A dance of Latin-American origin. The harmonies and basses traditionally associated with it were widely used as material for arias and instrumental variations in the 17th18th-c.
If a stereotypically "classic" chaconne may be described, it is usually (but not always) in major key, in triple meter, begins on the second beat of the bar, and has a theme of four measures (or a close multiple thereof). (In more recent times the chaconne, like the passacaglia, need not be in 3/4 time.)
If we accept the distinction of a chaconne as variations on a harmonic progression, often this harmonic progression may involve a recurrent bass line (ground bass), but this bass line -- let alone the chords involved -- may not always be present in exactly the same manner, although the general outlines remain understood. (Handel's "Chaconne" in G minor for keyboard has only the faintest relationship to the understood form.) The ground bass, if there is one, may typically descend stepwise from the tonic to the dominant pitch of the scale, or the harmony may emphasize the circle of fifths or a derivative pattern thereof.
One of the best known and most masterful and expressive examples of the chaconne is the final movement from the Violin Partita in D minor by Johann Sebastian Bach. (Bach's Goldberg Variations are also frequently reckoned as a multi-movement chaconne, although Bach did not explicitly label the work as such.) After the baroque period, the chaconne fell into decline, though the 32 Variations in C minor by Ludwig van Beethoven belong to the form. (1884-85) Philip Glass: Symphony No.3, third, slow movement (1995) George Frideric Handel: Chaconne from Suite in G minor for clavier Gustav Holst: Chaconne from First Suite in E♭ for Military Band Jean-Baptiste Lully : Chaconne from Phaëton (1683) Johann Pachelbel: Canon in D (see that article for more examples using the chord progression of Pachelbel's Canon) Henry Purcell: Chacony for strings and continuo in G minor Z.730 (1680) Tomaso Antonio Vitali: Chaconne in G Minor for Solo Violin (a 19th century mystification) Michiru Yamane: Chaconne in C minor from the soundtrack of Demon Castle Dracula X: Nocturne in the Moonlight, Saturn version.
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