Senin, 25 Februari 2013
Victorian Era
The waltz with its modern hold took root in England in about 1812; in 1819 Carl Maria von Weber wrote Invitation to the Dance,
which marked the adoption of the waltz form into the sphere of absolute
music. The dance was initially met with tremendous opposition due to
the semblance of impropriety associated with the closed hold, though the
stance gradually softened.[3] In the 1840s several new dances made their appearance in the ballroom, including the Polka, Mazurka, and the Schottische. In the meantime a strong tendency emerged to drop all 'decorative' steps such as entrechats and ronds de jambes that had found a place in the Quadrilles and other dances.
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