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Tales, Dance, Art & Songs
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Steps often represent aspects of life Igor Moiseyev (1906-2007) a pioneer in combining classical ballet with popular folk dance: Moiseyev Company (Балет Игоря Моисеева): “character dance” – a blend of folk dance with technique and theatrics Igor Moiseyev Балет Игоря Моисеева Costumes are representative of folk art: Decorative themes Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Troika Three dancers (usually a man and two women) represent the three horses pulling a “troika” (sleigh) Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Exemplar of Russian “folk” dance
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Pagan origins Mokosh/Mother Earth Motifs: Flowers Branches Trees Horsemen/hunters Animals/mythical creatures Decorative patterns
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Matryoshka – lacquered nesting dolls or “babushka” dolls Usually women in traditional dress First created in 1800s, presented at 1900 World Exhibition in Paris Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Afanasyev: 1 st major collection and recording of folk tales Pushkin used several as the basis for poems Gogol used several Ukrainian tales in short stories Much remains unpublished – oral tradition Many are gruesome and grim – weather/social conditions related?
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Baba Yaga: most famous character in Russian folk tales Witch? Eats children Flies through the air on a giant mortar (or broomstick) Lives in a hut standing on chicken legs Usually evil, but occasionally sought out for wisdom Example: Vassilissa the Fair and Baba Yaga Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Image: “Баба Яга” Wikimedia CommonsБаба Яга
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Scorned during the 1700s and 1800s by Francophile, cultivated city-dwellers Glinka (1804-1857): Russlan and Ludmilla opera based on a poem by Pushkin, used folk music as its basis. 1861: Emancipation of the serfs End of feudal Russia Rise of Slavophile feeling Major instrument: balalaika (Russian folk guitar) Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Shanty: sung by barge-haulers (бурлаки) on the Volga River Inspired by Ilya Repin’s famous painting Barge Haulers on the Volga Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Russian barge-haulers (primarily on the Volga) Burlaks (Wikipedia entry) Burlaks Image: “Burlak Women on the Volga” Wikimedia CommonsBurlak Women on the Volga
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Internet Archive Fedora Chaliapin 1922 recording Nikolai Massenkoff with the Russian Balalaika Orchestra Nikolai Massenkoff Glenn Miller band:
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A more cheerful folk song My “little snowberry” (Viburnum opulus) “Kalinka”Kalinka Image: Wikimedia CommonsWikimedia Commons
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Abbott, Alana Joli. "Moiseyev, Igor (1906-2007)." Newsmakers. Ed. Laura Avery. Vol. 1. Detroit: Gale, 2009. Discovering Collection. Web. 14 Apr. 2010. “Baba Yaga.” Wikipedia. Web. 2010. 14 Apr. 2010.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baba_Yaga Hilton, Alison. Russian Folk Art. Indiana University Press, 1995. Web. 14 Apr. 2010.http://books.google.com “Igor Moiseyev.” Wikipedia. Web. 2010. 15 Apr. 2010.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Moiseyev Rogers, Elizabeth E., ed. Music Through the Ages. New York, Putnam, 1967. Russian Folk Tales. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1967. “The Song of the Volga Boatmen.” Wikipedia. Web. 2010. 14 Apr. 2010 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ The_Song_of_the_Volga_BoatmenThe_Song_of_the_Volga_Boatmen>.
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