Polonaise | ‘The most traditional Polish dance’

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  • čas přidán 23. 06. 2020
  • ‘Once a favourite among the gentry, the Polonaise has a long & fascinating history…
    ‘As a walking dance… the Polonaise is purposefully moderate in tempo & very dignified… The dance is in 3/4 time & is performed by a procession of mixed pairs moving along trajectories, curved or straight, proposed by the dance-leader… The choreography revolves around a pivot, the temporary separation of partners, & then a circle by the male partner around the female dancer. In the first figure the pairs form lines that move towards each other & eventually cross. The female dancers form a line in the middle & the male dancers face them. After this is done, the pairs re-form. Then all the pairs in line except for the one in the front raise their joined hands forming a ‘tunnel’. The pair at the front of the line turns around & enters the passage, bending forward slightly. They are followed by the next pair at the front & so on. After a pair passes through the ‘tunnel’ they turn around at the end of it & raise their joined hands to add a segment to the passage.
    ‘[Its predecessor] the ‘taniec polski’ (‘Polish dance’)… was incredibly popular with the gentry at the Jagiellonian Royal Court of Poland. These were times when Poland was a very powerful state & its culture influenced other European countries. It was initially a sung dance… similar to the Polonaise but less dynamic… Nevertheless the taniec polski had the dignity & processional character that can be witnessed in later form.
    ‘Towards the end of the 17th century the taniec polski started to be accompanied by live music. It then rapidly spread to Scandinavia. To this day, one of the most popular traditional dances in Sweden, Denmark & Norway is called ‘Polska’… In the 18th century… The elected Saxon Kings of Poland as well as the German states were reputed to be incredibly fond of it…
    ‘In recent years groups of young enthusiasts of traditional dances have appeared in Poland, offering dance lovers a fantastic opportunity to witness & even try dancing a Polonaise. In view of its long history & bygone popularity, the Polonaise is often called the most traditional Polish dance.’
    ~ Marek Kępa
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Komentáře • 13

  • @olowrohek9540
    @olowrohek9540 Před rokem +7

    Amazing 👏

  • @ransomcoates546
    @ransomcoates546 Před 2 lety +21

    The musical form of the Polonaise has never seemed to me to correspond to the placid walking around done in dancing it.

    • @stomil
      @stomil Před 3 měsíci

      Until you saw this video....

  • @serhiishekhovtsov6585
    @serhiishekhovtsov6585 Před rokem +3

    what’s the name of this film?

    • @juanna1424
      @juanna1424 Před rokem +12

      Pan Tadeusz (1999)

    • @gb747gb
      @gb747gb Před 2 měsíci

      Robinhood: men in tights

  • @Contracrostics
    @Contracrostics Před 10 měsíci +4

    It is not Chopin's house in Żelazowa Wola in the background, but it looks very similar!

    • @YumiHanasato
      @YumiHanasato Před 5 měsíci

      If I think correctly, this footage is from "Pan Tadeusz" movie. "Pan Tadeusz" is famous polish lecture kids have to read. It's actually fucked up, but in the end of the book, there is a wedding of Tadeusz and Zosia (she is 14 btw) and everyone dance polonaise

    • @YumiHanasato
      @YumiHanasato Před 5 měsíci +1

      Oh, also the house is a house from Tadeusz childhood, he loved in it, but as I said, im not sure

  • @ariiski4501
    @ariiski4501 Před 2 lety +12

    Traditional for «Rich »influenced by the occidental …
    -in small villages or you can even call it «tribes» they had different dances and clothes …🥰

    • @PrzemasASPL
      @PrzemasASPL Před rokem +1

      XDD

    • @misiek_xp4886
      @misiek_xp4886 Před 8 měsíci +5

      You can't call it tribes, and peasants weren't even Polish as Polish nationality was attached to nobility and nobility is not about being rich but about heritage. Most of nobles were poor too. Local dance can't be called "most Polish" btw.

    • @djakmalinakot8568
      @djakmalinakot8568 Před 2 měsíci +2

      In the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. A nobleman could be poorer than a peasant - see szlachta golota. According to a well-known saying, "a nobleman at his croft is equal to a voivode", i.e. a commoner who did not have more property than a peasant, was equal to the voivode, i.e. the manager of the voivodeship.