Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
slowfox
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
English
Etymology
Noun
slowfox (plural slowfoxes)
- (music) A slow foxtrot.
- 1980, Grove, George, Sir, 1820-1900. Dictionary of music and musicians; Sadie, Stanley, The New Grove dictionary of music and musicians:
- During the 1920s it developed into two distinct styles, a slow dance in the English style (later called simply the ‘foxtrot’ in English-speaking countries and France and the ‘slowfox’ in German-speaking countries) and the ‘quickstep’ (in German-speaking countries called the ‘foxtrott’).
- 1995, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Boston Symphony Orchestra concert programs, 1994-1995, Subscription, Volume 02, Season 114:
- Suddenly the tempo changes to that of a "Slowfox," as the score says — that is, the current dance rage, the fox-trot — and a light-textured central passage begins to swing more and more intensely, finally breaking out again in the fast opening material that brings the concerto to its invigorating close.
Remove ads
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads