to your place and cut wood for you, eh. You maybe had an operation or
File: mackenziesheila06-oh-womanfiddling_M.mp3
Speakers
SM – Sheila MacKenzie
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
KP: Did you experience any sort of resistance yourself to your wanting to play?
SM: I definitely didn't meet any resistance, just because I think – Around
File: chappellella06-oh-wintertravel_M.mp3
Speakers:
EC – Ella Thomson Chappell
EC: And then I remember when I went to school, there's no snow plows then, and then we'd go through the field. They'd break a road with the horse and sleigh, and then they'd go and take branches off a
File: lowejudy06-oh-elliottwightdance_M.mp3
Speakers:
JL – Judy Lowe
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
KP: Tell me about how got started playing with Elliott [Wight]?
JL: I went to the dance, I was 19, at the Junior Farmer's Hall in North River, which
File: cheveriecharles06-oh-womansrole-M.mp3
Speakers:
CC – Fr. Charlie Cheverie
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
KP: Why do suppose there are more girls than boys excelling at the fiddle, or getting serious about the fiddle.
CC: I don't know what the demographics of
toolestephen-oh-goodfiddler_M.mp3
Speaker:
ST – Stephen Toole
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
ST Well, I think that there has to be music in you, yes. I've known people that are trying to play the fiddle, but I know very well that they'll never be able to play.
KP
File: hughesemmett06-oh-housepartydress_M.mp3
Speakers:
EH – Emmett Hughes
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
EH: Back then nobody would dance with their overalls on. It was kind of a B The whole damn trouble was, back when I was a young man was B [to] get money enough to
File: huestislowell06-oh-wppartyline_M.mp3
Speaker:
LH – Lowell Huestis
LH: That was on at 11:30 in the morning, every morning Monday through Friday. We would go to the country and record at some of these various talent shows, whenever there was a talent show advertised
File: livingstonemarie06-oh-wellingtonjam_M.mp3
Speakers:
ML – Marie Arsenault Livingstone
EA – Edward P Arsenault
KP – Curator Ken Perlman
ML: Friday evenings for the last six years we have a jam in Wellington at the Boys and Girls Club
EA: Every
File: macdougalljim06-oh-weddings_M.mp3
Speakers:
JM – Jim MacDougall
JM: There was always what they'd called a wedding shower. I can remember my oldest sister when she got married, we had borrowed this dancing booth they had for the parish for their picnics and we had it set up in our
File: woodrichard06-oh-olderfiddlers_M.mp3
Speakers:
RW – Richard Wood
RW: Those experiences, they were great for me because it was a bonding time with my Dad [Terry Wood]. It would be nothin' for us to be up at a ceilidh, or be in Monticello. Or say, "We just had dinner, what do you