Browse Titles - 29 results
Borders: Songs and Dances of the Scottish-English Border
The Dances of the World's Peoples, Vol. 1: Dances of the Balkans and Near East
The Dances of the World's Peoples, Vol. 2: European Folk Dances
The Dances of the World's Peoples, Vol. 4: Turkey, Israel, Greece, Armenia, and Caucasia
Epirotika with Periklis Halkias: Greek Folk Music and Dances from Northern Epirus, Vol. 1
Epirotika with Periklis Halkias: Greek Folk Music and Dances from Northern Epirus, Vol. 2
Folk Dances of Greece
Folk Music of France
From Angoumois to Orléans, this collection of Folk Music of France “remains the exact and faithful reflection of the different ethnic and language groups among which this folklore came to birth.” Often humorous, this collection is a running commentary on marriage with songs such as “Mon Père M’a Douné...
From Angoumois to Orléans, this collection of Folk Music of France “remains the exact and faithful reflection of the different ethnic and language groups among which this folklore came to birth.” Often humorous, this collection is a running commentary on marriage with songs such as “Mon Père M’a Douné un Mari,” (My Father Gave Me A Husband) “La Malmariée” (The Bad Bride) and “La Chanson de la Mariée” (The Song of the Bride).
Folk Music of Hungary
Folk Music of Rumania
This collection of Romanian folk music showcases two of the country’s most popular musical forms. Considered as belonging to everybody, the doina is “..a song of love, a pantheistic poem, a fighting song, or an outcry against injustice or the foreign ruler.” The hora, which is said to be known by more than...
This collection of Romanian folk music showcases two of the country’s most popular musical forms. Considered as belonging to everybody, the doina is “..a song of love, a pantheistic poem, a fighting song, or an outcry against injustice or the foreign ruler.” The hora, which is said to be known by more than 1546 names, is an ageless and genderless circle dance that can be found throughout Romania. Liner notes include photography by Béla B...
This collection of Romanian folk music showcases two of the country’s most popular musical forms. Considered as belonging to everybody, the doina is “..a song of love, a pantheistic poem, a fighting song, or an outcry against injustice or the foreign ruler.” The hora, which is said to be known by more than 1546 names, is an ageless and genderless circle dance that can be found throughout Romania. Liner notes include photography by Béla Bartók.
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