enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of ballet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_ballet

    The etymology of the word "ballet" reflects its history. The word ballet comes from French and was borrowed into English around the 17th century. The French word in turn has its origins in Italian balletto, a diminutive of ballo (dance). Ballet ultimately traces back to Italian ballare, meaning "to dance". [2]

  3. Ballet (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballet_(music)

    Ballet music was an accompaniment for the solo and ensemble dances. Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake was the first ballet score to be created by a symphonic composer. Following the initiative of Tchaikovsky, ballet composers were no longer writing simple, easily danceable pieces. The focus of a ballet was no longer solely the dance; the music behind the ...

  4. Ballet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballet

    Ballet (French: [balɛ]) is a type of performance dance that originated during the Italian Renaissance in the fifteenth century and later developed into a concert dance form in France and Russia. It has since become a widespread and highly technical form of dance with its own vocabulary. Ballet has been influential globally and has defined the ...

  5. Dance music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dance_music

    Electronic dance music. Dance music is music composed specifically to facilitate or accompany dancing. It can be either a whole piece or part of a larger musical arrangement. In terms of performance, the major categories are live dance music and recorded dance music. While there exist attestations of the combination of dance and music in ...

  6. History of dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_dance

    Dancers on a piece of ceramic from Cheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Iran, 5000 BC now at the Louvre. The people of the Iranian plateau have known dance in the forms of music, play, drama or religious rituals and have used instruments like mask, costumes of animals or plants, and musical instruments for rhythm, at least since the 6th millennium BC.

  7. Swan Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swan_Lake

    Petipa created the pas de deux to music by Ludwig Minkus, ballet composer to the St Petersburg Imperial Theatres. The piece was a standard pas de deux classique consisting of a short entrée, the grand adage, a variation for each dancer individually, and a coda.

  8. Giselle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giselle

    Created for. Carlotta Grisi. Genre. Romantic ballet. Giselle (/ dʒɪˈzɛl /; [1] French: [ʒizɛl]), originally titled Giselle, ou les Wilis (French: [ʒizɛl u le vili], Giselle, or The Wilis), is a romantic ballet (ballet-pantomime) [2] in two acts with music by Adolphe Adam. Considered a masterwork in the classical ballet performance canon ...

  9. The Nutcracker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nutcracker

    The Nutcracker (Russian: Щелкунчик [a], romanized: Shchelkunchik, pronounced [ɕːɪɫˈkunʲt͡ɕɪk] ⓘ), Op. 71, is an 1892 two-act classical ballet (conceived as a ballet-féerie; Russian: балет-феерия, romanized: balet-feyeriya) by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, set on Christmas Eve at the foot of a Christmas tree in a child's imagination.