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  2. Minuet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minuet

    A minuet ( / ˌmɪnjuˈɛt /; also spelled menuet) is a social dance of French origin for two people, usually in 3. 4 time. The English word was adapted from the Italian minuetto and the French menuet. The term also describes the musical form that accompanies the dance, which subsequently developed more fully, often with a longer musical form ...

  3. Gavotte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavotte

    Gavotte. The gavotte (also gavot, gavote, or gavotta) is a French dance, taking its name from a folk dance of the Gavot, the people of the Pays de Gap region of Dauphiné in the southeast of France, where the dance originated, according to one source. [1] According to another reference, the word gavotte is a generic term for a variety of French ...

  4. Bourrée - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourrée

    People dancing bourrée in a folk ball. The bourrée ( Occitan: borrèia; [1] also in England, borry or bore) is a dance of French origin and the words and music that accompany it. [2] The bourrée resembles the gavotte in that it is in double time and often has a dactylic rhythm. However, it is somewhat quicker, and its phrase starts with a ...

  5. Orfeo ed Euridice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orfeo_ed_Euridice

    Orfeo ed Euridice ( [orˈfɛ.o e.d‿ewˈri.di.t͡ʃe]; French: Orphée et Eurydice; English: Orpheus and Eurydice) is an opera composed by Christoph Willibald Gluck, based on the myth of Orpheus and set to a libretto by Ranieri de' Calzabigi. It belongs to the genre of the azione teatrale, meaning an opera on a mythological subject with ...

  6. Baroque dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroque_dance

    The style of dance is commonly known to modern scholars as the French noble style or belle danse (French, literally "beautiful dance"), however it is often referred to casually as baroque dance in spite of the existence of other theatrical and social dance styles during the baroque era. Primary sources include more than three hundred ...

  7. French Suites (Bach) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Suites_(Bach)

    The suites were later given the name 'French' (first recorded usage by Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg in 1762). Likewise, the English Suites received a later appellation. The name was popularised by Bach's biographer Johann Nikolaus Forkel, who wrote in his 1802 biography of Bach, "One usually calls them French Suites because they are written in the French manner."

  8. Les Indes galantes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Indes_galantes

    French. Premiere. 23 August 1735. ( 1735-08-23) Theatre in the Palais-Royal, Paris. Les Indes galantes is a ballet héroïque, a type of French Baroque opera-ballet, by Jean-Philippe Rameau with a libretto by Louis Fuzelier. In its final form it comprised an allegorical prologue and four entrées, or acts, each set in an exotic place, the whole ...

  9. Branle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branle

    Branle d'Ossau by Alfred Dartiguenave, 1855–1856. A branle (/ ˈ b r æ n əl, ˈ b r ɑː l / BRAN-əl, BRAHL, French: ⓘ), also bransle, brangle, brawl(e), brall(e), braul(e), brando (in Italy), bran (in Spain), or brantle (in Scotland), is a type of French dance popular from the early 16th century to the present, danced by couples in either a line or a circle.