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Sousedská: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:European dances]]
[[Category:European dances]]
[[Category:Bohemia]]
[[Category:Bohemia]]
[[Category:Czech culture]]
[[Category:Culture of the Czech Republic]]
[[Category:Dance forms in classical music]]
[[Category:Dance forms in classical music]]

Revision as of 17:52, 10 September 2023

The sousedská is a semi-slow Bohemian dance in three quarter time. It has a calm, swaying character and it is usually danced in a pair.[1]

The dance was used by some Czech composers, including Antonín Dvořák, who used it in his Slavonic Dances (the Sousedská is the fourth and sixth dance from his Op. 46, and the eighth dance from Op. 72). Josef Suk’s last composition is also a Sousedská for an unusual combination of instruments.

References

  1. ^ "České lidové tance" (PDF). Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport. Retrieved 8 April 2012.