Jump to content

Tamzara: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Ali55te (talk | contribs)
A random Azerbaijani persons claim in Azerbaijani language does not make this a reference. Please use international objective references
Ali55te (talk | contribs)
Completely irrelevant information without any reference, some references added for relevant information
Line 7: Line 7:


==Style==
==Style==
This dancing is played by the [[folklore]] dancing collective of [[Vayxır, Sharur|Vaykhir]], [[Azerbaijan]], cultural house joining their little fingers. Firstly they step three steps ahead and strike their left feet on the ground and then they put their left feet ahead and for a while stand on it, then they make three little steps back and speed their actions a bit more in the second part with the actions of the first part.


All Tamzara's have the unique [[9/8]] [[Usul (music)|Evfer]] rhythm, with the two accented beats at the end of each measure. In addition, the melody to most Tamzara's is very similar, though there are exceptions. Like most Anatolian folk dances, Tamzara is done as a "[[Armenian line dance|line dance]]" or "[[circle dance]]", with a large group of people with interlocked pinkies. However one version of the Tamzara is done by a man with one or two women standing shoulder to shoulder facing the same direction with their arms around each other's waists.
All Tamzara's have the unique [[9/8]] [[Usul (music)|Evfer]] rhythm, with the two accented beats at the end of each measure. In addition, the melody to most Tamzara's is very similar, though there are exceptions. Like most Anatolian folk dances, Tamzara is done as a "[[Armenian line dance|line dance]]" or "[[circle dance]]", with a large group of people with interlocked pinkies. However one version of the Tamzara is done by a man with one or two women standing shoulder to shoulder facing the same direction with their arms around each other's waists.


An Armenian-American variation of the Tamzara, invented in [[Fresno]], California, involves two lines of people facing each other, partners being the people opposite each other. Tamzara is one of the most popular Armenian folk dances to have been preserved in the United States by the Armenian-American community.
Tamzara is one of the most popular Armenian folk dances to have been preserved in the United States by the Armenian-American community <ref>[http://www.folkdance.com/LDNotations/Tamzara2001LD.pdf Tamzara, Folk Dance Federation of California]</ref>.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 01:25, 10 March 2015

Tamzara (Template:Lang-hy; Template:Lang-az; Template:Lang-tr; Template:Lang-el) is an Armenian (Hemshin peoples, Crypto-Armenians),[1] Assyrian, Chveneburi and Greek (Karamanlides, Cappadocian Greeks, Pontians)[2] folk dance native to Anatolia.[3] Name is derived from an Armenian village located in the region of Nikopolis (now Sebinkarahisar).[4][dead link] This dance was especially popular in the regions of Erzincan, Erzurum, Kiğı, Arabkir, Elazığ, and Malatya. There are many versions of Tamzara, with slightly different music and steps, coming from the various regions and old villages in Anatolia.

History and description

Legend has it that the dance was brought to Anatolia by the ancient Assyrians during there conquest of the region in the Assyrian empire[5][6] in commemoration to the god of food and vegetation Tammuz.

The meaning of this dance, which is famous in the villages of Charchibogan, Chomakhtur and other villages of Sharur region, is “Gizili tanbatan” (Half golden) in word by word translation and today Tanzara is included to the repertoire of the folklore dancing collectives respectively. The women dancing used to put on all kinds of golden things, dressed luxuriously–including rings, ear-rings, bracelets, chains etc. and those women resembled beauty and sparkling.

Style

All Tamzara's have the unique 9/8 Evfer rhythm, with the two accented beats at the end of each measure. In addition, the melody to most Tamzara's is very similar, though there are exceptions. Like most Anatolian folk dances, Tamzara is done as a "line dance" or "circle dance", with a large group of people with interlocked pinkies. However one version of the Tamzara is done by a man with one or two women standing shoulder to shoulder facing the same direction with their arms around each other's waists.

Tamzara is one of the most popular Armenian folk dances to have been preserved in the United States by the Armenian-American community [7].

See also

References