120430 Kim Junsu’s “Xia Tarantallegra” The Meaning and Origin of Tarantella: Musical Healing?

[It is always better to go into any experience well informed. The tarantella is a dance with many forms and applications, including classical music–but predominately it is based upon a legend of dancing for healing purposes. Care has to be exercised in how it is applied as its application can be frenzied, competitive dancing.] This is not a far cry from what already occurs at concerts except its intensity may be greater. It is probably subject in this particular case to the interpretation of this artist, Kim Junsu. [Editors Note]

Allegro: Quickly; Happily: Fast [Merriam-Websters 11th Collegiate Dictionary]

The Tarantella is an Italian Folk dance. The traditional Italian Tarantella dance is said to have originated between the 15th and 17th centuries. The beginning of the dance is related to a disease called tarantism. Tarantism is a hysterical state in which victims bitten by tarantulas convulse and dance for lengthy periods of time. [according to legend] They must dance in order to sweat the poison out. Today, the tarantella is danced in many traditional Italian weddings and parties. Over the centuries, many pieces of instrumental music have been written in honor of the dance, and it has been featured in films such as “The Godfather.” Learning how to perform it can come from books, personal instruction or videos.

Tarantella dance has roots in ancient Greece. It was a ritualistic dance in honor of the god of music and sun, apollo, and god of wine, dionysius. Ancient Greeks settled in Italy, and continued this beautiful dance to this day.

In the Italian Taranto, apulia, the bite of a locally common type of wolf spider, named “tarantula” after the region, was popularly believed to be highly poisonous and to lead to a hysterical condition known as tarantism. The stated belief in the 16th and 17th centuries was that victims needed to engage in frenzied dancing to prevent death from tarantism using a very rhythmic and fast music. The particular type of dance and the music played became known as tarantella. The oldest documents mentioning the relationship between musical exorcism and the tarantula are dated around 1100[citation needed]. John Compton has proposed that ancient Bacchalian rites that had been suppressed by the Roman Senate in 186 BC went underground, reappearing under the guise of emergency therapy for bite victims. The tradition persists in the area, and is known as “Neo-Tarantism. Many young artists, groups and famous musicians are continuing to keep the tradition alive. The music is very different—its tempo is faster, for one thing—but it has similar hypnotic effects, especially when people are exposed to the rhythm for a long period of time. The music is used in the therapy of patients with certain forms of depression and hysteria, and its effects on the endocrine system recently became an object of research[citation needed].

[edit] Courtship vs Tarantism dances

The stately courtship tarantella danced by a couple or couples, short in duration, is graceful and elegant and features characteristic music. On the other hand, the supposedly curative or symptomatic tarantella was danced solo by a supposed victim of a “tarantula” bite; it was agitated in character, lasted for hours or even up to days, and featured characteristic music. However, other forms of the dance were and still are couple dances (not necessarily a couple of different sexes) usually either mimicking courtship or a sword fight. The confusion appears to arrive from the fact that the spiders, the condition, its sufferers (“tarantolati”), and the dances all have similar names to the city of Taranto. The first dance originated in the Naples region and spread next to Apulia,Basilicata and Calabria, all part of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. The Neapolitan tarantella is a courtship dance performed by couples whose “rhythms, melodies, gestures, and accompanying songs are quite distinct” featuring faster more cheerful music. Its origins may further lie in “a fifteenth-century fusion between the Spanish Fandango and the Moresque ‘ballo di sfessartia’.” The “magico-religious” tarantella is a solo dance performed supposedly to cure through perspiration the delirium and contortions attributed to the bite of a spider at harvest (summer) time. The dance was later applied as a supposed cure for the behavior of neurotic women (” ‘Carnevaletto delle donne’ “).The original legend tells that someone who had supposedly been bitten by the trantula (or the meditteranean black widow) spider had to dance to an upbeat tempo to sweat the poison out.

There are several traditional tarantella groups: “Cantori di Carpino“, “Officina Zoé“, “Uccio Aloisi gruppu”, “Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino”, “Selva Cupina”, “I Tamburellisti di Torrepaduli”.

The tarantella is most commonly played with mandolin and/or accordion Guitar, flute, fiddle, and clarinet are also used.

[edit] Tarantism

Main article: Tarantism

Reportedly, victims who had collapsed or were convulsing would begin to dance with appropriate music and be revived as if a tarantula had bitten them. The music used to treat dancing mania appears to be similar to that used in the case of tarantism though little is known about either. Justus Hecker (1795–1850), describes in his work Epidemics of the Middle Ages:

A convulsion infuriated the human frame […]. Entire communities of people would join hands, dance, leap, scream, and shake for hours […]. Music appeared to be the only means of combating the strange epidemic […] lively, shrill tunes, played on trumpets and fifes, excited the dancers; soft, calm harmonies, graduated from fast to slow, high to low, prove efficacious for the cure.[7]

The music used against spider bites featured drums and clarinets, was matched to the pace of the victim, and is only weakly connected to its later depiction in the tarantellas of Chopin, Liszt, Rossini, and Heller.[8]

While most serious proponents speculated as to the direct physical benefits of the dancing rather than the power of the music a mid-18th century medical textbook gets the prevailing story backwards describing that tarantulas will be compelled to dance by violin music.[9] It was thought that the Lycosa tarantula wolf spider had lent the name “tarantula” to an unrelated family of spiders having been the species associated with Taranto, but since the lycosa tarantula is not inherently deadly in summer or in winter,[9] the highly poisonous Mediterranean black widow (Latrodectus tredecimguttatus) may have been the species originally associated with Taranto’s manual grain harvest.

The Tarantella is a dance in which the dancer and the drum player constantly try to upstage each other by dancing longer or playing faster than the other, subsequently tiring one person out first.

[edit] Grand Tarantelle ballet

Main article: Grande Tarantelle

The Balanchine ballet Tarantella is set to Grande Tarantelle for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 67 (ca. 1866) by Louis Moreau Gottschalk, reconstructed and orchestrated by Hershy Kay. The nimble quickness of Tarantella provides a virtuosic showcase. The profusion of steps and the quick changes of direction this brief but explosive pas de deux requires typify the ways in which Balanchine expanded the traditional vocabulary of classical dance.

[edit] Notable tarantellas

[edit] Classical music

[edit] Other uses

In literature
In film
In games

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ Blatter, Alfred (2007). Revisiting music theory: a guide to the practice, p.28. ISBN 0-415-97440-2.
  2. ^ Morehead, P.D., Bloombury Dictionary of Music, London, Bloombury, 1992
  3. ^ Linnaeus would name the spider Lycosa tarantula in 1758
  4. ^ John Compton. The Life of the Spider. Mentor Books (1954), p. 56f.
  5. ^ Toschi, Paolo (1950). Proceedings of the Congress Held in Venice September 7th to 11th, 1949: “A Question about the Tarantella”, Journal of the International Folk Music Council, Vol. 2. (1950), p. 19. Translated by N. F.
  6. ^ Ettlinger, Ellen (1965). Review of “La Tarantella Napoletana” by Renato Penna (Rivista di Etnografia), Man, Vol. 65. (Sep. – Oct., 1965), p. 176.
  7. ^ Hecker, Justus. Quoted in Sear, H. G. (1939).
  8. ^ Sear, H. G. (1939). “Music and Medicine”, p.45, Music & Letters, Vol. 20, No. 1. (Jan., 1939), pp. 43–54. Note that Sear may mistake the Neapolitan and Apulian tarantellas and that those by Romantic composers to which he refers may have been intended as Neapolitan.
  9. ^ a b Rishton, Timothy J. (1984). “Plagiarism, Fiddles and Tarantulas”, The Musical Times, Vol. 125, No. 1696. (Jun., 1984), pp. 325–327.

[edit] External links

 
Momma’s Source: wikipedia
 
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