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Passepied

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Passepiedfrom opera-interludeThe Shagreen Bone

Thepassepied(French pronunciation:[pasˈpje],"pass-foot", from a characteristic dance step) is a Frenchcourt dance.Originating as a kind ofBretonbranle,it was adapted to courtly use in the 16th century and is found frequently in 18th-century Frenchoperaandballet,particularly in pastoral scenes, and latterly also inbaroqueinstrumentalsuites of dances.In English the passepied has been spelled "paspy" as well as "paspie" or "paspe", phonetic approximations of the French pronunciation.

History

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The earliest historical mention of the passepied was byNoël du Failin 1548, who said it was common at Breton courts.François RabelaisandThoinot Arbeau,writing later in the 16th century, identify the dance as a type of branle characteristic of Brittany. At this time it was a fast duple-time dance with three-bar phrases, therefore of thebranle simpletype.[1]Like many folk-dances it was popular at the court ofLouis XIV.[2]

The passepied was remodelled byJean-Baptiste Lullyas a pastoralconcert dance,first appearing in the 1680s as a fasterminuet.[3]It is accounted the fastest of the triple-time dances of the time, usually with atime signatureof3
8
(also occasionally6
8
or3
4
), its phrases starting upon the last beat of the measure. Its phrasing had to divide into four measures to accommodate the four characteristic tiny steps over two measures. It used the steps of the minuet, which Lully had long before similarly adapted, to quite different effect, moving lightly and tracing elaborate patterns upon the floor.[4]

After this the passepied appeared in a great many theatrical productions, including those ofJean-Philippe Rameau.It is found as late as 1774 inChristoph Willibald Gluck'sIphegenia in Aulis.[2]

Writing in 1739Johann Matthesondescribed the passepied as a fast dance, with a character approaching frivolity, for which reason it lacks "the eagerness, anger, or heat expressed by thegigue".Italians often used it as a finale for instrumentalsinfonie.[5]

Passepieds occasionally appear insuitessuch asJ.S. Bach'sOrchestral Suite No. 1,or dramatic music such as hisFrench Overturefor harpsichord. There are often two Passepieds in minor and major keys to be played in the order I, II, I, or else passepieds occur in contrasting pairs, the first reappearing after the second as ada capo.[1]It also appeared as a movement inHenry Purcell's opera,Dioclesian,[6][n 1]and hundreds of other Baroque compositions.[citation needed]

Revivals

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Léo Delibeswrote a passepied as part of his incidental music for the playLe roi s'amusebyVictor Hugo.More modern examples include:

Notes

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  1. ^Several PDF scans of this publication may be found on Henry Purcell'sIMSLPpage.Page 118 of the original publication corresponds to the 130th page of the 196-page colour scan, and pp. 118–19 are both found on the 62nd page of the 89-page black-and-white scan (which is done "two pages up" ) where the title may be seen in archaic spelling as "paſpe" (the letter ſ being the archaiclong s,used only in lowercase, also found on the publication's title page, viz. "THE Vocal and Inſtrumental MUSICK OF THE PROPHETESS, OR THE HISTORY OF DIOCLESIAN. COMPOSED ByHenry Purcell,Organiſt of Their MAJESTIES Chappel, and of St.Peters Weſtminſter",in the printer's name"J. Heptinſtall",and indeed throughout the publication, whereas in modern editions this letter is ordinarily changed without comment to short s). SeeList of compositions by Henry Purcell,Z 627 for the modern spelling.Alfred Deller (Volume Two) – Music Of Henry Purcell,a compilation album released in 2008, also denotes passepied as both "paspe" and "passepied" according to its 5th disc (previously issued on LP as Vanguard / The Bach Guild BG-682) and its respective 5th track.

References

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  • Mattheson, Johann(April 1958). "Johann Mattheson on Affect and Rhetoric in Music (I)".Journal of Music Theory.2(1). Translated by Hans Lenneberg: 47–84.JSTOR842930.
  • Sutton, Julia(1985). "The Minuet: An Elegant Phoenix".Dance Chronicle.8(3/4): 119–152.doi:10.1080/01472528408568908.

Footnotes

  1. ^abLittle, Meredith Ellis. 2001. "Passepied [passe-pied, paspy, passe-pié]".The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians,second edition, edited byStanley SadieandJohn Tyrrell.London: Macmillan Publishers.
  2. ^abScholes, Percy A. 1970.The Oxford Companion to Music,tenth edition, edited by John Owen Ward. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
  3. ^Sutton 1985,p. 146.
  4. ^Little, Meredith; Jenne, Natalie (2001).Dance and the Music of J.S. Bach.BloomingtonIN: Indiana University Press.ISBN0253214645.
  5. ^Mattheson 1958,p. 64.
  6. ^Purcell, Henry. 1691.The Vocal and Instrumental Musick of the Prophetess, or the History of Dioclesian.London: Printed by J. Heptinstall, for the Author. pp. 118-9.
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