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CONTENTS

  1. Allemande
  2. Argentine Tango
  3. Bachata
  4. Ballet
  5. Ballroom dance
  6. Bebop
  7. Beguine
  8. Bellydance
  9. Blues dance
  10. Bolero
  11. Boogie-woogie
  12. Bossa Nova
  13. Bouree
  14. Breakaway
  15. Breakdancing
  16. Cake walk
  17. Can-can
  18. Ceremonial dance
  19. Cha-cha-cha
  20. Chaconne
  21. Charleston
  22. Choreography
  23. Club dance
  24. Competitive dance
  25. Contact improvisation
  26. Contemporary dance
  27. Contra dance
  28. Country dance
  29. Courante
  30. Cumbia
  31. Dance notation
  32. Disco
  33. Fandango
  34. Finnish tango
  35. Flamenco
  36. Folk dance
  37. Formation dance
  38. Foxtrot
  39. Free dance
  40. Funk dance
  41. Galliard
  42. Gavotte
  43. Gigue
  44. Glossary of ballet terms
  45. Glossary of dance moves
  46. Glossary of partner dance terms
  47. Gymnopaedia
  48. Habanera
  49. Hip hop dance
  50. Historical dance
  51. Hully Gully
  52. Hustle
  53. Intercessory dance
  54. Jazz dance
  55. Jig
  56. Jitterbug
  57. Jive
  58. Labanotation
  59. Lambada
  60. Latin dance
  61. Line dance
  62. List of dance style categories
  63. Macarena
  64. Mambo
  65. Mazurka
  66. Merengue
  67. Milonga
  68. Minuet
  69. Modern Dance
  70. Modern Jive
  71. Novelty dance
  72. Participation dance
  73. Partner dance
  74. Paso Doble
  75. Passacaglia
  76. Passepied
  77. Pavane
  78. Performance dance
  79. Polka
  80. Polka-mazurka
  81. Polonaise
  82. Punk dance
  83. Quadrille
  84. Quickstep
  85. Rain Dance
  86. Regency dance
  87. Reggae
  88. Renaissance dance
  89. Rigaudon
  90. Rock and Roll
  91. Rumba
  92. Sabre Dance
  93. Salsa
  94. Samba
  95. Samba ballroom
  96. Sarabande
  97. Seguidilla
  98. Sirtaki
  99. Slow dancing
  100. Social dance
  101. Square dance
  102. Step dancing
  103. Street dance
  104. Strictly Come Dancing
  105. Swing dance
  106. Tap dance
  107. Tarantella
  108. The Watusi
  109. Twist
  110. Twist
  111. Viennese Waltz
  112. Waltz
  113. Western dance
  114. Wheelchair dance sport
  115. Worship dance
 



DANCES
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaconne

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Chaconne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

In music, a chaconne (Italian: ciaccona) is a musical form whose primary formal feature involves variation on a repeated short harmonic progression. Originally a quick dance-song from Spain, with rather indelicate text, the chaconne eventually became a slow triple meter dance which first emerged in the 16th century. The chaconne is understood today -- in a rather arbitrary way -- to be a set of variations on a harmonic progression, as opposed to a set of variations on a melodic bass pattern (to which is likewise artificially assigned the term passacaglia). In actual usage in music history, the term "chaconne" has not been so clearly distinguished from passacaglia as regards the way the given piece of music is constructed.)

If a stereotypically "classic" chaconne may be described, it is usually (but not always) in major key, in triple meter, begins on the second beat of the bar, and has a theme of four measures (or a close multiple thereof). (In more recent times the chaconne, like the passacaglia, need not be in 3/4 time.)

If we accept the distinction of a chaconne as variations on a harmonic progression, often this harmonic progression may involve a recurrent bass line (ground bass), but this bass line -- let alone the chords involved -- may not always be present in exactly the same manner, although the general outlines remain understood. (Handel's "Chaconne" in G minor for keyboard has only the faintest relationship to the understood form.[1]) The ground bass, if there is one, may typically descend stepwise from the tonic to the dominant pitch of the scale, or the harmony may emphasize the circle of fifths or a derivative pattern thereof.

One of the best known and most masterful and expressive examples of the chaconne is the final movement from the Violin Partita in D minor by Johann Sebastian Bach. This 13-minute chaconne takes a plaintive four-bar phrase through a continuous kaleidoscope of musical expression, in both major and minor modes. (Bach's Goldberg Variations are also frequently reckoned as a multi-movement chaconne, although Bach did not explicitly label the work as such.) After the baroque period, the chaconne fell into decline, though the 32 Variations in C minor by Ludwig van Beethoven belong to the form. Johannes Brahms kept the form alive in the fourth (i.e., last) movement of his Symphony No. 4.

Examples of Chaconnes

  • Johann Sebastian Bach: Chaconne from Partita no. 2 for Solo Violin in D minor
  • Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 4, 4th mvt. (1884-85)
  • Philip Glass: Symphony No.3, third, slow movement (1995)
  • George Frideric Handel: Chaconne from Suite in G minor for clavier
  • Gustav Holst: Chaconne from First Suite in E♭ for Military Band (technically a passacaglia)[2]
  • Jean-Baptiste Lully : Chaconne from Phaëton (1683)
  • Johann Pachelbel: Canon in D (see that article for more examples using the chord progression of Pachelbel's Canon)
  • Henry Purcell: Chacony for strings and continuo in G minor Z.730 (1680)
  • Tomaso Antonio Vitali: Chaconne in G Minor for Solo Violin (a 19th century musical_hoax)
  • Michiru Yamane: Chaconne in C minor from the soundtrack of Demon Castle Dracula X: Nocturne in the Moonlight, Saturn version. (note: this piece bears striking resemblances to the Passacaglia of J. S. Bach's Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor for organ)

References

  1. ^ Händel, Georg Friedrich. "Chaconne," Klavierwerke / Keyboard Works IV. Einzelne Suiten und Stücke / Miscellaneious Suites and Pieces. Zweite Folge / Second Part. Herausgebegen von / Edited by Terence Best. Kassel: Bärenreiter, c1975, pp. 47-49.
  2. ^ Udell, Budd (1982). "Standard Works for Band: Gustav Holst's First Suite in E♭ Major for Military Band." Music Educators Journal, 69 (4):28 (JSTOR subscription access)

External links

  • A PDF of the score for Bach's Chaconne
  • Easybyte - free easy piano transcription of "Chaconne BWV 1004 / Second Theme Excerpt" by J. S. Bach
  • Passacaglias and Chaconnes for Lute
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaconne"

 

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