Blog, Last Saturday Ceili

2023 Feb 25th | Last Saturday Céilí | Betsy Branch

set list

Dance List

  1. Merchant | Reels 128, Reels 192, Reels 128, Hornpipes 144
  2. Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set) | Reels 128, Reels 160, Reels 144, Jigs 104, Hornpipes 152
  3. Antrim Square | Reels 144, Jigs 136, Slides 152
  4. Cashel | Slides 200 | Polkas 136 | Polkas 200 | Hornpipe 152 | Slides 256 | Polka 120
  5. Connemara | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 184, Maggie in the Woods 96
  6. Claddagh | Reels 192, Reels 184, Reels 154, Jigs 192
  7. Waltz

video playlist

music playlist

In this playlist they didn’t have a recording for the Merchant Set on Spotify so I used the Mabula site to find another recording of the same length. A great tool for teachers and callers. Here is a link to their site. It’s a database of set dancing recording. All you have to do is enter in the number of bars and tune type and all the recording of that length will come up. I love this site as often I can find a recoding that is the right length even if I don’t have the recording in my library for that particular set. In the olden days we used to call these “scrap sets”.

PLAY LIST

Blog

3-10-23 | 7pm | CVS Ceili

set list

CVS Ceili

  1. Merchant | Reels 128, Reels 192, Reels 128, Hornpipes 144
  2. Haymakers Jig | Jigs 400
  3. Claddagh | Reels 192, Reels 184, Reels 154, Jigs 192
  4. Siege of Carrick | Jigs (haste to the wedding)
  5. Antrim Square | Reels 144, Jigs 136, Slides 152
  6. Waltz

BREAK

  1. Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set) | Reels 128, Reels 160, Reels 144, Jigs 104, Hornpipes 152
  2. Siege of Ennis | Jigs
  3. Cashel | Slides 200 | Polkas 136 | Polkas 200 | Hornpipe 152 | Slides 256 | Polka 120
  4. Fairy Reel | Reels
  5. Connemara | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 184, Maggie in the Woods 96
  6. Waltz

video playlist

Coming soon

music playlist

Coming soon

In this playlist they didn’t have a recording for the Merchant Set on Spotify so I used the Mabula site to find another recording of the same length. A great tool for teachers and callers. Here is a link to their site. It’s a database of set dancing recording. All you have to do is enter in the number of bars and tune type and all the recording of that length will come up. I love this site as often I can find a recoding that is the right length even if I don’t have the recording in my library for that particular set. In the olden days we used to call these “scrap sets”.

Classes, Irish Set Dancing, Past Classes

2023 Feb | Saturday Set Dancing

intro

This February, let’s double our love! Our goal is for everyone to gain mastery in the skill of doubling as we learn several dances featuring this special move. From Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set) and Cashel Sets to Clare Lancers, Myserks and Caledonian – there are plenty of opportunities during the month-long event to perfect your technique. Let’s get ready to take a twirl through these traditional dance styles – twice!

Irish Set Dancing

Saturday 4-6pm

Waverly United Church of Christ

3300 SE Woodward St, Portland, OR, United States, Oregon

$10 general, $5 students

week 1

WEEK 1 | Class notes

Sat. Feb. 4, 2023

Our set of the week is: Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set)

This set was composed by Frankie Roddy. Frankie was a wonderful dancer from Derry. When I meet him in 1999 he was just getting back to dancing after some health issues. My fellow student at the University of Limerick ended up writing her theses on him. We traveled together to attend in his adult ceili class and to have a chance to chat with him again. At the time he was the only person we could find that was teaching ceili dancing to adults. He was a great solo dancer and had a school of dance. His son was the evil lead in Lord of the Dance. When Josephine and I meet him in Limerick he was the light we were looking for. We were both struggling in our studies and it was so lovely to meet such an amazing and generous person. I am happy to be reviving his dance here in Portland. I hope it one that we will dance many times in Frankie’s memory. I learned this dance from Anne McCallum at the Milwaukee Irish Festival Summer School.

week 2

WEEK 2 | Class notes

Sat. Feb. 11, 2023

Our set of the week is: The Cashel or The Castle

This dance is from Tipperary and was taught by the late great Connie Ryan. Many of the dance instructors that you know and love learned from Connie and followed him around the country to workshops and dances. In this particular video you can see Connie Ryan in first tops, Pat Murphy in first sides and Pádraig & Róisín McEneany in second sides.

week 3

WEEK 3 | Class notes

Sat. Feb. 18, 2023 (NO CLASS THIS WEEK) – we will learn this dance another time.

Our set of the week is: The Clare Myserks

We used to dance this years ago in Portland. This dance is dances in Seattle and in San Francisco. It’s a good one to know and nice and handy.

week 4

WEEK 4 | Class notes

Sat. March 25, 2023

Last Saturday Ceili

  • The Caledonian
  • Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set)
  • Claddagh Set
  • The Corofin Plain Set
  • The Clare Lancers set

We covered these five dances in the month of March Tonight we will celebrate by dancing them all. All dances will be called. All are welcome.

Music Playlist

Uncategorized

Variations & Creation

Variations & Creation

When you are at the point you are putting together a routine or plan for particular tune. There are several approached to this. You may know how you want to approach. If don’t know, not to worry, I’ve got you. 

First think about your why. You can have more than one why. 

  • To teach slides – create steps that you can teach based on the tunes. Develop tools to teach future slides and tunes based on the movements and techniques for creating steps. Start looking at all of the ways to add variation and step creating to create your own rapture that is uniquely your style and how to pass it along to others. 
  • To perform – you may want to make your routine and steps more visual and excited to watch. Consider using the floor and moving in different directions. Look at more visual steps like crossing over, grapevines, lead arounds….
  • Dance Sets – focus on advance and retire steps, slide and change steps and housing around. Practice traveling with all of the steps and movements. Which one works best for you. You can still use the same sheet bellow but come up with a few advance and retire steps and slide and change steps that you like. 
  • Dance in sessions – You may want to focus on dancing the tune and creating steps that are musical and contained in a small space. I like adding variations of the same sounds to keep me excited about the dancing. 
  • Have a party piece – you might want to have a mapped out routine that you can get up and dance to slides or these particular slides. 
  • Be able to improvise with slides – focus on the improvisation ideas over the next few weeks and incorporating them into your dancing. 
  • Dance the tune – come up with mapped out steps that fit the tune exactly. They can be visual or small and percussive or a bit of both. 

Here’s a spread sheet if that’s your jam – one think I like about the spread sheet is the ability to add the link to a video reference should you want that. It could be your own video or one from the course. 

In the introduction to the course I talked about having several ways to approach a performance piece or dancing a tune. Mapped out, half mapped, un mapped. As we go through this process decide which one you would like to focus on. If you are just starting out mapping the whole thing might be a good place to start and then as you get more comfortable with the routine start to dance is less mapped. It’s up to you. 

I have several tricks and tools to create variation in your steps. Here’s is my master list for step creation and variation:

  • Direction
    • You can change a step and create interest by moving it in different directions.
    • Try dancing a step in place, sideways, circle around self, circle around stage, zig zag, forward and back and at angles. Which one do you like? 
  • Phrasing or Space
    • Try adding a pause or leave beats out in your step. Adding breath to the step. Musicians will do this, especially flute players and singers. Take a note from them and see if this works with your steps. Let parts of the music come thought and dance the basic pulse rather than every note. 
  • Length of Phrases or movements
    • Play with the length of a phrase: 8bars/4bars/2bars/1bars. 
  • Emphasis
    • Emphasis one movement over the other. Swinging the beat and moving into different parts of the music.
  • Dynamics
    • Soft to aggressive
  • Creating multiple steps that have same rhythmic phrase
    • take a musical phrase and see how many different ways you can make that sound. This gives you lots of options when creating a step. Think about it in small chunks 2 or 4 bar phrases that you can swap in and out as you like. This will help you immensely when creating steps and improvising steps. 
  • Pitch or Tone
    • Dancing steps on your toes or heels, high, low or deep sounds. 
  • Rearrange Step / Rhythmic variation 
    • Moving the Stamp, Step or heel to different parts of the step and music. 
  • Weight
    • Keep weight the same with hop or tap and transfer step to the other foot.
  • Shifting the Beat
    • Start your step 1 beat over from where you normally would. Try ddd a beat to the step and/or removing a beat. This will move the movements over into different parts of the music. Very fun! 
  • One sided only
    • Dance movements only on one side right only, then left only. Sometimes this can create a very interesting step. 
  • Dancing the Tune
    • Crafting steps for a particular tune. 
  • Echoing the tune
    • playing a rhythmical call and response with the tune and musician. 
  • The Player
    • Getting to know the playing of a particular player and adapting to them. You can do this by listening to your local musicians live or recorded. Also your favorite musicians. Get to know how a musician plays and what they are likely to do with a tune. Learn their tunes or their style. 
  • The Instrument
    • What each instrument is capable of and what is interesting to you about each one. 
    • Watch the player and dance off of them. You can do this on youtube if you don’t have a player nearby. 
    • The Breath of flute player, whistle player, singer
    • Dancing to the bow of a fiddler.
    • the bellows of an accordion player.
    • the regulators of a piper. 
  • A Band
    • Dancing to multiple instruments and arrangements. 
  • Time Signature
    • Changing the time signature of a step
  • Tempo
    • Tempo of a particular tune, dance or style is played at. What sounds good to you? 
    • Reels 110-120, Slides 130-140?
  • Context
    • The context in which you dance or want to dance: a session, the stage, personal enjoyment, party piece, house parties…
  • Endurance
    • Work on endurance. Dancing at full temp for 30 minutes, dancing a whole show with all of your dance pieces in one set (make a playlist for your show). Jump roping, like boxers, to build up endurance, stamina and quick feet.
Blog, Events

Nov. 26th | 4pm | Annual Butterball

5th Annual Butterball

Saturday Nov. 26, 4-7pm

$10 per person

Waverly Height United Church of Christ, 3300 SE Woodward St, Portland, OR 97202

Facebook Event page

Hey all you Turkeys,

it’s that time of year again for the 5th Annual Butterball. Come dressed in your feathers and finery, bring tunes, stories, instruments and your dancing shoes. This is our 5th year of hosting the Butterball. (we missed 1 year during the pandemic). You are welcome to dress up or come as you are. Please pass this along to your communities. 

Blog

10-29-22 | Rambling House

céilí set list

Sat. Oct. 29th 4pm-10pm

Quarterly Rambling House

Session, potluck, ceili and more.

CCE Oregon

Waverly UCC, 3300 SE Woodward St., Portland, OR. 

CCE Quarterly Rambling House Céilí

7:15pm Lesson, 7:30-9:30 Céilí

Music: Joe Root

Calling: Maldon Meehan & Christina White

  1. Connemara Set | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 184, Maggie in the Woods 96
  2. Haymakers Jig | Jigs 400
  3. Merchant Set | Reel 128, Reel 192, Reel 128, Hornpipe 144
  4. Siege of Ennis  | Jig
  5. Clare Lancers | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 144, Reels 192, Reels 192
  6. Ballyvourney Jig Set | 4 Slides (32bar tunes) 4x each
  7. Fairy Reel | Reels
  8. Antrim Square | Reel 144, Jig 136, Slides 152
  9. Waltz

video playlist

Youtube Playlist

You can use this playlist to study up or teach the dances in your own community or to your friends and family. On the next tab there is a music playlist which is handy for teaching or practicing the dances.

music playlist

Spotify Playlist

In this playlist they didn’t have a recording for the Merchant Set on Spotify so I used the Mabula site to find another recording of the same length. I great tool for teachers and callers. Here is a link to their site. It’s a database of set dancing recording. All you have to do is enter in the number of bars and tune type and all the recording of that length will come up. I love this site as often I can find a recoding that is the right length even if I don’t have the recording in my library for that particular set. In the olden days we used to call these “scrap sets”.