Any recommended set dances?

Hi Everyone,

I’m looking to learn some set dances. At present I know pleanty og jigs and reels. But I’m somewhat lacking in the dance department. Any tunes that you’d recommend I should learn. It would be especially helpful as many of my friend enjoy dancing. Please remember I like to learn from a records. So prefurably from any of the Chieftains albums.

Cheers L42B :slight_smile:

I think ye are a little mixed up here…The music for set dances IS Jigs Reels Polkas Slides and Hornpipes…so ye can play any of these.There are some set dances aside which may be confusing ye a bit..The Blackbird et all.
2Books and tapes from NPU Music for the Sets Yellow and Blue,will give ye all the dance music ye can handle. :wink:
Slán Go Foill
Uilliam

Come on now Uilliam don’t go nitpicking, there’s music for the sets and there are set-dances. Blackbird, Job of Journeywork, Garden of Daisies, Mount Phoebus Hunt, An Suisin Ban, Madam Bonaparte, Downfall of Paris, Sean O Duihir an Gleanna, Jockey at the Fair, you know the ones he means.

There’s a lovely 6 part slip jig which isn’t difficult to learn or play. It’s called the Strayaway Child. The Bothy Band do a fast version of it on their first album. The Chieftains play a slow version on their album Celebration. I usually play it for dancers. The speed I use is somewhere between the Bothy and Chieftain versions, approx. 80 on the metronome. I usually only have to play it once, it’s so long.

I believe the Strayaway Child is a double jig.

Perhaps there is some confusion over the term “set dance”. A set dance is a fixed, performance dance - often solo - and the dance is specific to the tune. Peter has given some good examples. This is not the same as set dancing/quadrilles, where the dance steps are specific, but the tunes are not, as long as they are of the correct rhythm and number of bars, e.g. the NPU collection that Uilliam mentions.

djm

Correct.

Yeah, but what, Peter, is the Mt. Phoebus Hunt? Is that a local name for a more common set dance, or an entirely new one (to me at least)?

Usually ‘The hunt’ for short but applied to the version played around here by the West Clare fiddlers, patrick kelly used the name. There’s another version (leo rowsome played it like that for example, it’s in O Neill’s like that) that starts the second part on three distict F naturals

Nitpick!! … :astonished: Moi!! :astonished: :astonished: Maybe his pals want to do a set dance or maybe they want to dance sets :confused: :confused:

:wink: :wink: :wink:
Slán Go Foill
Uilliam
ps has Summer arrived there yet?It sure aint here!!! :roll:
pps Peter where are ye getting those wee emoticons from? :party:

ok, now I remember the one. Thanks Peter

Mozilla firefox just added a little browser extention called Smiley xtra, very handy if you are into the silly things.



The Drunken Gauger is a setdance isn’t it?

is that yerself above calling the set,by any chance??? :boggle:
Slán Go Foill
Uilliam :party:

Chieftains Celebration lists it as a slip jig - played, I believe in 12/8. The Bothy Band version is slightly different. But there’s so little difference between the two, I don’t think we should fall out over this. Let’s just agree to differ - :smiley:

By the way, half my repertoir of hornpipes are just reels played slowly, and most of my slow airs are hornpipes when I’m feeling really lazy. :wink:

Slip jigs are 9/8 so a 12/8 is by definition never a slip jig. Stayaway child is a 6/8 double jig.

OK, so it’s 6/8 and a double jig. I’m just repeating what it says on the album sleve, which is slip-jig.

I’ve heard other musicians call tunes that are in 12/8 slip jigs. But don’t worry, I’ll track them down and inform them of the error of their ways.

There is the Job of Journeywork by Paddy Keenan circa 1974 I think..

upiper71

I’ve always had a soft spot fot Rodney’s Glory.

David

I keep thinking up more since this morning. Drunken gauger came up at a funeral this morning. Rodney’s Glory is nice too. Hurry the Jug. St Patrick’s day comes around , but only once a year. Humours of Bandon, I haven’t thought of that one for a while. The one Tommy McCarthy used to play: Roche’s favourite. Not the King of the Fairies if at all possible.