Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bulgarian peasants ready to dance the horo, c 1913 Yove male mome and sedi donka can be thought of as a compound of common 7 (chetvorno) and 11 (kopanitsa) meters, but it is more unclear what sandansko horo should be: possibilities are a compound 9+13 , where 9 is the daychovo meter, and 13 the Krivo plovdivsko horo meter, or 9+9+4 , where 9 is ...
The term kopanitsa seems to be especially used in the Shopluk region of western Bulgaria, which includes the towns of Sofia, Pernik, Radomir and Kyustendil. Some common names are Shopska kopanitsa, Graovska kopanitsa, and Divotinka kopanitsa (from the village of Divotino). There is even a village named Kopanitsa not far from the town of Pernik.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Yove male mome (Bulgarian: Йове мале моме; Jove male mome, Jove malaj mome, "Jova, little girl"), also called Povela e Yova (Повела е Йова), is a fast Bulgarian folk dance. It is done to a 7+11 16 = 18 16 compound meter with alternating (sub-)bars of 7+11, in their turn divided into common chetvorno and kopanitsa rhythms ...
Kopanitsa is a form of Bulgarian folk music that utilizes certain forms of undecuple meter (typically 11 8).The terms are also used to describe the folk dances that are frequently performed alongside the music.Typically, kopanitsa's usage of undecuple meter will divide the measure into groupings of 2+2+3+2+2.
Dajchovo horo (Bulgarian: Дайчово хopo) is a Bulgarian folk dance done to a nine-beat meter. It is unique in two ways: it is a circle dance (most Bulgarian dances are either line or couple dances), and yet it has a leader (most circle dances have no leader). [1]
Five Bulgarian folklore dance groups numbereing more than two hundred [18] dancers performed in the event. [ 19 ] [ 20 ] [ 21 ] Other notable figures who attended the 2023 edition include: Vivek Murthy , Muriel Bowser , President of Mauritius Prithvirajsing Roopun , S. Jaishankar , Ryzsard Czarnecki , Ramnath Kovind , and Tim Draper .
National Geographic called Pirin "an organic synthesis of the regional folk choral and dance traditions of Bulgaria." [1] The Pirin Folk Ensemble, named after the Pirin Mountains, was founded in 1954 in Blagoevgrad, a town in southwestern Bulgaria. Professor Kiril Stefanov was the Pirin Folk Ensemble's chief art director and conductor for many ...