Febus
From Cunnan
Jump to navigationJump to search
Febus is a 15th Century Italian Dance which appears in seven different manuscripts. It is classified as a bassadanza.
Reconstruction
This dance is performed by three people. The original instructions call for one man and two women.
Steps used
- continentia left and right (CL and CR)
- sempio left and right (SL and SR)
- doppio left and right (DL and DR)
- riverentia (Rv)
- ripresa left and right (RpL and RpR)
- mezavolta right (MzvR)
- saltarello left and right (SlL, SlR)
- voltatonda left (VtL)
Choreography
- The three dancers begin in a line, side by side facing up the hall, and holding hands. The man is standing in the centre.
- The dancers perform a continentia left and then right. They then perform two sempi, one doppio left and a ripresa right. This sequence is performed again, however while the women perform the final ripresa the man performs a mezavolta to face down the hall.
CL, CR
SL, SR, DL
RpR
CL, CR
SL, SR, DL
RpR (women) - MzvR (man)
- Everybody perfoms two dopi, so that the man moves away from the two women. Everybody perform a mezavolta to face each other again, and then perfome two sempi and two dopi, with the man passing between the two women. All perform a mezavolata right again, a ripresa left then right and a riverentia.
DL, DR
MzvR, SL, SR
DL, DR
MzvR, RpL
RpR, RvL
- With the man passing between the women again, all perform 2 saltarelli. Next perform another mezavolta to face each other again, and perform three ripresa, left, right and left. Perform a voltatonda by doing a sempi right and sempio right and a sempio left turing in a full circle over your left shoulder, and then perform a ripresa right.
SlR, SlL
MzvR, RpL
RpR, RpL
VtL, RpR
- To complete the dance everybody performs two sempi to come into a straight line. The women then perform a mezavolta right. Joing hands everybody perform a ripresa left, a ripresa right and a riverenita left.
SL, SR, women MzvR
RpL, RpR
RvL
Music
The original music does not survive. Music for this dance is needed.