Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Kolo (dance)

South Slavic circle dance From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kolo (dance)
Remove ads

Kolo (Serbian: Коло) is a South Slavic circle dance, found under this name in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia. It is inscribed on the UNESCO List of Intangible Cultural Heritage for Serbia.[1]

Quick facts Native name, Genre ...
Quick facts Country, Reference ...
Thumb
Serbian kolo from Timok
Thumb
Serbian kolo from Vranje
Remove ads

Description

The circle dance is usually performed amongst groups of at least three people and up to several dozen people. Dancers hold each other's hands or each other's waists. They form a circle, a single chain or multiple parallel lines.[2][3]

Kolo requires almost no movement above the waist. The basic steps are easy to learn. Experienced dancers demonstrate virtuosity by adding different ornamental elements, such as syncopated steps. Each region has at least one unique kolo.[2][3] It is difficult to master the dance and even most experienced dancers cannot master all of them.[3]

Thumb
Bosnian kolo

Kolo is performed at weddings, social, cultural, and religious ceremonies.[4] Some dances require both men and women to dance together, others require only the men or only the women.

Music

The music is generally fast-paced.[4] The dance was used by Antonín Dvořák in his Slavonic Dances – the Serbian kolo is the seventh dance from opus 72.[5]

Remove ads

Traditional dance costume

Traditional dance costumes vary from region to region. Bordering regions are mostly more similar to each other.[6]

Various kolos are performed at social ceremonies. Often traditional clothing, which is unique to a region, is worn. The most common kolo is the narodno kolo or drmeš; a standard step followed by accordion music.

Other South Slavic circle dances

Elsewhere in South Slavic countries, there is horo (Bulgarian: хоро) in Bulgaria and oro (Macedonian: оро) in North Macedonia and Montenegro.[4]

Influence

Hungarian communities were also influenced by the tradition, where a similar dance is known as Kalala in Laslovo.[7]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads