Rhythmic analysis of the metric elaboration of one phrase of a gavotte by J.S. Bach.
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Their various adulteries are played out like a gavotte one has seen a few too many times.
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The gavotte is played at a moderate tempo, although in some cases it may be played faster.
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In a more playful item, about half a dozen members of the cast do a kind of jungle gavotte.
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The word originates from an old French dance resembling the gavotte.
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A sequence of steps laid against the typical rhythm of the gavotte.
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It is Mr Murakami's turn, now, to cut in on the boy-girl gavotte.
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The gavotte these three dance is a glum one, too stately in pace.
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The gavotte in the Baroque period is typically in binary form.
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More examples
An old formal French dance in quadruple time
Music composed in quadruple time for dancing the gavotte
The gavotte (also gavot or gavote) is a French dance, taking its name from a folk dance of the Gavot, the people of the Pays de Gap region of Dauphinu00E9 in the southeast of France, where the dance originated according to one source...
A moderate to fast duple time dance with a time signature of 2. It has a long upbeat of half a bar.
A Baroque dance of French peasant origin that is sometimes included in instrumental suites.
A gracious Baroque dance in duple meter.
Noun - 1. a seventeenth-century dance like the minuet, but faster and livlier 2. the music for this, in 4/4 time
17-18 century French folk dance in double time that exists in both folk forms and historical court forms.
A French dance in moderate 4/4 time, also optional in the Baroque Suite