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==Modern use== The step used in the pavane survives to the modern day in the ''hesitation step'' sometimes used at weddings. More recent works titled "pavane" often have a deliberately archaic mood. Examples include: * ''[[Pavane (Fauré)|Pavane]]'' (1887) by [[Gabriel Fauré]], a modern version of the Renaissance genre. {{Listen |type=music |title=Pavane pour une infante défunte |filename=Maurice Ravel - Thérèse Dussaut - Pavane pour une infante défunte.ogg |description=By [[Maurice Ravel]]. Performed by [[Thérèse Dussaut]]. }} * ''Tears and Pavan'' (2018) by [[The Strawbs]] * ''Pavan'' (2015) by [[Julian Bream]] * ''[[Pavane pour une infante défunte]]'' (1899) by [[Maurice Ravel]]. * The third part of the [[Piano Suite No. 2]] Op. 10, by [[George Enescu]] (1903) * ''Pavane'' from [[Peter Warlock]]’s ''[[Capriol Suite]]'' (1926) * ''De la Mare's Pavane'' from [[Herbert Howells]]' ''[[List of compositions by Herbert Howells|Lambert's Clavichord]]'' (1927) * The "Pavane of the Sons of the Morning" that closes scene 7 of ''[[Job: A Masque for Dancing]]'', a [[ballet]] composed by [[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] in 1930 and first staged in 1931. * "Pavane, the Girl with the Flaxen Hair", a dramatic script written and directed by [[Wyllis Cooper]], inspired in part by Debussy's composition,{{clarify|date=September 2011}}<!--"The Girl with the Flaxen Hair" is by Debussy, not Ravel; or is it Ravel's "Pavane pour une infante défunte" that is meant?--> for the old-time radio series ''[[Quiet, Please]]'' (1947). * ''[[The Moor's Pavane]]'' (1949), a ballet choreographed by [[José Limón]]. * The science fiction novel ''[[Pavane (novel)|Pavane]]'' (1968) by British author [[Keith Roberts]], about an alternative history in which Queen Elizabeth I is assassinated and the Armada wins in the year 1588, using the musical term as a metaphor for the book's setting. * The song "Pavan" (1970) from the progressive folk album ''[[Evensong (album)|Evensong]]'' by [[Amazing Blondel]]. * The first part of Maurice Ravel's ''[[Ma mère l'oye]]'' suite (1910), entitled "Pavane for the Sleeping Beauty", covered (as ''"Pavanne"'') by [[Joe Walsh]] on his album ''[[So What (Joe Walsh album)|So What]]'' (1974). * The fourth movement of the suite "The Fall of the House of Usher" from the progressive rock album ''[[Tales of Mystery and Imagination (Alan Parsons Project album)|Tales of Mystery and Imagination]]'' by [[The Alan Parsons Project]] (1976). * The song "Pavane" by [[Jon Lord]] of the band [[Deep Purple]], written and recorded for his solo album ''[[Sarabande (album)|Sarabande]]'' (1976). * "Pavane for a Dead Princess" (1978), a jazz version of Maurice Ravel's composition by Art Farmer and Jim Hall, released on the album ''[[Big Blues (Art Farmer album)|Big Blues]]''. * "Pavane: She's So Fine" (1994) from ''[[John's Book of Alleged Dances]]'' by [[John Adams (composer)|John Adams]]. * The title of a song from ''[[Verehrt und angespien]]'' (1999), the second studio album of the folk metal band [[In Extremo]]. * "Pavane (Thoughts of a Septuagenarian)" (2000) by the [[Esbjörn Svensson Trio]]. * The title of a song from ''[[Water Forest (album)|Water Forest]]'' (2003), an album by [[Rurutia]]. * "A Sad Pavan for These Distracted Times" is part IX of [[Vladimír Godár]]'s "Querela Pacis" ("Complaint of Peace") oratorio (2010). [[Thomas Tomkins]] composed a piece with the same title in 1649.{{clarify|date=January 2016}}<!--Pure coincidence, or is there some connection?--> Sir [[Peter Maxwell Davies]] composed one also, in 2004. The 'distracted times' refer to the execution of British king Charles I. * [[Eric Clapton]] released an acoustic demo song on his Facebook Page on September 30, 2014: "Pavane for Jay A", as a homage to skateboard pioneer [[Jay Adams]], who died on August 15, 2014, aged 53.
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