00:23 Allison Miner introduces; announces an article about Cajun music in Billboard previous week 02:00 Ann Savoy discusses that their acoustic arrangement reflects playing on the porch; Marc Savoy is playing his grandpa’s fiddle who he learned from 03:55 Demonstration: “Don’t Bury Me Little Girl When I Die, Don’t Bury Me in the Graveyard, Bury Me by the Fireplace in your Daddy’s House” 08:05 Demonstration: “Lawtell Waltz,” written by Marc Savoy’s uncle Frank Savoy and recorded by Harry Choates in the 1940s; named after a small town near Eunice, LA 12:46 Demonstration: “Les Flames d’Enfer,” Michael Doucet plays accordion 17:52 Demonstration: “Quelle E’Toile (What Star is that Up in the Sky, When I Look up Which Star is You?)” 24:18 Adjusts the sound check again; wants the accordion up as the lead instrument and the guitar as a rhythm instrument 25:10 Demonstration: “Lafayette Playboy Waltz,” written by Wade Frugé who passed away the previous year; dedicates the song to the group of people from California who go to the Savoy’s crawfish boil every year; they boil hundreds of pounds of crawfish and have two kegs then go out into the swamps 31:42 Demonstration: “Lapin Dans Son Nique,” song originally written by Sidney Brown called “The Rolling Pin” about a wife who keeps beating her husband with a rolling pin, but Marc and Ann rewrote the song about their lives; recorded on the Two-Step d’Amede album for the Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band 36:40 Takes requests from the audience; “La Pointe Au Pain” and “La Danse De Limonade;” both two-steps 37:15 Demonstration: “La Pointe Au Pain,” lyrics are: “You’re the oldest one in the group, you’re the cutest one, you’ve got the slyest eyes, you’re so pretty, and if I can’t have you I don’t want any other woman in this batch;” probably learned from Cyprien Landreneau 42:20 Demonstration: “La Danse De Limonade”