(519 results found)
Kutner (LKT)
… dancing. Girls danced also but separately. They danced folk dances and waltzes, in which boys dance with boys and …
Lizginke (LKT)
… the full reference. “A ‘kozak’ [and a freylekhs ]... were folk-dances for adults and in-laws. The youth strutted its …
Mazurka (LKT)
… that among our large masses, for a long time now the folkdance has been accompanied by singing and song; and not … notation included). “The dance-song is a collective folk-expression which derived from the need to sing for the …
Pleskun (LKT)
… Beregovski writes, ‘we find a number of Ukrainian folk songs which were reworked for solo instrument (most …
Polka
… that among our large masses, for a long time now the folkdance has had been accompanied by singing and song; and … is a] song for [the] polka-dance... The melody is Polish folk.” [Galicia, 1920s-30s]. Pipe 1971a, pp. 164 (#53), 308 … is a] song for [the] polka-dance... The melody is Polish folk.” [Galicia, 1920s-30s]. Pipe 1971a, pp. 166 (#55), 308 …
Polonaise
… that among our large masses, for a long time now the folkdance has had been accompanied by singing and song; and … Pipe 1971b, p. 571. “The dance-song is a collective folk-expression which derived from the need to sing for the …
Raynlender (LKT)
… that among our large masses, for a long time now the folkdance has had been accompanied by singing and song; and …
Sher
… 1982, p. 526, n. 18] . “Gathering data on Jewish folk dances, and especially on the widespread frejlaxs and … references, the šer is also mentioned very rarely in folk songs. These folk songs are all from the Ukraine (cf. Cahan 1912a: 18 …
Hag Purim – The story behind its melody
… It was also featured in many publications of Jewish folk songs in the early 20th century as a wordless Hassidic … und West in 1910 ( example 1 ) and in Kisselgof's Jewish folk song collection of 1912 ( example 2 ). The similarity … from the living practice. 1 As it happens to most folk songs, the first line of the lyrics of “ H ag Purim” …
Skotshne/Skochne
… This could not have been adopted from the Ukrainian folk music, since there were far fewer professionally-trained Ukrainian folk musicians than Jewish ones.” Beregovski 1937 [= …