Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The crowd forms a large farandole around fire, until it goes out.
The crowd is singing and dancing a farandole as it waits for the start of a race.
Marlier also took part in the Farandole series, intended for children.
Later he asks the town band to play the Farandole from the same Bizet piece.
The most famous dance is the farandole.
The farandole is also frequently presented as a medieval dance, based on surviving iconography.
The farandole is a line dance.
The farandole bears similarities to the gavotte, jig, and tarantella.
Her thesis was on the farandole (or chain dance) in its folk, aristocratic and theatrical forms.
Farandole (www.hotel-la-farandole.com; 0476 805045) One of only two 4-stars.
This is an expanded combination of numbers 22-24 of the original incidental music, in which the farandole appears first on its own.
The farandole is an open-chain community dance popular in the County of Nice, France.
The finale, the farandole, incorporates the theme of the March of the Kings once again.
A rock version of Farandole appears in the Catherine (video game) by Atlus.
Farandole (1945)
Ello lo dice (Farandole of believers - Nothing.
The farandole was first described in detail by the English folklorist Violet Alford in 1932.
Jazz musician Bob James arranged and recorded a jazz version of Farandole on his album Two (1975).
La farandole des animaux.
Currently, the popular punk/ska band Streetlight Manifesto opens their shows to the tune of Farandole.
La grande farandole (TV series) (1964)
The Carillon and Farandole were used on two episodes of Playhouse Disney's Little Einsteins.
La Grande Farandole (1961-1967)
"Farandole" (Bizet)
Georges Bizet features the farandole as the fourth and concluding movement of his second L'Arlésienne suite (1872).