One of the simplest couple dances of the nineteenth century was the galop (gallop, galopade, gallopade), which traveled from the ballrooms of continental Europe to those of England and American in the 1820s and 1830s, often as part of quadrilles or country dances. It was also -- by the middle of the century, predominantly -- a dance for individual couples, though it continued to appear in quadrille figures and occasional country dances throughout the nineteenth century. It is described in just about every surviving French, English, and American source for couple dancing from the mid-nineteenth century into the early years of the twentieth. I have cited a few of these in the text below; a complete bibliography would run multiple pages.
The galop is an aerobic dance done at a rapid pace. One of the few manuals to include tempo notes, M.B. Gilbert's Round Dancing (Portland, Maine, 1890) gives a tempo of 144 beats per minute
for the galop, as opposed to 116 beats per minute for the polka. La Danse
(Washington Lopp; Paris, 1903) agrees with those tempos (Lopp borrowed heavily from Gilbert) and adds 120 beats per minute for the two-step.
Coulon's handbook (third edition; London, c1860) describes the lively nature of the dance in its untamed form:
The Gallopade has had a long reign of nearly twenty years, and is
still in high favour at public balls in Paris, as well as at Jullien's bal
masqué in London. There is no dance more exciting, or easy to learn, it
requires only a good ear to mark the time of the music. The chief
requisite in this dance is to keep on one's feet, for there is great
danger if once you fall that you will have those who follow over you,
like the Capucins de Cartes. This power once acquired, you have only to
throw yourself in the volcanic tourbillon and fellow the course of the
stream, which with very little attention will be easily understood.
The Gallopade has recently been re-introduced in private society, where it is not customary to race as at a masquerade. They merely make a few steps of the galop
and pass into the valse à deux temps. In this way the gallopade becomes
a spirited and graceful dance instead of a tremendous rush.
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