Tommy Doucet

Tom (Tommy) Doucet (June 8, 1902 – around 1992) was an Acadian fiddler. He was born in Concession, Digby County, Nova Scotia, Canada. He emigrated to the Boston area, where he became very active in the club and dance hall music scene in the 1920s and 1930s. His repertoire included jigs, reels, foxtrots and 'hot' tunes.

Doucet recorded two albums. Down East Star, which was drawn from home recordings, includes some of his best material from his early period.[1] The tracks on this album are: Temperance Reel Medley; Panhandle Swing; Blue Belles Of Scotland; Tom’s E- Flat Clog/Banks/Autocrat; Superior Medley; Mrs. Dundas of Arniston; Lancers; Erin Reel; Joanne Reel; Shrips Clog; High Level Hornpipe; Fred Allen's; Irving's Clog/Cotton Eyed Joe; St. Lawrence River; Durham's Bull; Decision Reel; Shepard's Reel Medley; and St. Elmo's Clog.

He died around 1992 in Lynn, Massachusetts.

Discography

  • Down East Star, Rounder 7010, (1979/1955).
  • Tommy Doucet: I Used to Play Some Pretty Tough Tunes, Fiddler FLRP 001, (1975).
gollark: FPGAs remain quite costly and niche.
gollark: Much more readily available, very multipurpose, still pretty fast.
gollark: Arguably you would be better off with random microcontroller hardware.
gollark: If you're emulating a CPU on your FPGA, then an actual hardware CPU is going to easily beat it.
gollark: I think a more sensible model is multicore CPUs for general tasks and FPGAs doing dedicated acceleration things which they're actually good at.

References

  1. Ryan J. Thomson, The Fiddler’s Almanac, 1985, p. 104.


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