- This suite is extracted from Thomson’s score for the 1948 film Louisiana Story.1
- Thomson’s score for Louisiana Story won the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for music.
- Thomson’s suite of Acadian Songs and Dances from “Lousiana Story” was published in 1951, and premiered on January 11 of that year, in a performance by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy, at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia.2
- The work’s title refers to the French settlers of Acadia in Canada, whose descendants settled in Louisiana in 1755 and became known as “Cajun.”3
- This suite makes use of Cajun (Acadian) folk songs that Thomson found in the collections of John Lomax and Alan Lomax, and Irene Therese Whitfield’s Louisiana French Songs.4
Movements
- Sadness
- Papa’s Tune
- A Narrative
- The Alligator and the ‘Coon
- Super-Sadness
- Walking Song
- The Squeeze-Box5
Sources
- “Works: Louisiana Story,” Virgil Thomson, accessed August 13, 2021, https://www.virgilthomson.org/works/louisiana-story/.
- “Works: Acadian Songs and Dances from ’Louisiana Story,’” Virgil Thomson, accessed August 13, 2021, https://www.virgilthomson.org/works/acadian-songs-and-dances-from-louisiana-story/.
- Christopher Palmer, “Louisiana Story – Acadian Songs and Dances,” Hyperion (1992), accessed August 13, 2021, https://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/tw.asp?w=W617.
- Ibid.
- “Acadian Songs and Dances from ‘Louisiana Story’,” Virgil Thomson, accessed September 10, 2021, https://www.virgilthomson.org/works/acadian-songs-and-dances-from-louisiana-story/.
Cut IDs
49424 42499