The ALAMO Gazette

The ALAMO Gazette A historical - not hysterical, please! - challenge: Introducing opinions around the Texas Campaign as seen by all sides: Tejano, Mexican, Texian, French, etc.

À La Poussière de Pont Breaux dimanche dernier. Pas grand monde, quelques couples de vieux danseurs + des revivalistes q...
04/13/2024

À La Poussière de Pont Breaux dimanche dernier. Pas grand monde, quelques couples de vieux danseurs + des revivalistes qui ont pris des cours de danse et sautillent comme des puces. Avec ça une sono tonitruante et une clime glaçante. Mais en tout cas c'est du vrai de vrai.

Photos de pochette du dernier LP Folkways que j'ai enregistré avec Marie-Paule Vadunthun.
03/05/2024

Photos de pochette du dernier LP Folkways que j'ai enregistré avec Marie-Paule Vadunthun.

On était jeune, on était beau, on fleurait bon le folk chaud.
01/05/2024

On était jeune, on était beau, on fleurait bon le folk chaud.

10/18/2021

Longue vie !

Who will tell us if François-René Viscount de Chateaubriand (1768-1848), one of the greatest names in French literature,...
10/05/2021

Who will tell us if François-René Viscount de Chateaubriand (1768-1848), one of the greatest names in French literature, met the Crockett family in 1791. Chateaubriand is twenty-three years old then. Idle and preoccupied by the revolutionary political situation, he leaves France for North America. His journey will last four months only but, beyond the cities still in the making, he discovers, fascinated, the American wilderness: the Niagara Falls, the Great Lakes, the Mississippi and the Indian tribes who inhabit these lands. More than thirty years later, he writes down his Journey to the New World through the prism of his memories and his readings. He also reinvents everything he has not seen, so that it is sometimes difficult to disentangle the true from the false. Chateaubriand tells us for instance that « the Creeks, whose ancient customs I have painted, could not put two thousand warriors on their feet at this moment. » My question is: Had the French traveler visited the tribes himself and where did the Crockett family stay in 1791? At Cove Creek maybe? What was young David Crockett doing that same year? Could the two future celebrities have met, and if so, under which circumstances? David was only five and Chateaubriand would rather have made the acquaintance of his father John, a miller by trade who opened a tavern three years later.

Yours truly impersonating his ancestor Charles Gouget on his way to the Vine and Olive Colony in Southwestern Alabama.
09/27/2021

Yours truly impersonating his ancestor Charles Gouget on his way to the Vine and Olive Colony in Southwestern Alabama.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GK7HLBAZEpU
09/27/2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GK7HLBAZEpU

I did my best to compose El Alamo in the old broadside style, when street fiddlers played, sang and sold historical stories they were sometimes only vaguely ...

09/27/2021

Texas 1836: Musical Echoes from the Alamo
 
This comprehensive and abundantly illustrated study by Gérard Dôle, edited and translated by Anita Conrade, is devoted to music and dance in Texas at the time of its war for independence. Mr. Dôle sifted through a large number of documents, old and new, in conducting his research for the book. Because a majority of the Anglo-Celtic soldiers who made up the Alamo garrison had come to Texas from homesteads in other parts of the United States, the author begins with a study of dancing as a social activity in North America in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Next, he surveys the musical instruments, songs, and dance melodies the Texians favored at the time, referring when necessary to the music popular in the lands they had left behind: England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany, and even Denmark. Mr. Dôle goes on to cite the tunes sung and danced during the siege of the Alamo, both by its defenders (some of whom were inside the fort with their families or their black slaves) and by its attackers (who had attracted a motley crowd of camp followers). He mentions the martial music (fifes and drums) on both sides. Finally, Mr. Dôle explores Davy Crockett’s fiddle and John McGregor’s bagpipes. According to the granddaughter of one of the few survivors of the massacre, their duets were other-worldly. One can imagine the two men striking up a lively jig or fling in order to distract their companions-in-arms, doomed to certain death. For a brief instant, fiddle and pipes were a spirited match for the ominous notes of General Santa Anna’s trumpets.

In the second part of the book, “San Antonio Roze,” the author cites fifty documents as proof that the Napoleonic officer Louis Roze (1785-1851) has wrongly been identified as the mysterious Moses Rose, the Alamo deserter who claimed to have served in Bonaparte’s Grande Armée. In truth, Lieutenant Louis Roze never crossed the Atlantic, so he never set foot in Texas or on any other American territory. After an illustrious and blameless military career, he died in France, as the records show. 

175 numbered copies of Musical Echoes from the Alamo were printed for this edition commemorating the 175th anniversary of the famed battle. They can be ordered from the author

Across The Alley From The Alamo.
09/27/2021

Across The Alley From The Alamo.

Here is Texians' arch-ennemy, General Santa Anna.
09/26/2021

Here is Texians' arch-ennemy, General Santa Anna.

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