NRR Project: “Evangeline Special”/“Love Bridge Waltz”
Performed by Iry Lejeune
Recorded 1948
2:27/2:52
Another entry I had no awareness of! What does this say?
It seems that no matter how hard you try to absorb all the sounds and the sights that’re out there, you’re going to miss some. OK, a lot. No matter how hard you try.
But that doesn’t mean you should give up! Let them pry the books out of your cold dead hands and pull the headphones from your dead ears. Get all the culture you can, every day. Of every kind.
This is a recording of Cajun music by the excellent accordionist Iry Lejeune. I learned everything that I know about the two songs from Ron Yule’s amazing essay on them at the National Recording Registry. You should read it. Then you will learn as much as I have.
These songs, one rollicking one plaintive, epitomize the Cajun sound – a tradition grounded in a different language, different customs, an unlikely embedded jewel in the American culture. These are dance tunes, made deliberately for live performance. As such, they are compelling musical documents.
As you may know, I am listening to and writing about every entry in the National Recording Registry, in order. In conjunction with this project, I am viewing and writing about all the entries in the National Film Registry in order as well. These twin Everests are half-climbed now. I have been doing this for years. I do not know if I will ever finish, but it’s certainly worth a try.
The great thing about these two endeavors is their inclusivity. I have been exposed to all kinds of cultural influences by watching/hearing them; their contents are as pieces in a museum. To write my way through them is a way to honor and examine them. They constitute part of America’s cultural pantheon.
The National Recording Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: “I Can Hear It Now.”






