Ultylis
Steps$Used In Court Dancing In Fifteenth-century Italy
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Steps Used In Court Dancing In Fifteenth-century Italy
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^ Ann and Paul Kent DHDS,2013 ISBN 978-0-9540988-1-0 ^ Liza Picard (2005). The earliest choreography that we have for a basse dance is 1445 and the latest 1589 (in the memoirs of an elderly cleric who reminisces about dancing it when he was young). 1463) edited by Barbara Sparti. M. ISBN0-19-816574-9. D. A & P Kent, Cherwell Thy Wyne: Dances of fifteenth-century England from the Gresley Manuscript (DHDS, 2013).
D. The basse dance probably pre-dates the first written source and was certainly still in use in the 1550s (if the dance music collections are any guide), and over the century or more in which it was danced it evolved. At Court, the formal entertainment would often be followed by many hours of country dances which all present could join in. Our knowledge of 15th-century Italian dances comes mainly from the surviving works of three Italian dance masters: Domenico da Piacenza, Antonio Cornazzano and Guglielmo Ebreo da Pesaro. Mullally, The Brussels Basse Dance Book (Dance Books, 2015). The best-documented dance style of the fifteenth century is the basse dance (Italian bassadanze; Spanish baixa). R. pub. Nevile, The Eloquent Body: Dance and Humanist Culture in Fifteenth-Century Italy (Indiana University, 2004). New York: Dover Publications Inc.
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by Ultylis on 2016-05-31 01:25:52
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