Cajun Boogie
by Hans Theessink recording of 1998 from Blue Grooves From Vienna (a 50th birthday celebration), Come on baby come along with me Down to the bayou country To the swamplands where the cajuns go Do the zydeco Alligator jumps around Wags his tail to the squeeze-box sound There's a fish-fry and there's hot gumbo Come on baby let's go Tune up the fiddle, roisin' up the bow Listen to the fiddle of Old Man Moe Sends a tune up to the sky Watch them bowhairs fly Alligator jumps around ... There's Old Ray and black-eyed Susie Rockin' to the beat of a Cajun boogie Dancin' the two-step and the fais dodo Come on baby let's go Alligator jumps around ... __________ Note 1: bayou, any of various usually marshy or sluggish bodies of water; Note 2: Cajun, a citizen from the U.S. state of Louisiana descended from French-speaking immigrants from Acadia, Canada. The Acadians were French settlers of eastern Canada who were exiled from their land in the 1750's. The Cajuns are their descendants who settled in Louisiana. The word Cajun is an alteration of Acadian. Find out more at this site, Acadian-Cajun Genealogy & History Note 3: zydeco, popular music of southern Louisiana that combines tunes of French origin with elements of Caribbean music and the blues and that features guitar, washboard, and accordion; Note 4: gumbo, a soup thickened with okra pods or filé and containing meat or sea foods and usually vegetables; Note 5: fais dodo, probably a Cajun dance.