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Highland Dancing
Scottish Highland dancing is one of the oldest forms of folk dance, and both modern ballet and square dancing can trace their roots back to the Highlands. Dating back to the 11th or 12th century, the Highland Dances of Scotland tended to be highly athletic male celebratory dances of triumph or joy, or warrior dances performed over swords and spiked shield. According to tradition, the old kings and chiefs of Scotland used the Highland Games as a way of choosing the best men for their retinue and men at arms. Highland dancing was one of the various ways men were tested for strength, stamina, accuracy, and agility. The Scottish military regiments used to use Highland dancing as a form of training to develop stamina and agility, but this has become less common these days. Competitive Highland dancing started during the Highland revival of Victorian Britain, and was for men only. Ladies began competing only at the turn of the century. Over the centuries the dancing style has become more refined and now shares many elements from classical ballet. Although historically Highland dancing was restricted to men, today it is mostly performed by females. No matter who dances them, Highland dances require both athletic and artistic skill.
THE HIGHLAND DANCES
The Highland FlingThis is the oldest of the traditional dances of Scotland and is a dance of joy performed at the end of a victorious battle. It was danced by male warriors over a small round shield, called a Targe, that the warriors carried into battle. Most Targes had a sharp spike of steel projecting from the centre, so dancers learned early to move with great skill and dexterity. The Highland Fling is danced on the spot, and is said to be based on the antics of a stag on a hillside; the grouped fingers and upheld arms representing the antlers.
The Sword Dance (Gillie Challum) It is probable that the tune, _Gillie_Callum_, dates back
to the days of Malcolm Canmore (Shakespeare's MacBeth). The earliest references
to the *dance* are from the 19th century, and it is unlikely that it is very
much older. One story is that this was a dance of victory, as the King
danced over his bloody claymore (the two-handed broadsword of Scotland) and the
even bloodier head of his enemy. Some say that no severed head was used and that
the King danced over his own sword crossed over the sword of his enemy. Another
story is that the Sword Dance was danced prior to a battle. To kick the swords
was considered a bad omen for the impending battle, and the soldier would expect
to be wounded. If many of the soldiers kicked their swords the chieftain of the
clan would expect to lose the battle. The Seann Triubhas Pronounced "shawn trews", this Gaelic phrase
means "old trousers". This dance is reputed to date from the rebellion
of 1745 when Bonnie Prince Charlie challenged the might of England at Culloden,
and lost. As a penalty, Highlanders were forbidden to wear the kilt. Seann
Triubhas is a dance of celebration developed in response to the Proscription
Repeal which restored to the Scots the right to wear their kilts and play the
bagpipes once more. The movements of this dance clearly depict the legs
defiantly shaking and shedding the hated trousers and returning to the freedom
of the kilt. Some of the steps originate from hard shoe dancing. It is likely that the kicking-off-of-the-trousers bit was
retro-fitted to the dance much like the bloody-swords-and-head thing with the
Sword Dance. The Seann Triubhas arrived at its present form in the early 20th
century, and an itinerant dance teacher from the 1890s is on record as having
invented the first step of the Seann Triubhas. See Flett & Flett. -- It does
not come as a big surprise that some of the steps in the Seann Triubhas 'come
from hard shoe dancing', since that is what people would have worn for dancing
in the old days, anyway (if they wore anything). Before the RSCDS, the modern
ghillie pumps were only used by competing Highland dancers at Games, and even
now there is a certain renaissance of the hard shoe; only a few years ago even
the RSCDS put out a newsletter urging teachers to teach the steps in a way so
that they can be danced in hard shoes. (Personally, I do prefer the ghillies for
SCD, having tried both -- there is much better control.) Strathspey and Highland Reel and Strathspey and Half
Tulloch The Strathspey and Reel and the Strathspey and Half Tulloch are
performed by four dancers. The Strathspey is never danced on its own in
competition but must be followed by the Reel. These dances illustrate the
"set" and "travel" steps which are common in Scottish social
dancing. DRESS In Highland dancing competitions, female dancers wear a
velvet jacket with gold or silver braid edging and gold or silver buttons, over
a white shirt with lace ruffles at the neck. They wear a kilt and tartan hose,
and black laced gillies, or dancing shoes. Men wear the kilt and sporran, with a
jacket and bonnet, with tartan hose with a sgian dhubh. For the National dances
either a national costume is worn, or the costume appropriate to the dance such
as the hornpipe costume, or the Irish Jig costume, which is worn with jig shoes.
The national costume consists of a tartan style gathered skirt, a velvet jacket
of a different style, laced up the front with silver laces and decorated with
silver buttons. There is a plaid which is attached at the waistband at the back,
and then comes up and over the right shoulder and is fastened with a brooch onto
the shoulder of the jacket. Men wear the kilt and sporran, with a jacket and
bonnet, with tartan hose with a sgian dhubh. They can wear tartan trews or
Highland dress for national dances, and the hornpipe outfit, and a male version
of the Irish Jig costume. THE NATIONAL DANCESThe Flora McDonald's Fancy This is said to be the last dance Flora McDonald danced for
Bonnie Prince Charlie before he fled overseas, but is more likely to be a dance
named in her honor. Flora McDonald helped the prince escape from North Uist to
Skye disguised as her maid. She emigrated to America but returned home to Skye
later in life. The Sailor's Hornpipe The Sailor's Hornpipe is a caricature dance developed from
the The Irish Jig The Scottish Version of the Irish Jig is another caricature
dance depicting an Irish washerwoman who is angry with her erring husband. The
costume worn for this dance is either a red or emerald green skirt and bodice
and a full white petticoat, with a white blouse, with a white apron. Red or
green jig shoes are worn and there is much stamping and facial grimacing in this
dance. In the male version, the dancer wears a red or green tailcoat with a
waistcoat of the opposite color, brown knee britches of corduroy, with a paddy
hat and he carries a shillelagh, which is a club made from the forked branch of
a tree. Scottish Lilt The original tunes for the Lilt are 'Drops of Brandy' (if
you happen to have danced the RSCDS version of the popular ceilidh dance, Strip
the Willow, which is a 9/8 running step, you may have heard the tune; it is also
sometimes played at sessions) and 'Brose and Butter' (for the folkies, this is
the tune used for the song, 'Tak it, Man, Tak it', on the Dublin Lady album by
Andy M. Stewart and Manus Lunny). I do the Scottish Lilt either to the Battle of
the Somme (which is also a 9/8 tune) or to the original tunes -- I have a very
nice recording of them played on the clarsach and bodhran with duet singing
which is suitable for 8 steps of the Lilt, but I don't know where that tape
originally came from :^( The difference in feeling isn't very pronounced but I
do prefer the originals. There are a number of other National dances, which include
"The Earl of Errol", "Hielan' Laddie", and "Wilt thou
go to the Barracks, Johnny?". They reflect the difficulty of trying to
elucidate the history of the dances. The Earl of Errol was originally a hard
shoe dance, from the Aberdeenshire area, which was collected by Isobel Cramb,
recorded on the Hill manuscript yet there are two different versions. The
Scottish Lilt is claimed by both the Hebrides and Perthshire. It was probably
very different when danced to its original 9/8 jig tune but nowadays it is
danced to a tune called "The Battle of the Somme" which dates from the
First World War. The tune is a retreat and has a completely different speed and
rhythm. There are several different tunes called "Hielan' Laddie", and
different dances to each tune so who knows which is the original? "Wilt
thou go to the barracks, Johnny?" is a recruiting song and "the
barracks" is probably a corruption of "Berwick", although there
was a barracks there. Many of the National Dances, for example, 'Blue Bonnets' and 'Hielan Laddie' were actually devised in the late 19th century by a chap called Ewan MacLachlan, who studied the ballet in France before returning to his native, I think, Benbecula (at any rate, somewhere in the Outer Hebrides). Some of them are really quite balletic but do retain their Scottish flavor. |
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