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  2. Bygdedans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bygdedans

    Bygdedans (or village dance) is the regional, traditional dance of Norway. Bygdedans are the oldest and most distinctive among Norwegian folk dances. [1] The music accompanying bygdedans is normally seen as the oldest living musical traditions in the country. These traditions have mainly survived in the more isolated farming communities of the ...

  3. Nordic folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_folk_music

    Balto-Finnic music is a category of music of Balto-Finnic people, that overlaps with both Nordic folk music of Nordic countries and Baltic folk music of Baltic states. Finland's musical ties are primarily to the Balto-Finnic peoples of Russia and Estonia (Cronshaw, 91). Runic singing was practiced throughout the area inhabited by these peoples.

  4. Traditional Nordic dance music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Nordic_dance_music

    Traditional Nordic dance music is a type of traditional music or folk music that once was common in the mainland part of the Nordic countries — Scandinavia plus Finland. The person who plays this kind of music might be called speleman (Swedish/Norwegian), spelman (Swedish), spel(l)emann (Norwegian), pelimanni (Finnish) or spillemand (Danish).

  5. Polska (dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polska_(dance)

    The polska (Swedish plural polskor) is a family of music and dance forms shared by the Nordic countries: called polsk in Denmark, polka or polska in Estonia, polska in Sweden and Finland, and by several different names in Norway. Norwegian variants include pols, rundom, springleik, and springar.

  6. Music of Norway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Norway

    Norway shares some Nordic dance music tradition with its neighbouring countries of Sweden and Denmark, where the most typical instrument is the fiddle. In Norway, the Hardanger fiddle (hardingfele), the most distinctive instrument in Norwegian folk music, looks and plays like a standard violin. It is only to be found primarily in the western ...

  7. Schottische - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schottische

    Schottische in Madrid August 2017. The schottische is a partnered country dance that apparently originated in Bohemia. [citation needed] It was popular in Victorian era ballrooms as a part of the Bohemian folk-dance craze and left its traces in folk music of countries such as Argentina (chotis Spanish Wikipedia and chamamé), Finland (), France, Italy, Norway ("reinlender [] "), Portugal and ...

  8. Swedish folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_folk_music

    Swedish folk music is a genre of music based largely on folkloric collection work that began in the early 19th century in Sweden. [1] The primary instrument of Swedish folk music is the fiddle . Another common instrument, unique to Swedish traditions, is the nyckelharpa .

  9. Pols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pols

    The pols and springar are Norwegian folk dances in 3/4. They are essentially fast versions of the Nordic polska. [1] [2] The dance is considered to have come to Norway with labor immigration to the Norwegian mining industry in the 16th and 18th centuries.

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