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1. ceilidh -- (an informal social gathering at which there is Scottish
or Irish folk music and singing and folk dancing and story telling)
During recent history, a Ceilidh has meant a party where a band of musicians
would play live Scottish music and other traditional country dances. It
is a very energetic, informal dancing style where you dance in different
groups all night. It is an relaxed opportunity to meet and dance with
a lot of people, and because the dances are so energetic, it is quite
usual to pause for a chat and a drink between dances, or you can just
watch the other dancers and enjoy the atmosphere.
Ceilidh is a word from Gaelic the ancient Scottish and Irish Language
that survives today in the Highlands, Western Isles and parts or Rural
Ireland. Translated into English, Ceilidh literally means a gathering
of people in an informal social get-together. In bygone days neighbours
would gather round the warmth of a peat fire in a thatched cottage and
spend long winter nights in story and song.
The ceilidh was primarily entertainment but at certain times during the
troubled relationship between Scotland and England a ceilidh would have
been an opportunity for the highlanders to meet and plan their campaigns
against the English. It was an opportunity to discuss politics in their
native Gaelic, a language that may have been disapproved of by the English
speaking Lords. More generally it was a social gathering where through
anecdote and folk-tale, the old people would tell the community's history,
and the youngsters would listen and learn. More recently the word Ceilidh
has centered around the idea of a party with a band playing traditional
Scottish Country dances.
Enquire about
booking a Ceilidh band for an event.
Dance instructions
The Britannia Twostep
Formation: in threes around the room facing anti-clockwise, man between
two ladies.
Music: 6/8 pipe march.
Bars: Description
1: Nearer hands joined, touch the left heel then the left toe to the floor,
bouncing on the right foot with each touch.
2: All skip to the left for one step.
3-4: Repeat 1-2 with the opposite feet.
5-8: Skip forward for two steps, then backwards for two steps.
9-10: Set on the spot facing forwards.
11-12: Still setting, the man raises his arms and the ladies turn underneath.
13-16: Skip forward for two steps, then backwards for two steps.
Repeat ad lib.
The Canadian or Highland Barn Dance
Formation: couples around the room facing anti-clockwise, ladies on the
right.
Music: 2/4 or 4/4 pipe march (not 6/8) or scottische.
Bars: Description
1-2: Starting with the outside foot, walk forward for three steps and
hop (or kick).
3-4: Walk backwards for three steps and hop.
5-6: Skip sideways away from your partner (men towards the centre of the
room, ladies towards the edge) for two steps and clap.
7-8: Return to partner and join in ballroom (waltz) hold.
9-12: In ballroom hold, skip sideways to the man's left, lady's right
for two steps then back again.
13-16: Use four step-hops to polka anti-clockwise round the room.
Repeat ad lib.
The Circassian Circle
Formation: Large circle round the room, ladies on the right of their partner.
Music: 32 bar Reels.
Bars: Description
1-4: Hands joined in a circle, all advance for four steps, retire for
four steps.
5-8: Repeat.
9-12: Drop hands, ladies advance and retire.
13-16: Men advance, turn round and walk out to the next lady CW (the one
who was on their left; the one who is now to the right of their partner
as they view).
17-24: All spin with new partners
25-32: Hands crossed in front (right to right and left to left), ladies
on the outside, promenade ACW around the room.
Repeat ad lib.
The Cumberland Square Eight
This is normally danced to tunes in common time (32 bar and the dance
is 64 bars long) but can be and is sometimes done to jigs (6/8 tempo).
I'll get round to adding the description at some point.
The Dashing White Sergeant
Formation: three facing three around the room, man between two ladies
or lady between two men.
Music: The Dashing White Sergeant - 32 bar reels, starting and ending
with "The Dashing White Sergeant".
Bars: Description
1-8: Join up in a circle of 6 and circle round to the left for 8 steps
(4 bars) and back to the right.
9-12: The person in the middle turns to the person on their right and
sets to them, then turns them once round right hand (variation - both
hands). The other partner stands still.
13-16: Repeat with the other partner.
17-24: Using elbow grip, turn 1st partner, then 2nd partner, then 1st
partner, then 2nd partner. (Variation - dance a reel of three, giving
left shoulder to 1st partner to start).
25-28: In the lines of three, advance towards each other (two skip steps)
and retire.
29-32: Both lines dance forwards, one line raising their hands in an arch
and the other line dancing underneath, and dance on to meet the next set
of three coming in the other direction.
Repeat with new three.
The Eightsome Reel
Formation: four couples arranged around a square, lady on the right of
the man. Couple with their backs to the music are couple number 1, couple
on their left number 2, couple opposite number 3 and couple on the right
number 4 (ie numbering clockwise).
Music: Lively reels, played 40 bars for the first time through, plus
8 lots of 48-bar repetitions, plus a final 40 bars. "The Deil Amagn
the Tailors" is commonly used for the first and last 40 bars; other
tunes often used include "Soldier's Joy", "Mrs MacLeod
of Raasay", "The Fairy Dance", "The Mason's Apron".
Bars: Description
Chorus:
1-8: All join hands in a circle and circle round to the left for 8 steps
(four bars) and back.
9-12: Ladies join right hands in the middle, and hold partners around
waist, and all dance right hands across in a star (wheel).
13-16: Swing round (couples still holding around the waist) so the men
join left hands, and dance back with a left hand star.
17-20: Face partners and set twice.
21-24: Spin partners (turn RH).
25-40: Giving right hands to partner to start, dance a grand chain around
the set (keep going in the same direction and give right hand, then left
hand, then right hand, ... until you get back to place). If you get back
early, spin until the end of the phrase.
Figure - repeat 8 times
1-8: 1st lady goes into the centre of the set and sets while the others
circle round to the left and back.
9-16: 1st lady sets to partner, turns him, sets to opposite man and turns
him.
17-24: 1st lady turns partner, opposite man, partner, opposite man (variation
- dance a reel of three with partner and opposite man, giving left shoulder
to partner to start).
25-32: Repeat bars 1-8.
33-48: Repeat bars 9-24 with side men.
Repeat Figure with 2nd lady, 3rd lady, 4th lady, 1st man, 2nd man, 3rd
man, 4th man in the centre.
Chorus: Repeat the 40 bars of the start of the dance.
The Gay Gordons
Formation: couples around the room facing anti-clockwise, ladies on the
right.
Music: 2/4 or 4/4 march. E.g. "Scotland the Brave", "The
Gay Gordons".
Bars: Description
1-2: Right hands joined over lady's shoulder (man's arm behind her back)
and left hands joined in front, walk forward for four steps, starting
on the right foot.
3-4: Still moving in the same direction, and without letting go, pivot
on the spot (so left hand is behind lady and right hand is in front) and
take four steps backwards.
5-8: Repeat in the opposite direction.
9-12: Drop left hands, raise right hands above lady's head. Lady pivots
on the spot. (The man may set).
13-16: Joining hands in ballroom hold, polka round the room.
Repeat ad lib.
For scottish country dancers, the grip in the first eight bars is allemande
hold.
Highland Schottische
Formation: couples in a circle around the room, ladies on the outside,
men on the inside, joined in ballroom hold with partners.
Music: Schottische.
Bars: Description
1-2 Men with left foot, ladies with right, point toe in 2nd, bring foot
up in front of shin (3rd aerial), point in 2nd and bring foot up behind
calf (3rd rear aerial). Bounce on supporting foot on each of these four
beats.
3-4 Step onto that foot, close other foot behind, step onto the original
working foot again, and close original supporting foot behind calf.
5-8 Repeat 1-4 with other leg.
9-10 Repeat 3-4 (ie step, close, step, hop).
11-12 Repeat 7-8 (ie 9-10 in other direction).
13-16 Polka as in Canadian barn dance - step, hop, step, hop - rotating
clockwise and following line of dance anticlockwise around the room.
Repeat ad lib.
There follow chapter, verse, chorus and encore on the "Schottische"
(for whom it may concern !) from Charles Gore:
The Highland Schottische was introduced in 1855 and was known by the
name of "the Balmoral Schottische"
(Robbie Shepherd, who knows all there is to know - and quite a lot besides
- about Scottish Dancing)
Scott Skinner published a "Balmoral Schottische" in his Elgin
Collection (1884); on the same page of this collection is a tune of his
called "Glenlivet" which describes as Strathspey or Highland
Schottische.
[From a Dictionary of Music]; "Schottische (English !), Schottisch
(German "Scottish", a misnomer since there is no evidence of
Scottish origin); the German Polka, a round dance of the mid-19th cent.
Some books confuse it with the Ecossaise, which is a country dance and
thus very different. Both are in simple duple time.
[From Caoimhin Mac Aoidh, "Between the Jigs and the Reels"]:
The Berlin Polkey was a popular dance in Donegal maybe in the late 19th
c. and up to 1930 or so. The Highland is special to Donegal; though universally
so called "it appears to have originated from the Schottische, a
dance of German origin". "The Highland as commonly performed
throughout Donegal today is a couple dance (ie. a girl and a boy)",
dancing first side by side, then face to face. The term "Highland
Schottische" appears to have arisen to differentiate it from a "German
Scottische". "A Barn Dance in Donegal has the unusual title
of the "german". [Are you still with me ?]
There is no precise equivalent in Gaelic.
Highland Scottisches seem to have been danced (traditionally) to tunes
like "Orange and Blue", "Lad wi' the Plaidie", "Cathkin
Braes" and "John MacAlpine" (aka: Oft in thStilly Night).
They all look like strathspeys to me!
Charlie
The Military Twostep
Formation: couples around the room facing anti-clockwise, ladies on the
right.
Music: 6/8 pipe march.
Bars: Description
1-2: Lady with hand on man's shoulder, man with arm around waist, touch
heel then toe of outer foot to ground twice, bouncing on the inner foot
with each touch.
3-4: Walk forward for three steps then turn towards each other to face
in the opposite direction.
5-8: Repeat in the opposite direction.
9-10: Facing partner and joining both hands, bounce on both feet, then
kick the right foot across the body (to the left), followed by the left
foot across the body (to the right).
11-12: The man raises his left hand and the lady turns underneath (dropping
the other hand).
13-16: Polka around the room.
Repeat ad lib.
The Pride of Erin Waltz
Formation: couples around the room facing anti-clockwise, ladies on the
right.
Music: 32 bar waltzes.
Bars: Description
1-4: Nearer hands joined, swing the inner leg (and joined hands) forward
and back, then walk forwards.
5-8: Repeat in the opposite direction.
9-10: Facing partner, both hands joined, and heading clockwise, cross
trailing leg over leading leg (ie right over left for ladies, left over
right for men), then point with leading leg.
11-12: Repeat in opposite direction.
13-16: Take four steps anti-clockwise, pulling leading shoulder back to
face alternately away from and towards your partner with each step.
17-24: Joining both hands, swing together (slightly to the right of partner)
and away, then change places, turning the lady under the man's left arm
while doing so. Repeat.
25-28: In ballroom hold, take two steps anti-clockwise, then two clockwise.
29-32: Waltz round the room.
Repeat ad lib.
The St. Bernard's Waltz
Formation: couples around the room in ballroom hold heading anti-clockwise,
ladies on the outside.
Music: waltzes.
Bars: Description
1-4: In ballroom hold, take three steps sideways towards the lady's right,
man's left, then stamp both feet.
5-6: Take two steps sideways in the opposite direction.
7-8: Take two steps towards the centre of the room (lady heading forwards
with right foot then left foot, man backwards with left foot then right).
9-10: Take two steps back out (same feet).
11-12: Lady turns about on the spot under the joined hands.
13-16: Waltz onwards round the room.
Repeat ad lib.
Strip the Willow
Formation: Longwise sets of 4 couples, men on the right and ladies on
the left as viewed from the band. Couples number from nearest the band.
Music: 6/8 or 9/8 double jigs. E.g. "The Irish Washerwoman",
"The Curlew", "The Jig of Slurs" for 6/8 and "Drops
of Brandy" for 9/8.
Bars: Description
1-8 1st couple spin RH.
9-20 1st lady turns 2M LH, partner RH, 3M LH, partner RH, 4M LH.
21-24 Spin with partner RH to the end of the phrase.
25-36 1st man turns 4L LH, partner RH, 3L LH, partner RH, 2L LH.
37-40 Spin with partner RH to the end of the phrase.
41-52 1st lady works down men, while 1st man works down ladies, turning
2C LH, partner RH, 3C LH, partner RH, 4C LH.
53-56 Spin with partner RH to the end of the phrase.
Repeat ad lib.
Orcadian (or Shetland) Strip the Willow
Formation: Couples in a long line down the room, men on the right and
ladies on the left as viewed from the band. Couples number from nearest
the band.
Music: 6/8 or 9/8 double jigs. E.g. "The Irish Washerwoman",
"The Curlew", "The Jig of Slurs" for 6/8 and "Drops
of Brandy" for 9/8.
Bars: Description
1-8 1st couple spin RH.
9-... 1st couple work down the opposite line (ie of the people of the
opposite sex) turning side person LH, partner RH, next side person LH,
...
When 1st couple reach the bottom, they spin to the end of the phrase,
then join the side lines.
A new couple starts every 16 bars.
The Swedish Masquerade
Formation: couples around the room in heading anti-clockwise, nearer hands
joined, ladies on the outside.
Music: That tune...
Bars: Description
Slow march
1-8 With nearer hands joined, walk slowly along the line of dance
9-16 With nearer hands joined, walk slowly against the line of dance back
to starting point
Waltz
17-20 With nearer hands joined, facing along line of dance, balance away
from partner and back towards partner twice.
21-24 Waltz along line of dance.
25-32 Repeat bars 17-24.
Polka
33-36 With nearer hands joined, facing along line of dance, balance away
from partner and back towards partner twice.
37-40 Polka along line of dance.
41-48 Repeat bars 33-40.
When 1st couple reach the bottom, they spin to the end of the phrase,
then join the side lines.
A new couple starts every 16 bars.
The Virginia Reel
This seems actually to be a family of similar dances - probably word-of-mouth
having lead to variations. One variety is:
Formation: Longwise sets of 4 couples, men on the right and ladies on
the left as viewed from the band. Couples number from nearest the band.
Music: "Hoedown" reels, e.g. "Turkey in the Straw".
Bars: Description
1-8 All advance and retire, then turn partners RH.
9-16 All advance and retire, then turn partners LH.
17-24 All advance and retire, then turn partners BH.
25-32 All advance and retire, then dance back to back with partners (do-si-do).
25-32 1st couple join both hands and side slip down the middle and back.
25-32 1st couple, followed by 2nd, 3rd and 4th couples cast off to the
bottom; 1st couple make an arch and the other three couples dance up to
new positions.
Finish 2,3,4,1, ready to start again.
One variation has bars 33-40 expanded - slip down to the bottom (4 bars)
and strip the willow back up again (12 bars), followed by the cast and
arch figure on bars 49-56. There is also a 64-bar version which I can't
remember at the moment.
Terminology
Up/Down In a longwise set, the couple nearest the band is numbered 1,
and the other couples are numbered 2, 3, 4 (and 5, ... if appropriate)
working down the line. "Up" is towards the band, and "down"
is away from the band.
Ballroom hold has the man facing the lady, lady's right hand in man's
left, man's right hand on lady's waist, and lady's left hand on man's
right shoulder.
Line of dance (LoD): the direction a normal waltz (polka or whatever)
moves around the floor (anti-clockwise around the room).
Anti-line of dance (Anti-LoD): the opposite to LoD.
Setting
The basic idea of a setting step is to spend two bars admiring your partner
(or someone else) while shifting the weight from foot to foot. To be more
precise (something alien to the ceilidh dance ethos, but hey!) the step
is the pas de basque:
Bar 1:
step onto the left foot
beat with the right foot in third position (a "T" formation
with your feet, right heel in left instep), bringing the left foot off
the ground
step back onto the left foot
pause (if you're feeling ambitious, go for the jette' at this point)
Bar 2:
Repeat with opposite feet.
Note the phrasing with 4 beats in the bar, even though you only do things
on three of them. Best practised to a reel (4/4 - "egg and mustard")
rather than a jig (6/8 - jiggety jiggety).
cast off or "cast to 2nd place"
A cast takes you behind the standing person/people (or where they would
be if they were standing) - "off" takes you "down"
the set (away from the band, towards the higher numbers), up takes you
"up" the set. Unless otherwise stated, you only move one place
down or up. eg:
/--1M 1L--\
| |
\->2M 2L<-/
3M 3L
4M 4L
Cast off one place (also in this instance cast off to second place) -
note if 2nd couple are still there they will get run over.
Reel of 3 Reel of 4
Think of a reel of three with an extra person and an extra loop. Four
dancers in a line, middle dancers facing out, outer dancers facing in.
/ /
Out1 Mid1 Mid2 Out2
/ /
Bar 1: Out1 & Mid1, and Mid2 & Out2 Pass RS.
Bar 2: Out1 and Out2 pass LS _while_ Mid1 and Mid2 turn around to face
in.
Bar 3: Mid1 & Out2, and Out1 & Mid2 Pass RS.
Bar 4: Mid1 and Mid2 pass LS _while_ Out1 and Out2 turn around to face
in.
Bars 5-8: Repeat (heading in opposite direction) back to place.
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