"La Valse de Madame Sosten" is the A-side of the 78-RPM single #17000, recorded by Joe Falcon and Cléoma Breaux in 1934.[1][2] Side B contains "Mes Yeux Bleus" sung by his wife, Cleoma Falcon.
"La Valse de Madame Sosten" | |
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Single by Joe Falcon | |
A-side | "La Valse de Madame Sosten (Mrs. Sosten Waltz)" |
Recorded | December 22, 1934 |
Genre | Cajun |
Length | 3:09 |
Label | Decca Records 17000-A |
Content
editMadame Sosten or "Sosthene" refers to Sosthene Falcon's wife Josephine Trahan. Sosthene Falcon is Joe's older uncle. The song deals with Josephine's daughter, Alida, who is the love interest of a much older man. He begs her parents to have her, even at the point of elopement (taking her through the window).
Lyrics
editCajun French | English |
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Oh Madame Sosthène, mais donnez moi Alida, Au jour d'aujourd'hui, mais c'que j'voudrais m'la promène, C'est dur de me voir, mais m'en aller moi tout seul, |
Oh Madame Sosthène, let me have Alida, Today's the day if you want to come with me, It's hard for me to leave by myself, |
References
edit- ^ Broven, John. "South to Louisiana: The Music of the Cajun Bayous"
- ^ "Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections" www.lib.lsu.edu Archived 2011-10-11 at the Wayback Machine