Sunday, November 1, 2015





BLOG—RUSSIAN KICK DANCING
PRESENTATION BY LUCY WARNER
NOVEMBER 1, 2015


Folk dancing and music are wonderful! One of the best college courses I took was International Folk Music. We didn’t cover this Hopak music and dancing in that course, but a number of other spectacular music forms such as “throat singing” were taught. It was an eye-opening experience.

See the Wikipedia article below on Hopaty or Hopak, the Ukrainian dance, and the following Sirmpa from Greece, which is said to have similar music. Another great Wikipedia article is found under “Ruthenia,” an early name for the Ukrainian region. It states that the Ruthenian written language was not formalized until 1995! See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruthenia. Also, the music of Hopak dancing is described in the Wikipedia article “Hopak” as being similar to that from Leros, Greece. General information and auditory samples of both the Sirmpa and the Hopak music are given below.




http://www.revolvy.com/main/index.php?s=Sirmpa

This website contains information on a number of localized Grecian dances, the Sirmpa included.

Sirmpa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“The Sirmpa (Greek: Σίρμπα) is a Greek folk dance from Leros. The dance originated in the Middle Ages as a battle mime with swords performed by the Greek butchers guild, which adopted it from the military of Byzantine era. There are similar folkloric dance tunes known as Hopak in Ukraine.”



https://youtu.be/KOkBQ3N1pqo

Traditional Greek Dancing – This is from Crete.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAngMPoKBKg

Sirmpa from Leros, Greece




To see the Russian Cossack kick dance in action, go to these Youtube sites. The Russian soldiers give an especially good demonstration. --


https://youtu.be/KRuyMHEiTts

Russian Dance Tutorial

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBqlfKtqTgc

Dancing and singing. Kick dancing shows up only briefly in the Ukrainian section, but the music as a whole is beautiful. I saved it onto my computer for listening when I want some stimulation.


https://youtu.be/gqEtq34dSUo

Russian Soldiers With the Cossack Dance





https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081121175752AAtNpi9

What's the name of the Russian dance where they do the whole squat and leg kick thing?

There's some Russian dance that has leg kicking. What's the name of it?
Update: Are there any movies with this dance in it? I remember seeing this one movie where there were these two guys doing the dance in full fur coat, fur hat, the whole 9 yards.

ANSWERS AND COMMENTS:

Best Answer: Kozachok also Kazachok (Russian: Kaзaчoк) (Russian diminutive of kazak "cossack") A Slavic dance, chiefly Ukrainian, with a fast tempo featuring a step in which a squatting dancer kicks out each leg alternately to the front.

Source(s):
I did a google search, got this from Wikipedia. I don't usually trust them for serious research, but this sounds ok!
thedivamom • 7 years ago

Russian gopak Ukrainian folk dance originating as a male dance among the Zaporozhian Cossacks but later danced by couples, male soloists, and mixed groups of dancers. In western Ukraine, as the hopak-kolo, it is danced in a closed circle. The hopak has no fixed pattern of steps. Men competitively improvise steps, high leaps, squatting kicks, and turns; women dance simple steps, sway, clap, or circle. Changes of step do not necessarily correspond with the musical metre ( 2/4). Composers who have used hopaks in concert music include Semen Hulak-Artemovsky, Mykola Lysenko, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.


Source(s):
hopak. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 22, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://search.eb.com.cwplib.proxy.liu.edu/eb/article-9041004


It's called the Trepak.
There is a well-known Trepak in the Nutcracker Suite.
Source(s):
Played in the orchestra for 500 Nutcracker Suites.
violinner • 7 years ago

I know a dance called Casatchok.
Willy • 7 years ago
0 Thumbs up 2 Thumbs down




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopak

Hopak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Hopak (Ukrainian: Гопа́к, IPA: [ɦoˈpɑk]), also referred to as Gopak or Cossack dance, is a Ukrainian dance. It is performed most often as a solitary concert dance by amateur and professional Ukrainian dance ensembles, as well as other performers of folk dances. It has also been incorporated into larger artistic opuses such as operas and ballets.

The Hopak is often popularly referred to as the "National Dance of Ukraine". There are similar folkloric dance tunes known as Sirmpa in Leros Greece.

Etymology[edit]
The name hopak is derived from the verb hopaty (Ukrainian: гопати) which means "to jump," as well as the corresponding exclamation hop! (Ukrainian: гоп) which can be uttered during a jump as an expression of surprise or amazement.

History[edit]
See also: Ukrainian dance
The Hopak originated in southern Russia and Ukrainian military communities in the 1600s.

The Hopak developed initially as a Kozak social dance (Ukrainian: побyтовi танці, translit. pobutovi tantsi), and was practiced in the lands of present-day Ukraine beginning in the 16th century. While the fortified Kozak Sich generally frowned upon amusements and diversions from military training, such regulations were overlooked when Kozaks returned victorious after battle. Kobzars and other musicians would gather their instruments - violins, bagpipes, cimbaloms, and fifes - while other participants would dance.

Hopak (a late, unfinished painting by Ilya Repin)
These celebratory hopaky were performed only by male participants, as they took place in an all-male environment. The performers were young, boisterous mercenaries, and not professional dancers; as such, the dance steps performed were predominantly improvisational, reflecting the performers' sense of manliness, heroism, speed and strength. The steps exhibited included many acrobatic jumps (Ukrainian: стрибки, translit. strybky). Often fights from the battlefield would be re-enacted in pantomime, with real swords, lances or other weaponry, as the performer lashed out at invisible enemies. These dances were not tied down to specific rhythms, and the dancers could change tempo at any point.

Such festive dancing differed greatly in character from the older ritual dances (Ukrainian: oбpядовi танцi, translit. obryadovi tantsi), such as the Khorovod, which had previously been the dominant choreographic works in Ruthenian lands. A primary distinction was the gender of the participants – all male – as opposed to the predominantly all-female ritual dances.

With the elevation of Kozak status in the region, hopaky began to appear in the villages within their domain. Unlike the all-male dances found in the Sich, these dances were mixed, with young boys and girls dancing celebratory movements together. While the lead role was retained by male performers, structural elements began to be added in, such as circle forms and pairs moving together in formation; these developments most likely were derived from the choreographic history of ritual dances in the area.

None of the dances performed by Kozaks during this time were ever recorded. Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan recorded the fact that Kozaks danced in such a manner, and other historical accounts verify this. Later, Ivan Kotliarevsky and Taras Shevchenko incorporated the Hopak and dancing Kozaks into their works. However, with the destruction of the Sich in the 18th century, the dance survived only in its mixed-gender village format as a celebratory dance.

Concert dance[edit]
After Hopak-like dances began to be performed on stage in the 18th century in Serf and Peasant theaters, professional dramatic troupes began to incorporate this popular dance into their repertoire. These performances only incorporated the Hopak into a larger opus, such as Kotliarevsky's operetta Natalka Poltavka. It was the pioneering work of a performer in a dramatic ensemble, the ethnochoreologist Vasyl Verkhovynets, in the early 20th century, that enable the dance to develop into its current format. Verkhovynets' initial work entailed gathering authentic village steps throughout central Ukraine and constructing dances which more accurately represented the Ukrainian cultural tradition. His break-through, however, was demonstrating that staged Ukrainian dance could exist as a distinct performing art, in the form of concert dance. He and his disciple Vasyl Avramenko began staging performances throughout western Ukraine, forming troupes of dancers in village after village.

In the spring of 1935, the All-Union Organization of Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries agreed to send a delegation to the upcoming First International Festival of the Folk Dance in London. Verkhovynets worked with Leonid Zhukov of the T. Shevchenko Kyiv Opera and Ballet, and professional dancers from both the Kyiv and Kharkiv Opera houses, on constructing a suite to represent the Ukrainian SSR. For his part, Verkhovynets choreographed what became known as the "London Hopak" (Ukrainian: лондонській гопак, translit. londonskiy hopak): this was a 3-part dance, consisting of a men's dance (much like the original Kozak dance), a second, slower segment danced only by women, and finally a rousing closing with both male and female dancers sharing the stage. This dance, along with Zhukov's addition, won the first prize at the festival that summer. The 3-part Hopak was later reprised in September back in Ukraine as part of the opera, Zaporozhets za Dunayem. The format of the 3-part Hopak was subsequently adopted by many professional folk dance ensembles who have choreographed their own variants of Hopak through the years.

In 1990, twenty members of the State Folk Dance Ensemble of the Ukrainian SSR, split off and created the Hopak! Ukrainian Dance Company, Ukraine's first independent professional dance company, under the direction of Sergei Makarov.

Dance steps[edit]
The modern-day Hopak is a choreographed dance made to appear full of improvisation. Much of the seemingly improvised parts involve solo dancers, usually male, performing visually and technically amazing acrobatic feats. These include jumps and spins, and are usually the highlight of the performance.

The rest of the dance includes many movements performed in unison, especially by the female dancers. Male dancers are expected to squat repeatedly.

Because of the speed and energy required to perform a successful Hopak, this dance is usually performed at the end of a program. As in many Ukrainian dances, the dancers, especially the women, do not stop moving until the end of the dance.

Hopak music[edit]
Music for the Hopak is not standardized by tempo or melody, although 2/4 time predominates most arrangements. The dance is supposed to evoke a sense of improvisation, so the pace of the music changes from segment to segment, allowing dancers to distinguish themselves. The melodies of the songs Hop, moyi hrechanyky (Ukrainian: Гоп, мої гречаники) and Vid Kyiva do Lubny (Ukrainian: Від Київа до Лубни) can be found in many Hopak arrangements. Hopaks usually end on a fast and furious pace, with some incorporating boisterous Ukrainian marches, such as Zasvystaly kozachen'ky (Ukrainian: Засвистали козаченьки).


A number of composers have composed a Hopak as part of an opera or ballet:

Operas
Modest Mussorgsky, in The Fair at Sorochyntsi
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, in Mazepa
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, in May Night
Semen Hulak-Artemovsky, in Zaporozhets za Dunayem
Ballets
Aram Khachaturian, in Gayane
Vasily Solovyov-Sedoi, in Taras Bulba
Cesare Pugni, in The Little Humpbacked Horse
Anatoliy Sviechnikov, in Marusia Bohuslavka
In other fields[edit]
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin once famously forced his eventual successor Nikita Khrushchev (who had been the Communist Party chief in Ukraine) to dance the Hopak.[1]

The Hopak was performed as a part of the choreographic suite Friendship of Peoples by dancers in Ukrainian folk costumes during the opening ceremony of the 1980 Summer Olympics. This event took place on the field of the Central Lenin Stadium, with a large section of the tribune under the Olympic Flame Cauldron coloured in Ukrainian folk patterns during the performance.[2]

In the 2000s (decade), the music has been extensively used for Anna Bessonova and Natalia Godunko in their routines of rhythmic gymnastics; these two famous rhythmic gymnasts are natives of Ukraine.

See also[edit]
Hopak-Kolom
Trepak
Combat Hopak


References[edit]

Jump up ^ Brown, Archie (2009). The Rise and Fall of Communism. New York City: Ecco. p. 229. ISBN 978-0-06-113879-9.
Jump up ^ Documentary: "Олимпиада – День открытия". USSR Central Television, 1980
(Ukrainian) Humeniuk, Andriy (1963). Folk Choreographic Art of Ukraine (Hароднe Xореографiчнe Mиcтeцтвo України), Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR.
Shatulsky, Myron (1980). The Ukrainian Folk Dance, Kobzar Publishing Co. Ltd. ISBN 0-9692078-5-9.
(Ukrainian) Vasylenko, Kim (1971). Lexicon of Ukrainian Folk-Stage Dance (Лeкcикa Українського Hapoднo-Cцeнiчнoго Taнцю), Art.
(Ukrainian) Verkhovynets’, Vasyl’(1919). Theory of Ukrainian Folk Dance (Teopiя Українського Hapoднoго Taнкa).
Zerebecky, Bohdan (1985). Ukrainian Dance Resource Booklets, Series I-IV, Ukrainian Canadian Committee, Saskatchewan Provincial Council.

External links[edit]
Look up hopak in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to hopak.


Ukrainian folk dance at the online Encyclopedia of Ukraine
Video of 1941 soldiers brigade, Russia, performing Hopak, set to modern music