The tarantella became increasingly popular in high society; many famous composers, including Chopin, Liszt, and Rossini, wrote their own renditions of the Sicilian folk dance. The dance is described thus:
The tarantella is mainly an Italian country partner dance, which features numerous twirls and spins. It was popularized as a ballroom dance by Madame Michau in the 19th century, and performed in France and England. The ballroom dance differs significantly from the country Italian dance, but it gets the main elements down. Usually music for the tarantella is in 6/8 or 3/4 time, or you may find some versions in 4/4 time with a lot of triplets. Though the dance is partnered, many of the steps are danced away from each other, and steps together are often taken with the partners side to side instead of face to face.ShareMany of the steps are in triples, like triple gallop steps to left and right. In the country dance version, women can partner with other women, but the ballroom dance features a male and female partner. The dance is always vigorous, and triumphs woman’s superiority over admiring men (at least during the dance).
4 comments:
Rossni wrote a famous tarantella, "La danza," as a song for chamber performance, scored for voice and piano. In its orchestral version it is a popular tenor showpiece. Here's the great Caruso singing it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDnoLNulmf8&feature=related
Thanks, Pentimento, I'll incorporate that into the post.
As a teen I danced this with my friends for International Fairs and weddings. LOL! All my friends are Italians. It was fun.
I'm an honorary Italian, that's for sure.
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