The
notation alla polacca ( means "polonaise") on a
musical score indicates that the piece should be played with the rhythm and character of a polonaise. For example, the third movement of Beethoven's
Triple Concerto op. 56, marked "Rondo alla polacca," the last movement in Weber's
Clarinet Concerto No. 2 is marked "Alla Polacca", his
Horn Concertino likewise ends with a polka movement, and the finale of Chopin's
Variations on "Là ci darem la mano" both feature this notation. In his book
Classic Music: Expression, Form, and Style, Leonard G. Ratner cites the fourth movement from Beethoven's
Serenade in D major, Op. 8, marked "Allegretto alla Polacca," as a representative example of the polonaise dance topic (Ratner 1980, pp. 12–13).
Frédéric Chopin's
polonaises are generally the best known of all polonaises in
classical music. But there was a long tradition of polonaise in European music at least 100 years before Chopin. Händel wrote a famous one, and Wilhelm Fiedemann Bach wrote a number of beautiful ones in major minor pairs. Other composers who wrote polonaises or pieces in polonaise rhythm include
Johann Sebastian Bach,
George Frideric Handel,
Georg Philipp Telemann,
Joseph Haydn,
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
Ludwig van Beethoven,
Franz Danzi,
Bernhard Henrik Crusell,
Karol Kurpiński,
Józef Elsner,
Maria Agata Szymanowska,
Henryk Wieniawski,
Franz Schubert,
Carl Maria von Weber,
Clara Schumann,
Robert Schumann,
Franz Liszt,
Johann Kaspar Mertz,
Moritz Moszkowski,
Modest Mussorgsky,
Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov,
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and
Alexander Scriabin. Another more recent prolific polonaise composer was the American
Edward Alexander MacDowell.
John Philip Sousa wrote the
Presidential Polonaise, intended to keep visitors moving briskly through the
White House receiving line. Sousa wrote it in 1886 after a suggestion from then-President of the United States
Chester A. Arthur, who found it undignified, temporarily replacing
Hail to the Chief as the presidential march under Sousa's leadership of the
United States Marine Band. Tchaikovsky's opera
Eugene Onegin, an adaption of Alexander Pushkin's novel in poetry verse, includes a famous polonaise. ==National dance==