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・ Kamargoria
・ Kamarhati
・ Kamarhati (Vidhan Sabha constituency)
・ Kamari
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・ Kamari, Hamadan
・ Kamari, Iran
・ Kamari, Lorestan
・ Kamaria Durant
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Kamarinskaya
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・ Kamaritsa
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・ Kamarkati
・ Kamarkawarai-tepui
・ Kamarkhanda Upazila
・ Kamarkuh
・ Kamarkundu
・ Kamarkundu railway station
・ Kamarlu
・ Kamarlu (disambiguation)
・ Kamarna
・ Kamaro Sharif railway station
・ Kamarou Fassassi


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Kamarinskaya : ウィキペディア英語版
Kamarinskaya
Kamarinskaya ((ロシア語:камаринская)) is a Russian traditional folk dance, which is mostly known today as the Russian composer Mikhail Glinka's composition of the same name. Glinka's ''Kamarinskaya'', written in 1848, was the first orchestral work based entirely on Russian folk song and to use the compositional principles of that genre to dictate the form of the music. It became a touchstone for the following generation of Russian composers ranging from the Western-oriented Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky to the group of nationalists known collectively as The Five and was also lauded abroad, most notably by French composer Hector Berlioz.
==Traditional Kamarinskaya==
According to musicologist Richard Taruskin, the traditional ''Kamarinskaya'' is "a quick dance tune" otherwise known as a ''nagriish'', distinctive for its three-bar phrase lengths, which are played in an endless number of variations in moto perpetuo fashion by an instrumentalist. This tune usually accompanies a squatting dance often called a ''Kazatsky'' (especially since in the West it has been associated in romantic fashion with Cossacks) and is played traditionally by a fiddler, a balalika player or a concertina player〔Taruskin, ''Russian'', 127.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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