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  1. May 14, 2018 · The same as divertimento, with the additional meaning of an entertainment of dances and songs inserted in an 18th-cent. stage spectacle or sometimes in a ballet or opera (as in Gounod's Faust or Delibes's Coppélia ). The term is also applied to a suite of dances unconnected by a story.

    • Waltz

      waltz / wôlts / • n. a dance in triple time performed by a...

  2. During the 17th and 18th century, the term implied incidental aspects of an entertainment (usually involving singing and dancing) that might be inserted in an opera or ballet or other stage performance.

  3. The same as divertimento, with the additional meaning of an entertainment of dances and songs inserted in an 18thcent. stage spectacle or sometimes in a ballet or opera (as in Gounod's Faust or Delibes's Coppélia). The term is also applied to a suite of dances unconnected by a story.

  4. May 23, 2024 · Divertissement is a musical term for a song within an opera or ballet which does not further the plot. It is also a ballet made entirely of such loosely connected dances and an instrumental piece of light music. The term is originally a French word meaning diversion or amusement.

    • Laura Metz
  5. Divertissement is a 1930 reworking of incidental music that Ibert had composed the year before for a well-known theatrical farce, The Italian Straw Hat, from 1851 by the nineteenth-century dramatists, Labiche and Marc-Michel. While perhaps obscure to most Americans today, the play has an important place in the genre.

  6. Divertimento, 18th-century musical genre of a light and entertaining nature usually consisting of several movements for strings, winds, or both. The movements included sonata forms, variation forms, dances, and rondos. One of Joseph Haydn’s numerous divertimenti is a sextet written for a double.

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  8. Divertissement is the French equivalent of “diversion,” in the sense of amusement or entertainment; this title Ibert gave to the concert suite he drew from his incidental music to a 1929 production of one of the greatest French farces, The Italian Straw Hat, by Eugène Labiche (1815-1858).

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