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quadrille

 
Dictionary: qua·drille1   (kwŏ-drĭl', kwə-, kə-) pronunciation
n.
  1. A square dance of French origin composed of five sections and performed by four couples.
  2. Music for this dance in 6/8 and 2/4 time.

[French, from quadrille, team, crew, one of four groups of horsemen, from Spanish cuadrilla, probably diminutive of cuadro, square, from Latin quadrum.]


qua·drille2 (kwŏ-drĭl', kwə-, kə-) pronunciation
n.
A card game popular during the 18th century, played by four people with a deck of 40 cards.

[French, perhaps from Spanish cuartillo, diminutive of cuarto, fourth, from Latin quārtus.]


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Dance for four couples in square formation, fashionable from the late 18th through the 19th century. Imported to England from Parisian ballrooms in 1815, it consisted of four or five contredanses (see country dance), each danced with prescribed combinations of intertwining figures rather than depending on intricate individual steps. It was often danced to opera melodies. See also American square dance.

For more information on quadrille, visit Britannica.com.

Music Encyclopedia: Quadrille
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An early 19th-century ballroom dance, based on the contredanse. Performed by sets of four, six or eight couples, it was popular in Paris during the First Empire and later elsewhere. The music, usually adapted from popular tunes, was in eight- or 16-bar sections and in duple time.

Examples were written by the Strausses and other major dance composers; there are also quadrilles based on such unlikely works as Tristan und Isolde and Rossini's Stabat mater.



Dictionary of Dance: quadrille
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A French ballroom dance for four couples which was very popular at the court of Napoleon I and which found its way into Britain in the early 19th century. The term also refers to the square formations of couples in the American Square Dance and to the position of corps de ballet dancers within the hierarchy of the Paris Opera (first and second quadrilles, two of the lowest ranks in the company).

Wikipedia: Quadrille
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For the equestrian form of quadrille, see Quadrille (dressage).
For the card game Quadrille, see Quadrille (card game).
The term may also refer to quad paper and a Quadrille (geometry).

Quadrille is an historic dance performed by four couples in a square formation, a precursor to traditional square dancing. It is also a style of music. A derivative found in the Francophone Lesser Antilles is known in the local Creole as kwadril.

Contents

The beginning – horsemen

The term quadrille came to exist in the 17th Century, within military parades, where 4 horsemen and their horses performed special square shaped formations or figures. The word quadrille is probably derived from the Spanish word "cuadrillo" (diminutive Spanish, meaning four) and from the Latin "quadratus" (meaning square).

The L’été figure of the quadrille, early 1820s
"Accidents in Quadrille Dancing", 1817 caricature

From paired horses to paired dancers

This performance became very popular, which led people to perform a quadrille without horses. In the 18th Century (estimated around 1740) the quadrille evolved more and more in an intricate dance, with its foundation in dances like cotillions. It was introduced in France around 1760, and later in England around 1808 by a woman known as Miss Berry. It was introduced to the Duke of Devonshire and made fashionable by 1813. In the following years it was taught to the upper classes, and around 1816 many people could dance a quadrille.

The quadrille (in French quadrille de contredanses) was now a lively dance with four couples, arranged in the shape of a square, with each couple facing the center of that square. One pair was called the head couple, the other pairs the side couples. A dance figure was often performed first by the head couple, and then repeated by the side couples. In the original French version only two couples were used, but two more couples were eventually added to form the sides of a square. The couples in each corner of the square took turns, in performing the dance, where one couple danced, and the other couples rested.

Terms used in the quadrille are mostly the same as those in ballet. Dance figures have names such as jeté, chassé, croisé, plié, arabesque, and so on.

Dances within Dances

As the quadrille became even more popular in the 19th century, it evolved into forms that used elements of the waltz, including Caledonian, Lancer, Ländler, Deutscher, and so on. When the quadrille became known in Germany and Austria, the dance composers from that time (Josef Lanner and the Strauss Family) also took part in the hysteria of the quadrille.

Where the music was new with every quadrille composed, the names of the five parts (or figures) remained the same. And if it were performed with dancers – audiences also preferred to listen to the dance alone, and not dance to it – the way of dancing to the parts remained (mostly) the same too. The parts were called:

  1. Le Pantalon (a pair of trousers)
  2. L’été (summer)
  3. La Poule (hen)
  4. La Pastourelle (shepherd girl)
  5. Finale

All the parts were popular dances and songs from that time (19th century). Le Pantalon was a popular song, where the second and third part were popular dances. La Pastourelle was a well-known ballad by the cornet player Collinet. The finale was very lively.

Sometimes La Pastourelle was replaced by another figure, La Trénis. This was a figure made by the dance master Trenitz. In the Viennese version of the quadrille, both figures were used, where La Trénis (it was translated into French) became the fourth part, and La Pastourelle the fifth part, making a total of six parts for the Viennese quadrille.

The quadrille - music analysis

Thus the quadrille was a very intricate dance. The standard form contained five different parts, and the Viennese lengthened it to six different parts. The following table shows what the different parts look like, musically speaking:

  • part 1: Pantalon (written in 2/4 or 6/8)

theme A – theme B – theme A – theme C – theme A

  • part 2: Été (always written in 2/4)

theme A – theme B – theme B – theme A

  • part 3: Poule (always written in 6/8)

theme A – theme B – theme A – theme C – theme A – theme B – theme A

Part 3 always begins with a two-measure-introduction

  • part 4: Trénis (always written in 2/4)

theme A – theme B – theme B – theme A

  • part 5: Pastourelle (always written in 2/4)

theme A – theme B – theme C – theme B – theme A

  • part 6: Finale (always written in 2/4)

theme A – theme A – theme B – theme B – theme A – theme A

Part 6 always begins with a two-measure-introduction

All the themes are 8 measures long.


Stately Quadrille

The mechanics of the dance, that of constantly shifting partners, led it to be compared to the European political system in the eighteenth century. What became known as the Stately quadrille saw the forming of fresh alliances with different partners in order to maintain the balance of power in Europe.

See also

Historically related forms of dance:

Notes


Translations: Quadrille
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Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - kvadrille, firdobbelt

2.
n. - kvadril (kortspil), kvadrille

3.
n. - millimeterpapir
adj. - ternet (f.eks. ternet papir, millimeterpapir)

Nederlands (Dutch)
quadrille (dans/ kaartspel), gemarkeerd met vierkanten/ rechthoeken

Français (French)
1.
n. - quadrille (danse)

2.
n. - jeu de cartes à quatre joueurs

3.
n. - quadrillage
adj. - en quadrillé

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Quadrille (Tanz, Musik, Kartenspiel)

2.
n. - Quadrille (Tanz, Musik, Kartenspiel)

3.
n. - Quadrille (Tanz, Musik, Kartenspiel)
adj. - Quadrille-

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (μουσ.) καντρίλια
adj. - της καντρίλιας

Italiano (Italian)
quadriglia, quadriglio

Português (Portuguese)
n. - quadrilha (f)
adj. - de quadrilha

Русский (Russian)
кадриль, в клеточку

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - lancero, rigodón, contradanza

2.
n. - cuatrillo, cascarela

3.
n. - cuadrilla, cuadrícula
adj. - cuadricular

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - kadrilj
adj. - kadrilj-

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 四对舞伴的方舞, 方舞舞曲

2. 四人用四十张纸牌玩的牌戏

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 四對舞伴的方舞, 方舞舞曲

2.
n. - 四人用四十張紙牌玩的牌戲

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 쿼드릴(넷이 한조가 되어 추는 춤)

2.
n. - 4사람이 40매의 카드로 하는 놀이

3.
n. - (모눈종이 등의)모눈 눈금
adj. - 4각형으로 나누어진

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - カドリル, カドリール
adj. - 四角形をなした

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) الكدريل رقص قديم ملائم لأربعه أزواج, موسيقى لهذا نوع من الرقص, نوع من لعبه الأوراق لأربعه أشخاص (صفه) مكدرل, معلم بالمربعات‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮ריקוד ריבועי, מוסיקה לריקוד זה, קדריל‬
n. - ‮משחק קלפים ל-4 משתתפים ו-04 קלפים, קדריל‬
n. - ‮רשת של ריבועים קטנים, בייחוד על נייר‬
adj. - ‮מחולק לריבועים (נייר גרפי)‬


 
 
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary of Dance. The Oxford Dictionary of Dance. Copyright © 2000, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Quadrille" Read more
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