English Country Dance: Difference between revisions

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* '''[[Dances from Playford|List of dances from Playford]]'''
* '''[[Dances from Playford|List of dances from Playford]]'''

* [[Dargason]]
* [[Gathering Peascods]]
* [[Heart's Ease]]
* [[Hyde Park]]
* [[If all the world were paper]]
* [[Jenny Plucks Pears]]
* [[Mage on a Cree]]
* [[Parsons Farewell]]
* [[Picking of Sticks]]
* [[Rufty Tufty]]
* [[Upon a Summer's Day]]

From the [[Carolingia|Carolingian]] dance book(?):
* [[Chestnut (dance)|Chestnut]]
* [[Grimstock]]


== External Links ==
== External Links ==

Revision as of 11:03, 23 February 2006

English Country Dance is the common name for dances propagated by John Playford and later his sons and other heirs in the book titled The English Dancing Master (later renamed to The Dancing Master). This style of dancing evolved in England, and eventually spread to France and Germany and later to the New World, and even Australia. Bush dances such as Strip the Willow are included in later editions of The English Dancing Master.

It was published in 1651 and is theoretically outside of the SCA period but is commonly done in the SCA anyway. English Country Dance can be classified as early Baroque Dance rather than Renaissance Dance, although it is not clear that the dances in The English Dancing-Master are more closely allied to most Baroque dances than to Renaissance dances. There are references to dances with some of the same names as those in Playford before 1600, although from the description of a couple of these it is clear that the dance was significantly different from those later printed by Playford.

Many of these dances are somewhat similar in form, often being for formations of two, three, or four couples, often consisting of what modern teachers often call a verse-and-chorus structure. The three "verse" sections are typically leading forward and back or circling two doubles around in the first verse, sides in the second, and arms in the third. However, this is at best a general guideline.

There is also the Morris dance, (originally Moorish) brought back during the Crusading period, danced by small groups of men, bearing bells, sticks, handerchiefs and the like, and frequently alleged to have been linked to certain English pagan traditions. See (mundanely) the works (passim) of Terry Pratchett, and accounts of the Helston Furry Dance, and the Padstow May Dance.

Some English country dances

External Links