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Polish
Customs and Traditions
Polish Folk Dance ...
Wedding
traditions demanded
that guests be invited
in a certain
obligatory manner.
Many traditions are
regional and can be
little different.
Below are images
of old postcards of
artist Zofia Stryjeńska,
designed in year 1927:
Góralski
Regional folk dance.
Góralski/Zbójnicki
Regional folk dance.
Kujawiak
Regional folk dance.
Kołomyjka
Regional folk dance.
Krakowiak
Regional folk dance.
Krakowiak
Regional folk dance.
Mazur
Regional folk
dance of 3/4 rythm.
From XIX century
popular
on manor of the nobility.
Oberek
Regional folk dance.
Polka
Regional folk
dance of 2/4 rythm adopted in Poland, Italy and other countries.
Polonez
Popular dance in Poland.
Tance
goralskie
Also on different
events like concerts, festivals, picknics and other polonia's events you can watch
shows of Polish dances.
There are other
popular Polish Folk
Regional Dances in
Poland:
Kujawiak /
Folk
Dance
Kujawiak
is a Polish dance from
the region of Kujawy
after which it is
named (the region is
in central Poland, on
the Mazovian plains).
The kujawiak was
originally danced with
a calm dignity and
simplicity, in a
smooth flowing manner
"reminiscent of
the tall grain stalks
in the fields swaying
gently in the
wind." The
couples were spinning
around the circle in a
seemingly endless
rotation. There were
no vigorous stamps and
no drastic changes of
tempo. This style was
passed on from
generation to
generation. There was
no special schooling:
children and young
people would watch
during parties and
festive occasions and
then try it on the
side. Because of its
beauty the kujawiak
was embraced by the
landed gentry and the
nobility. Fascinated
with the music, they
collected and
published kujawiak
melodies. In order to
learn the dance, the
landowners invited the
village musicians and
dancers to their
manors. They
encouraged the
peasants to show them
fancier steps and
figures. They
themselves also
improvised new figures
or new ways of dancing
the traditional steps;
some of these
improvisations were in
turn adopted by the
village dancers. As a
result of this
interchange, the
kujawiak, in a
polished but not
completely changed
form, was incorporated
at elegant parties and
fancy balls.
From Kujawy the dance
was taken to similar
festive occasions in
Warsaw and other big
cities. From there it
spread all over
Poland, where it
underwent various
transformations as,
for instance, a tempo
alternating from slow
to fast and back to
slow, show-off steps
for men, new figures,
etc. One figure from
the kujawiak as
performed by the
Podhale Polish Folk
Dance Company appears
in the photo; the
dancers wear costumes
from central Mazowsze
area.
The kujawiak exists in
two forms: as a
regional folk dance
including many
varieties, and as the
unified "national
dance," (one of
the five so-called
"national dances
of Poland" with
polonaise, krakowiak,
oberek,and mazur).
Both variants include
rotations of couples
which shift around a
large circle of the
dance space. The folk
versions are notably
faster than the
national version,
they are also more
complicated, with a
greater variety and
difficulty of steps.
Polonaise
/ Folk
Dance
The
polonaise is a stately
Polish processional
dance, performed by
couples who walk
around the dance hall;
the music is in triple
meter and moderate
tempo.
The dance developed
from the Polish dance
(taniec polski) of the
18th century; this
form, in turn, was
derived from the
chodzony (walking
dance) which was
popular in the 17th
century and known as a
pieszy (pedestrian),
or chmielowy (hops)
dance. The latter form
had its roots in the
folk wedding dances,
from which it
separated and then
entered the dance
repertoire of the
nobility. The folk
variants continued to
develop independently
of the "Polish
dance," resulting
in such dances as
chodzony, chmielowy
(in the villages), and
swieczkowy (in the
towns). The Polish
name of the dance,
polonez, stems from
the polonized form of
the French term
polonaise which was
introduced in the 17th
century (also accepted
in English); the
Polish term replaced
the earlier name of
the "Polish
dance" in the
18th century; the
earliest Polish source
is a 1772 manuscript
collection by Joseph
Sychra (with 62
polonaises). The
polonaise as a dance
form should not be
confused with the
chorea polonica (i.e.
"Polish
dance" in Latin)
occurring frequently
in the Baroque
manuscripts of the
17th century.
According to many
scholars, the chorea
polonica has musical
characteristics of the
krakowiak, not the
polonaise.
According to the entry
on the polonaise in
the New Grove
Dictionary of Music
and Musicians, before
the end of the 16th
century the Polish
folk dances that are
ancestors of the
polonaise were adopted
by the lower ranks of
the upper classes
(gentry and lesser
aristocracy). At first
they retianed their
sung accompaniment,
but as these dances
became popular among
people of higher
status, the music was
transferred to the
instrumentalists who
accompanied court
dances.
The court polonaise,
according to the New
Grove entry, "was
played by musicians in
the galleries of the
great reception halls
while the assembly,
dressed in great
splendour, danced it
below in processional
figures [...] In this
form it was
transformed into the
most highbred
expression of the
Polish national spirit
and became in the
process the most
representative of
Polish dances
throughout
Europe."
Music
by Tatra Mountains
Highlanders / Folk
Dance
Krakusy in góralski,
1999. The góralski
varies in content and
style from one village
to another and from
one dancer to another.
Although the góralski
is a couple dance, the
partners touch only
during the final
turning together
figure, called "zwyrtanie"
(according to Ada
Dziewanowska, Polish
Folk Songs and Dances,
p. 267). The man plays
the leading role and
performs the most
intricate steps. The
woman has only two or
three different
patterns to perform
and mostly responds to
the actions of the
man.
There were few
transcriptions of górale
music in the first
half of the 19th
century and none
earlier; an explosive
growth in the
outsiders' interest
began in the late 19th
century. At that time,
Dr. Tytus Chalubinski
organized many
excursions into the
Tatras accompanied by
groups of górale
musicians. Despite the
presence of górale
themes in 19th-century
Polish opera (Karol
Kurpinski's Zabobon,
czyli krakowiacy i górale;
Stanislaw Moniuszko's
Halka), a serious
interest in the
stylistic traits of
the Podhale folklore
was expressed only in
the 20th century,
starting with Karol
Szymanowski (his
Mazurkas, ballet
Harnasie), and
continuing with Artur
Malawski (symphonic
poem Tatry), Henryk Górecki
(two string quartets),
and Wojciech Kilar (Krzesany
for symphony
orchestra).
DESCRIPTION The dance
is performed by a solo
couple; the man is the
dominant partner and
selects the tunes and
figures to perform. He
sings to te musicians
the tune he wants to
dance and they respond
by repeating it with
ornaments. According
to the description of
the góralski by
Wlodzimierz Kotonski,
the dance begins when
another male dancers
introduces the girl
onto the dance floor
and turns her around
("Wyzwyrtanie").
During the following
sequence of dances,
the male partner
dances solo, circling
around the woman and
presenting a variety
of figures. The woman
responds by turning,
performing heel
clicks, and stamping.
The dance sequence
usually begins with
the slower nuta
ozwodna and the steps
of drobiony (minced),
running, and regular.
After a couple of
ozwodnas the dancers
performs a krzesany
(from
"sparks" of
the flint; the name
comes from the
regular, heavy accents
in the music) or
drobny (tiny; the name
reflects the small
size of the fast-paced
steps). MUSIC Podhale
is the only area of
Poland where the folk
culture is still alive
as it is present in
the daily activities
of the górale. They
wear their costumes,
speak the local
dialect, and sing and
play the traditional
melodies. The music of
this region strongly
differs from Polish
folk music of its
northern regions,
especially because of
its predominantly
duple meters (triple
meter is the most
popular on the
Mazovian plains).
However, Timothy
Cooley discovered that
the 19th century
collectors, especially
Oskar Kolberg, found
numerous triple-meter
melodies in the Tatras;
the change of the
repertoire may be
attributed to the
influence of
outsiders, the tourism
promoters and
ethnographers, who
emphasized the
differences between
the music of the górale
and that originating
from the rest of the
country (Cooley 1998,
2000). Several types
of melodies are used
for the dance: nuta
ozwodna, krzesana,
drobna, and zielona.
The man sings one
couplet in a high and
tense falsetto voice
and a
quasi-improvisatory
manner. The band
(called kapela or
muzyka), led by a
violinist, responds
with repeats of the
ornamented melody
(performed by lead
violinist). The
strongly accented
rhythmic foundation is
provided by the
accompanying violins
and the basy (see the
entry on zbójnicki
for a description of
the band and the
instruments).
Information
and pictures are
published for
information only.
The zbojnicki picture
is from Krakusy Polish
Folk Dance Ensemble
archive, featuring
their main dancer,
Stanislaw Danko
(1970s), the one of
Kujawiak picture is
from Podhale Polish
Folk Dance Company,
also from
California (Maja Trochimczyk,
Ph.D.
info/photos).