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How to dance the revived ancient dances / by Ardern Holt.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Horace Cox, 1907.Description: viii, 158 p. : ill., music ; 19 cmSubject(s): Available additional physical forms:
  • Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as facsimile page images and full text.
Summary: Holt begins his discussion with a history of "chorography" and the work of famed eighteenth-century dancing masters and choreographers Guillaume-Louis Pecour, Pierre Beauchamps, and Raoul-Auger Feuillet. Several pages of dances written in the dance notation system devised by Feuillet are included. Holt's "reconstruction" of the pavan includes the appropriate music from Thoinot Arbeau's 1588 manual, Orchesographie. For decades, the inclusion of the notation and music was deceiving to many unsuspecting people who used Holt's manual to reconstruct dances for the Renaissance and Baroque. Holt's interpretations bear no resemblance to the originals; however, they do clearly illuminate the romanticized aura that began to surround such dances as the minuet during the nineteenth century. Line drawings and photographs enhance Holt's manual.
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Item type Home library Shelving location Class number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Books Books VWML QS 40 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Reference only 4418
Books Books VWML Off-site storage QS 40 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Reference only (7-10 days notice needed. Contact a member of staff.) 4609

Holt begins his discussion with a history of "chorography" and the work of famed eighteenth-century dancing masters and choreographers Guillaume-Louis Pecour, Pierre Beauchamps, and Raoul-Auger Feuillet. Several pages of dances written in the dance notation system devised by Feuillet are included. Holt's "reconstruction" of the pavan includes the appropriate music from Thoinot Arbeau's 1588 manual, Orchesographie. For decades, the inclusion of the notation and music was deceiving to many unsuspecting people who used Holt's manual to reconstruct dances for the Renaissance and Baroque. Holt's interpretations bear no resemblance to the originals; however, they do clearly illuminate the romanticized aura that began to surround such dances as the minuet during the nineteenth century. Line drawings and photographs enhance Holt's manual.

Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as facsimile page images and full text.

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