The farandole is an open-chain community dance popular in the County of Nice, France. The farandole bears similarities to the gavotte, jig, and tarantella. The carmagnole of the French Revolution is a derivative.
Traditionally led by the abbat-mage holding a ribboned halberd, the dancers hold hands and skip at every beat; strong beats on one foot, alternating left and right, with the other foot in the air, and weak beats with both feet together. In the village of Belvédère, on the occasion of the festival honoring patron Saint Blaise, the most recently-married couple leads the dance.
Musically, the dance is in 6/8 time, with a moderate to fast tempo, and played by a flute and drum. Georges Bizet included a farandole in his L'Arlésienne suite.
Many people use a variety of questionable evidence to argue that the farandole has a history going back to the Middle Ages. While there are descriptions of line and circle dances, and iconography showing people dancing in lines and circles[1], there is no evidence that the medieval dance was done like the modern folk farandole. Arbeau, the most well-known source for renaissance line and circle dances such as the branle, does not contain any dance with these specific steps and figures.
In Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty ballet the dames propose a farandole in Scene IV of the Second Act.
A farandole is present in the classical saxophone piece 'Tableaux de Provence' by Paule Maurice, and makes up the first movement out of 5.
During his time in the 80's metal band "Talas", Billy Sheehan wrote a song called "The Farandole". It includes an electric and bass guitar soloing together with drums keeping up the rhythm. In their early days Dream Theater (then only consisting of Johns Myung and Petrucci and Mike Portnoy) did a go on this song, available on The Majesty Demos 1985-1986 of the YtseJam Records Official Bootleg Series.
In Madeleine L'Engle's A Wind in the Door, the Farandolae are fictional creatures that live inside mitochondria, and do circular "dances" around their "trees of origin."
Jazz musician Bob James arranged and recorded a jazz version of Farandole from Bizet's L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2 on his album Two (1975).
Currently, the popular punk/ska band Streetlight Manifesto opens their shows to the tune of Farandole.