Polka
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| Polka | |
|---|---|
| Stylistic origins: | Folk dance based on Czech and Polish sources; details highly controversial |
| Cultural origins: | 1830s Bohemia |
| Typical instruments: | Accordion, Tuba, Piano |
| Mainstream popularity: | Formerly much, worldwide, now limited to small populations |
| Derivative forms: | |
| Subgenres | |
| Chicago dyno - Chicago honky - Chicago push - Cleveland style - Conjunto style - Dutchman style - Eastern style - Neo-polka - Polish style - San Francisco style - Slovenian style | |
| Fusion genres | |
| Kalattuut - Norteño - Polka-mazurka - Polkacore - Polkasteady - Chicken scratch | |
| Regional scenes | |
| Other topics | |
| Polka Aid | |
Polka is a type of dance and genre of dance music; it originated in the middle of the 19th century in Bohemia, and is still a common genre of Czech folk music; it is also common both in Europe and in the Americas. In classical music, many polkas were composed by both Johann Strauss I and his son Johann Strauss II; a couple of well-known ones were composed by Bedrich Smetana and Jaromír Vejvoda, the author of Škoda lásky ("Roll Out the Barrels").
The polka (a 2/4-beat dance of Czech origin) should not be confused with the polska (a Swedish 3/4-beat dance with Polish roots); cf. also polka-mazurka. A related dance is the redowa.
There are various styles of contemporary polka. Of the US types, the North American "Polish-style polka" has roots in Chicago, Illinois, and can be identified as 'Chicago honky' and 'Chicago push' styles. This 'push' version or style of Polka features accordion, concertina, bass, drums, and (almost always) two trumpets. The 'honky' variation of this style uses clarinet and one trumpet, accordion is almost never used in this setting. North American "Slovenian-style polka" is fast and features piano, accordion, and is associated with Cleveland. North American "Dutchman-style" features an oom-pah sound, often with a tuba, and has roots in the American Midwest. "Conjunto-style" has roots in Northern Mexico and Texas, and is also called Norteño. In the 1980s and 1990s several bands began to combine polka with various rock styles, sometimes referred to as "punk polka", "alternative polka" or "San Francisco-style".
Contents |
Samples
- Download a recording of "Jenny Lind", a polka from the Library of Congress' California Gold: Northern California Folk Music from the Thirties Collection; performed by John Selleck (violin) on October 2, 1939 in Camino, California
Some polka artists
- Slavko Avsenik
- Global Kryner -- Austrian band/pop/jazz/polka
- Eddie Blazonczyk -- Chicago push
- Brave Combo -- alternative, two-time Grammy Award winner
- "Happy" Louie Dusseault
- Li'l Wally -- Chicago honky / Chicago push
- Walter Ostanek, Canada, three-time Grammy Award winner -- Slovenian-Canadian
- Jimmy Sturr, United States, fourteen Grammy Awards
- Lawrence Welk
- Whoopee John Wilfahrt -- Dutchman
- Frankie Yankovic -- Slovenian-American
- Eddie Zima -- Chicago push
- Harold Loeffelmacher -- Dutchman/Oompah
- Those Darn Accordions
- Polkacide -- alternative/punk/San Francisco
- Big Lou and her Polka Casserole
- The Dynatones
- "Weird Al" Yankovic
- PAPI CON HUEVOS
- MAMAS CON KULO
See also
- Austrian folk dancing
- polska 3/4-beat Nordic folk dance
- polonaise - 3/4 -beat slow dance of Polish origin
- polka-mazurka - 3/4-beat dance, musically similar to the mazurka
External link
ca:Polca cs:Polka de:Polka es:Polca eo:Polko fr:Polka he:פולקה ja:ポルカ nl:Polka pl:Polka pt:Polca sv:Polka
