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  2. Romy Gosz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romy_Gosz

    The very next night, they played a golden anniversary at the J.D. Prokash hall in Rockwood, Wisconsin, and the night after that, the group played a sixtieth wedding anniversary dance. [ 2 ] A few years later, Gosz's father Paul decided to work more at his day job at the local lime kiln , Allwood Lime Company, and he handed the management of the ...

  3. Chicken scratch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_scratch

    Chicken scratch (also known as waila music) is a kind of dance music developed by the Tohono O'odham people. The genre evolved out of acoustic fiddle bands in southern Arizona, in the Sonoran Desert. These bands began playing European and Mexican tunes, in styles that include the polka, schottisch and mazurka. [1]

  4. Polka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polka

    Polka is a dance style and genre of dance music in 2 4 originating in nineteenth-century Bohemia , now part of the Czech Republic . Though generally associated with Czech and Central European culture , polka is popular throughout Europe and the Americas.

  5. Polkas for a Gloomy World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polkas_for_a_Gloomy_World

    The Washington Post wrote that the album "proves the polka can be every bit as invigorating as a Cajun two-step, another dance music rescued from wedding-reception hell." [12] The Chicago Tribune stated that Brave Combo "plays Polish polkas and waltzes, German polkas, Czech drinking songs and conjunto and tejano tunes, or 'Mexican polkas'...

  6. Talk:Polka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Polka

    Created a section on the different styles of Polka music. Other well Known Polka songs besides Roll Out the Barrel (Beer Barrel Polka) from the czech writer Jaromír Vejvoda (Škoda lásky). Discuss Polka music in pop culture. Explain in more detail what a Polka dance is. Include some pictures if possible of Polka dancers in action.

  7. Galop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galop

    Copper engraving of the "Great Galop" of Johann Strauss (1839). Galop rhythm. [1]In dance, the galop, named after the fastest running gait of a horse (see Gallop), a shortened version of the original term galoppade, is a lively country dance, introduced in the late 1820s to Parisian society by the Duchesse de Berry and popular in Vienna, Berlin and London.

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  9. Polonaise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polonaise

    The polonaise dance influenced European ballrooms, folk music and European classical music. The polonaise has a rhythm quite close to that of the Swedish semiquaver or sixteenth-note polska, and the two dances share a common origin. Polska dance was introduced to Sweden during the period of the Vasa dynasty and the Polish–Swedish union.