- Ländler
The ländler is a folk
dance in 3/4 time which was popular inAustria , southGermany and GermanSwitzerland at the end of the 18th century.It is a dance for couples which strongly features hopping and stamping. It was sometimes purely instrumental and sometimes had a vocal part, sometimes featuring
yodeling .When
dance hall s became popular in Europe in the 19th century, the ländler was made quicker and more elegant, and the men shed thehobnail boots which they wore to dance it. Along with a number of other folk dances fromGermany andBohemia , it is thought to have contributed to the evolution of thewaltz .A number of classical
composer s wrote or included ländler in their music, includingLudwig van Beethoven ,Franz Schubert andAnton Bruckner . In several of hissymphonies Gustav Mahler replaced thescherzo with a ländler. The Carinthian folk tune quoted inAlban Berg 's "Violin Concerto" is a ländler, and another features in Act II of hisopera "Wozzeck ". The "German Dances" ofWolfgang Amadeus Mozart andJoseph Haydn also resemble ländler. Britten'sPeter Grimes features a Ländler in the scene where a dance night is occurring in the Hall.The movie "The Sound of Music" features a scene where the protagonists Maria and Captain von Trapp dance a ländler; however, it is not a traditional but a choreographed form. The instrumental tune used in that sequence is a slowed-down re-arrangement of a song heard earlier in the film, "
The Lonely Goatherd ".ee also
*Austrian folk dances
*Austrian folk dancing
*Music of Austria External links
* [http://www.notesonfranzschubert.com/qanda.htm Analysis of Schubert's Seventeen Ländler] by pianist
Bart Berman
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