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  2. Minuet step - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minuet_step

    The minuet step is the dance step performed in the dance minuet. It "is composed of four plain straight Steps or Walks, and may be performed forwards, backward, sideways, &c." ( Tomlinson 1735, 103) or in a square. [citation needed] The steps are often referred to by direction to distinguish them. "A Movement, or Sink and Rise, being added to ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. Bourrée - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourrée

    The minuet step is a pas composé, a step composed of more basic steps. The pas de bourrée of one movement is the second half of the most common minuet step, the minuet step of two movements, or "one and a fleuret", as the English master Tomlinson described it.

  5. 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 ...

  6. Baroque dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroque_dance

    The English, working in the French style, added their own hornpipe to this list. Many of these dance types are familiar from baroque music, perhaps most spectacularly in the stylized suites of J. S. Bach. Note, however, that the allemandes, that occur in these suites do not correspond to a French dance from the same period.

  7. Passepied - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passepied

    Passepied from opera-interlude The Shagreen Bone. The passepied (French pronunciation:, "pass-foot", from a characteristic dance step) is a French court dance.Originating as a kind of Breton branle, it was adapted to courtly use in the 16th century and is found frequently in 18th-century French opera and ballet, particularly in pastoral scenes, and latterly also in baroque instrumental suites ...

  8. Rigaudon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigaudon

    The rigaudon ( French: [ʁiɡodɔ̃, ʁiɡɔdɔ̃], Occitan: [riɣawˈðu] ), anglicized as rigadon or rigadoon, is a French baroque dance with a lively duple metre. The music is similar to that of a bourrée, but the rigaudon is rhythmically simpler with regular phrases (eight measure phrases are most common). It originated as a sprightly 17th ...

  9. Minuets in G major and G minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minuets_in_G_major_and_G_minor

    No. 3, the first piece after the two seven-movement Partitas, is a Minuet in F major by an unknown composer (likely not Bach), adopted as No. 113 in the second annex (German: Anhang, Anh.), that is the annex of doubtful compositions, in the Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis (BWV). Petzold's Minuets in G major and G minor, BWV Anh. 114 and 115, are the ...