{"@context":{"dc":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/","skos":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2004\/02\/skos\/core#","skos:broader":{"@type":"@id"},"skos:inScheme":{"@type":"@id"},"skos:related":{"@type":"@id"},"skos:narrower":{"@type":"@id"},"skos:hasTopConcept":{"@type":"@id"},"skos:topConceptOf":{"@type":"@id"}},"@id":"https:\/\/vocabularios.eca.usp.br\/vcaa\/skos\/5444","@type":"skos:Concept","skos:prefLabel":{"@language":"pt-BR","@value=":"bolero"},"skos:inScheme":"https:\/\/vocabularios.eca.usp.br\/vcaa\/","dct:created":"2021-04-19 18:40:07","skos:scopeNote":[{"@lang":"en-US","@value":"A Spanish popular dance or song.\u00a0Varying interpretations of the dance are found in Mexico, Cuba and other Latin American countries, especially Colombia and Venezuela. The Cuban bolero is a duple-metre dance that exhibits closer relationships with the habanera and Afro-Cuban musical styles than with its Spanish counterpart. It is a binary song form that developed from such 19th-century forms as the conga,\u00a0danz\u00f3n\u00a0and\u00a0contradanza.\nFonte: Grove Music Online\nhttps:\/\/doi.org\/10.1093\/gmo\/9781561592630.article.03444 "}]}