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Category: Dance Styles
All the courses on the site.
12pm | FREE | Irish Sean-nós Dance Challenge
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March 11 – March 15
12pm PST | 1pm MST | 2pm CST | 3pm EST on ZOOM
Step into the vibrant world of traditional Irish dance with our Free Irish Sean-nós Dance Challenge! This exhilarating week-long event is perfect for everyone, from the curious beginner to the seasoned dancer looking to add a touch of authentic Irish culture to their repertoire. All session will be recorded and available for your reference.
Learn the Basics
Start from the ground up with step-by-step tutorials that make learning sean-nós accessible to anyone, regardless of your skill level.
Improvise with Confidence
Develop your improvisational skills with guided exercises that encourage creativity and help you find your own style within the tradition.
Master Choreography Techniques
Gain insights into crafting stunning dance sequences that tell a story with every step and leap.
Transform Your Dance
By the end of the week, not only will you have a complete dance that you can perform and perfect, but you’ll also carry with you the joy and pride of engaging deeply with Irish culture.
For Beginners and Pros Alike
Whether you’re taking your first dance steps or you’re an established performer, our challenge will push your boundaries and invigorate your practice.
Connect with Culture
Join a community of dance enthusiasts who share your passion for tradition and cultural heritage.
Absolutely Free!
day 1
Day 1 | Connemara Reel Steps
Be sure to look at the resource page. You will find practice music there and links to other resources. I have also included a video playlist with all of the videos for the week. The playlist also has practice videos for each step and the breakdown of each step. This is very helpful to have when you just want to work on one step. This will allow you to go directly to what you want to work on without having to watch the whole class recording. I will keep adding to the resource page as the week goes along so key your eye on that page.
Connemara Step (2 heel downs)
6 heels (or sometimes called the zig zag step) (6 heel downs)
Finishing step (often used for the Connemara set or to finish a series of steps) (3 heel downs, 1 heel down)
day 2
Day 2 | More Reel Steps & transitions between steps
The dancer that I mentioned as one of my favorite dancers is: Paraig Ó Haibicín. This link will take you to a page with a playlist of Paraig’s dancing.
day 3
Day 3 | Improvisation
Unleash Your Creativity with Improvisation! Join us for Day 3 as we delve into improvisation tricks and tips, demystifying the process. By the end of our session, I aim to transform improvisation from a daunting concept to a creative tool that inspires you to develop your unique style with confidence.
- Tea Time Talk – Improvisation (an hour long talk on improvisation)
- Course on Improvisation (Maldon Meehan Dance Members only)
Here are some ideas to get you started with improvising. We will cover a few of them in the day 3 workshop.
- Direction – Experiment with direction to add interest to your dancing. Move in place, sideways, circle around yourself or the stage, zigzag, form squares, advance and retire, and play with angles. Some steps work well moving, and others are better stationary. Play around and see what you like!
- Phrasing or Space – Putting in a pause or leave beats out of a step. This ads breath. I often add more space when dancing to a flute or whistle player. Adding a pause where they take a breath.
- Length of phrases or movements – try breaking rhythms into 8-bar, 4-bar, 2-bar, and 1-bar movements. As you become familiar with the steps, you’ll naturally think in these rhythmic phrases. When learning new tunes, you’ll recognize these phrases within the music, making it easier to recall and dance to the rhythm. Irish musicians do this with tunes and many of the same patterns appear in different tunes. Thinking in smaller chunks of music can aid in learning and dancing to unfamiliar tunes. As you learn these chunks some of your work will already be done when you take a new tune.
- Emphasis – Emphasis one movement or beat over the other. Swinging the beat and moving into different parts of the music.
- Shifting the Beat – Explore improvisation possibilities with the double stamp technique in the Connemara step. By incorporating double stamping, you can initiate rhythmic patterns in four unique sections within a music bar. Experiment with applying this technique to any step and at any point within it. Delve into starting a beat later in the tune, adding or removing beats from different parts of the step. This is one of my favorite things to play with.
- Dynamics – Improvise your dance by playing with dynamics. Explore the art of dancing with varying volumes, from soft and gentle to bold and aggressive.
- Pitch or Tone – Pitch and tone in music can be brought out in your dancing by using the different parts of your feet. For example toes for high sounds and heels low, or deep sounds. I enjoy playing with this concept in tunes that have contrasting parts – a low A section followed by a high B section. Sometimes, I’ll dance the same step on my heels and then on my toes to play with tone.
- Rearrange Step / Rhythmic variation – Rearrange Step a step to create rhythmic variation. Move parts of a step around to create a new step or rhythm.
- Weight -keep weight the same with hop or tap and transfer step to the other foot. This allows you more freedom to play and move between patterns with ease.
- One sided only –dance movements only on one side. Like dancing a bunch of shuffles with just one foot.
- Dancing the Tune – crafting steps for a particular tune or learning the tune with your feet. This can be mapped out as well as done on the spot.
- Chasing the tune or Echoing the tune – I love this one! Often times if you don’t know a tune yet you can take dance the rhythmic phrase you just heard, but dance it in the next part of the tune. This can help you get the tune down or give you a call and response in the tune.
- The Player –knowing the playing of a particular player and dancing in conversation with them. If you know anyone who can play music with you try using YouTube. You can find a nice recording of a musician on YouTube and watch them play and play with them. This is particularly rewarding when you and the musician are listening and watching and playing in conversation with each other. Some very amazing improvisation can come from this.
- The Instrument – exploring 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. This is amazing and very fun in person with another musician but again if you don’t have that opportunity you can do this using video recordings from YouTube.
- A Band – dancing to a full band and arranged music.
- Time Signature – changing the time signature of a step.
- Tempo – play with dancing a different tempos. Often we dance to slower tempos when learning and then graduate to faster tempos. But there are some tune, step and dances that just feel very different and different tempos. For our classes we tend to work with 60, 80, 100, and 120 bpm. Went dancing reels I really like dancing around 110 bpm and find that 120 is too fast for me to do some of the play that make dancing so fun.
- Context – dancing at a session, on stage, for personal enjoyment, a party piece, in class, teaching or busking. This can inform your improvisation as well and change the way you dance.
day 4
Day 4 | Step Creation (choreography)
Step Creation ideas
- Vocabulary – mixing and matching vocabulary movements and rhythmic steps (i.e. Connemara step, 6 heels, finishing step). You will find a vocabulary playlist under the resource tab.
- 8 bar step – mixing and matching 1 bar, 2 bar and 4 bar patterns to make an 8 bar step.
- Taking an existing step and inserting a different pattern into the 8 bar step. (removing a movement to make this work). As you do this it might change the step or the weight change and you can decided how you want to proceed with each part before or after the new movement.
- Dancing the tune – listening to a tune and tapping out the melody and rhythm of the tune with your hands or heels. I like to keep this simple in at the start so that I am only focusing on the sounds and not worrying about how I will move yet. Then once have a pattern that you like, try dancing it different ways to make that sound with your feet. Pick one you like and work with that. Often I keep this one sided and repeat it so that I don’t have to worry about to many weight changes yet. Once I have a pattern that I like and have it in my feet then I attempt to put it on the other foot or make it two sided.
- Looking for where to start exploring tunes? Try TheSession.org, YouTube, Spotify or your own music collections. The session.org is great for finding sheet music, recordings and variations of tunes. I often will use the sheet music or the midi recording (on repeat and slowed down) to help me learn the tune. This is especially helpful if the tune I want to learn is in a set of tunes and it’s hard to just listen to the one tune on repeat. I don’t read sheet music well at all, but I use the sheet music to see the rhythmic structure of the tune. The whole notes, quarter notes and eight notes. This can help me in a tricky spot of the tune where I can’t figure out what it happening or I want to double check what I am hearing on a recording. I use this purely as a rhythmic tool. (One day I will learn to read sheet music and use it as a melodic tool). I tell you this because if you don’t read music you can still use this tool.
- I have loads of playlists on my YouTube and Spotify channels and you are very welcome to save them and use them. As I find tunes that I like I add them to these playlists.
- Maldon’s YouTube channel – look under playlists. When you go to my page, click on ‘playlists’ to see them all. I have a lot of playlist on YouTube so if you want to find music or dancers quickly “music” or “dance” they will come up.
- Maldon’s Spotify channel – look under playlists. Most of the playlists are organized my tune type.
day 5
Day 5 | Performance (the whole dance)
Spreadsheet with some of our tunes written out – make a copy of this and save it to your google drive to use this sheet.
Notes from my sheets of paper:
Day 5
- Pick a banner step (the easiest step for you to dance) and dance it only to a track of music
- Half Mapped with a banner step- now dance that step for 8 bars and then see what comes out for the next 8 bars and then go back to the banner step. Go back and forth testing half mapped and mapped
- Half Mapped – take a routine of steps after each mapped step dance any step that comes to mind and then go into the next mapped step and so on.
- Un mapped – dance steps as they come to you. Use improve tricks from day 3. Listen to the music and respond.
- Mapped – listen to a track of music and writ out steps for each part of the tune. Write an order of steps and memorize them. Use steps from the week. Make your own steps up and set them in an order. Use the tune to create steps.
List of steps
- Connemara
- 6 heels
- Finish
- Cross step
- Heel and ball 3x (side step)
- Slide step creation #1
- Slide step creation #2
- Extra beats
Vocabulary
- stamp step
- Heel step
- Tap step
- Stab step
- Heel down
- Cross step
- heel step toe step (front and back or opposite feet)
- heel toe (same side)
- Heel drop
- Heel drop Stab drop
- Slide tap
These can be danced as:
- 1 2 3 4 (whole notes)
- 1&2&3&4 (quarter notes)
- 1e&a2e&a3e&a4 (eight notes)
Improv
- Double stamp
- Echo Tune
- # of Heel downs (dancing across the bars of music)
- See day 3 for more ideas
Molly Bán
Our group mapped out routine
A
B Cross Step 2, heel stab
A Extra beats with double stamp
B 6 heels 2x, Connemara 2x, 6 heels
resources
Helpful Resources
- An article on Shoes
- Tea Time Talk on Shoes
- Tea Time Talk on dance floors
- Tea Time Talk on Improvisation
- Turning a Reel step into a Jig step
Practice Music:
Erik Killops on Fiddle (Day 1 tune)
Erik Killops on Fiddle (Day 2 Tune)
Full Sets of tunes (Day 3)
Erik Killops on Fiddle
Preston Howard on Pipes
Erik Killops on Fiddle (Day 4 Tune)
Sligo Duke or Garrett Barry’s on the Session.org – you can find sheet music, variations, recording references for this tune.
Playlist for the whole week
Vocabulary Playlist
I use the term vocab or vocabulary to refer to the different movements and sounds our feet can make. Quite often when I teach I have a warm up before we start that includes the vocab steps. These steps are a great place to start out as an absolute beginner. They can be danced as whole notes, quarter notes and eighth notes depending on what sound you want.
2023 June | Thu 6pm | Hornpipes!
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We will explore hornpipes, both traditional old style and Sean-nos inspired steps. Over the month each of will work on creating our own steps and style for dancing to hornpipes.
week 1
WEEK 1 | Class notes
week 2
WEEK 2 | Class notes
week 3
WEEK 3 | Class notes
Week 3. Find a tune that you like dancing to and put steps to the tune. Hornpipe steps, reel steps, jig or slide steps. You can create steps or create a routine or just improv to the tune.
week 4
WEEK 4 | Class notes
- Past Course covering Murray’s #1 (Class video week 4, Video of Joe dancing under the week 6 tab)
week 5
resources
- 1/19/2021 Winter 1 | Woodshed 3 | Old-style
- 1/14/2021 Winter 1 | Class 2 | Old Style Step
- 01/12/2021 Woodshed 2 Old-Style Step Hornpipes
- 01/07/2021 | Old-Style Step Dance | Class 1
- 01/05/2021 | Woodshed | Hornpipe Basic Step
- Vocabulary | Skip back
- Vocabulary | Cross
- Vocabulary | Heel Drop
- Vocabulary | Shuffle
- Blackbird
2023 May | Saturday 4pm | Irish Set Dancing [in-person]
2023 April | Saturday 4pm | Set Dancing [IN-PERSON]
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The month of April we will be learning sets from Connemara.
Irish Set Dancing
Saturday 4-6pm
Waverly United Church of Christ
3300 SE Woodward St, Portland, OR, United States, Oregon
$10 general, $5 students
Last Saturday Céilí ~ 4-7 ~ Live Music
week 1
WEEK 1 | Class notes
Saturday April 1, 2023
Our set of the week is: The Connemara Set
Footwork for the Connemara. The Connemara step and the stamp and stamp step. The stamp and stamp step can help you travel when you are first starting out it might be hard to travel across the floor and I find this step easer to move further. I used it for years until I was able to dance the Connemara step fully.
Connemara Set
The Connemara set is a nice 4 figure set. The first sides are on the right of first tops.
We reviewed the Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set). We covered this dance in February. Videos and instructions can be found on the February class page under the week 1 tab.
We also danced 3 figures of the Inis Oirr Set.
week 2
WEEK 2 | Class notes
Sat. April 8, 2023
Set of the Week: The Claddagh Set
This another Connemara set. It was taught by Seamus O Meoloid a great set dancer and Sean-nós dancer. The set was revived in Ráth Chairn, Co. Meath. There is a Gaeltacht in Ráth Chairn.
“n 1935 a number of families from the Connemara Gaeltacht were transplanted east to Ráth Chairn to live on land acquired by the Land Commission. It continues today as a thriving Gaeltacht, where Irish is spoken and its traditions embraced through dance and music.” from Ireland XO.
My hope is to keep working on this set and have become one of Portland’s regular dances.
- Instructions Claddagh
- Callers notes for the Claddagh Set – this is a google document. You can make a copy and save it and print it for your reference.
If there is time we will review the Connemara and The Derry set.
week 3
WEEK 3 | Class notes
Sat. April 15, 2023
Our set of the week is: Foraer a Neaintín (Connemara Jig)
- Instructions Foraer a Neaintín (Connemara Jig)
- the dancing in this video is not great, but it is the only one I can find at this time.
If there is time we will review the Claddagh set.
Week 4
WEEK 4 | Class notes
Sat. April 22 2023
Mini Céilí
- The Connemara
- Foraer a Neaintín (Connemara Jig)
- Inis Oirr
- Claddagh Set
We might not get to them all but we will try.
Quarterly Rambling House
Saturday Rambling House (Bealtaine)
- Saturday, April 29, 2023
- 4:00 PM 10:00 PM
- Waverly UCC (map)
Quarterly CCE open house and fundraising event. Our quarterly Saturday Rambling House returns for an half-day event featuring a General Meeting of the branch followed by instrumental sessions, singing circles, and music & dance workshops. Potluck and full céilí dance to follow! This is a great opportunity to introduce members of the wider Portland community to Irish cultural traditions while bolstering our current MÓD community with convivial conversation, moving music, superb singing, deft dancing, and FOOD!
2023 March | Saturday Set Dancing
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Shake out those shamrocks ‘n let’s boogie!
This March, our theme of the month will be advance and retires. We will focus on basic Clare advance and retires as well as including some battering. We will continue to review previous techniques and learn new dances.
As always I encourage you to review the videos and instructions before and after class. If you don’t have time, I’ve got your back. I will break everything down nice and handy and we will progress through the months dances. There’s never a better time to enjoy the art of Irish Set dancing. St. Patrick’s Day is just around the corner!
Irish Set Dancing
Saturday 4-6pm
Waverly United Church of Christ
3300 SE Woodward St, Portland, OR, United States, Oregon
$10 general, $5 students
Last Saturday Céilí ~ 4-7 ~ Live Music
week 1
WEEK 1 | Class notes
Sat. March 4, 2023
Our set of the week is: Caledonian
This is one of my favorite sets. It is one I love teaching both beginners and experienced dancers. It’s the perfect set for perfecting housing and dancing at home. It also allows room for battering. The set can be receptive and when you aren’t focusing on footwork it some might call it boring. But adding a little battering and some great advance and retire steps lights up the dance. We will cover the basics and beginning of advancing and retiring as well as more advanced steps for those with more experience.
If there is time we will review the Claddagh Set. Reviewing the instructions and video before class will give you a nice leg up. If you don’t have time or forget no worries I’ve got your back and will teach and call everything.
- Instructions Claddagh
- Callers notes for the Claddagh Set – this is a google document. You can make a copy and save it and print it for your reference.
week 2
WEEK 2 | Class notes
Sat. March. 11, 2023
Our set of the week is: Clare Plain
If there is time we will review the Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set). We covered this dance in February. Videos and instructions can be found on the February class page under the week 1 tab.
week 3
WEEK 3 | Class notes
Sat. March 18, 2023
Our set of the week is: Corofin Plain
Jim Belcher recently taught a lesson on the Corofin Plain set at our Sweet Hearts dance in February. We will review the set and add more footwork.
If there is time we will review the The Cashel or (The Castle). We covered this dance in February. Videos and instructions can be found on the February class page under the week 2 tab.
Last Saturday Céilí
WEEK 4 | Class notes
Sat. March 25, 2023, 4-7pm
Last Saturday Céilí music by Preston Howard
- The Caledonian
- Seit Doire Cholmcille (Derry Set)
- Claddagh Set
- The Corofin Plain Set
- The Clare Lancers set
We might not get to them all but we will try.
2023 Feb | Saturday Set Dancing
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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.
Resource | Set Dancing
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Welcome Set Dancers,
This is your set dancing hub for reference material and links to resource on the web.
dance instructions
Dance Pages
These are pages dedicated to each set with notes and video references.
- Irish Set Dance Notes – I love the way this site describes the instructions and how the instructions are laid out. If a set is on this site I usually use it first as my reference.
- Dance Minder – my friend Michael Harrison runs this site. It is a great recourse for dancing notes and music references.
courses, classes, video
Courses
Resources on this page dedicated to set dancing and battering for sets. Including entire courses, classes, practice videos and breakdown videos.
- 2022 Summer 1 | Advanced | Wed 6pm
- 2022 Summer 1 | Beginners | Tue 5pm
- 2022 Summer 1 | Intermediate | Tue 6pm
- Mon 6pm | 2022 Spring 2 | Battering for Sets | Jigs, Slides & Polkas
- 12.21 Fall | Battering for Sets
- Mon 6pm | 2022 Spring | Battering for Sets
- 01.22 Winter | Battering for Sets
- Mon. 6:00pm & Wed. 7:00pm | 2021 Fall | November | Set Dance | Reels
- Battering for Sets | Advance & Retire Steps [The Lobster Inspired]
- Dance | Clare Plain Set
books
Books
- Pat Murphy, 1995, Toss the Feathers: Irish Set Dancing, Mercier Press: Dublin.
- Pat Murphy, 2000, The Flowing Tide: More Irish Set Dancing, Mercier Press: Dublin.
- Pat Murphy, 2009, Apples in Winter: Irish Set and Social Dancing, self published, Ireland.
music
Music Resources
- Spotify Music Playlist – please save this playlist in your Spotify account. When ever possible I will add the music for each set on this playlist. A great resource for practicing or teaching the dances to your friends and family.
- Youtube Set dance playlist – please save this playlist in your YouTube channel. I will work on adding each dance we learn to this playlist. Having them all in one place will make it easy for you to learn and remember the material we cover.
- .
IN-PERSON | 2022 Fall | Saturday 4pm Irish Set Dancing Class
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Saturdays
4:00pm-6pm
[IN-PERSON]
Combining Sean-nós steps, Clare battering and smooth dancing form to learn to dance in Ireland, or throughout the world wherever Irish music is played.
4pm-6pm every Saturday with a Live music céilí from 4pm-7pm on the last Saturday of the Month.
Waverly UCC, 3300 SE Woodward St., Portland, OR. $5-$10 Sliding scale lesson, $10 for the Céilí.
Welcome Set Dancers,
This is a companion course for our in-person class in Portland, Oregon. You can still follow along if you are in-person or learning online. I will offer tips and tricks for practicing at home by yourself.
You will discover creative ways to study set dancing even as a solo person. Many of you are at home on your own without a partner. It can be a challenge. But not as hard as you might think! I learned many of my set dancing and steps solo. In the process you can really hone your skills before having to work with a partner. I will also provide tips on how to practice without attending a ceili. Not to mention, some bonus tips and tricks for memorizing sets in isolation.
Kevin Burke once told me a story of a show where the dancers were two short of a set, so one of the musicians joined the group with a chair and danced the set with a chair as his partner. It’s a great story and I can’t do it justice. So, I must invite him as a guest to tell us the story himself. In the meanwhile, don’t be afraid to develop a temporary relationship with a nice looking piece of furniture.
Get your set dancing ready for the dance floor.
9/17
WEEK 1 | Class notes
Saturday, September 17, 2022
THE CLARE PLAIN SET
Our first week we had 12 people ranging from 6 months old to 79 years old. Here’s to keeping set dancing going for years to come! Lovely to see you all out and dancing. We covered footwork for traveling, advancing, dancing at home and housing. You will find a few video references for these movements. We also danced the Clare Plain Set. This dance is from County Clare. The while you will see dancers battering the foundation is the smooth gliding step we covered in class. These steps will be the foundation for all of the Clare dances.
Warm up & Technique
- Traveling: Smooth 3’s
- Advance & Retire
- Frame
- Home
- House
Traveling: Smooth 3’s
Video coming soon
Ladies – Advance & Retire
Gents – Advance & Retire
Frame
Video coming soon
Home
Video coming soon
House
Video coming soon
The Clare Plain Set
- Set Dancing Teacher Instructions
- Dance Minder Instructions
9/24
WEEK 2 | Class notes
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Our second week we will learn the Clare Lancers. We will also review and cover set dancing technique and form. Our second class was a blast. Michael and Margret visited from California. Michael played flute for some of the figures.
The Clare Lancers
- Set Dancing Teacher Instructions
- Dance Minder Instructions
10/1
WEEK 3 | Class notes
Saturday, October 1, 2022
This week we will learn the Connemara set and Jim Loewenherz will play for our class. It’s such a blessing to have live music while learning. One of the great things is that we can dance at the pace that we are learning and right away be in sink with the music and each other. Starting out we will dance this set smooth and eventually when you are ready you can add the battering step to the set. You will find the instructions as well as the video reference for the set. Also on this page is the Connemara step broken down and a practice video.
- Set dance teacher: Connemara Instructions
- Dance Minder: Connemara Instructions
Here is the battering step for the Connemara Set. It is not necessary to have this step in the set, but if you want to work on it on your own I will have a session down the line where we include it in the set and we will work on traveling with the step. If you like the battering footwork keep working on this step on your own and focus on moving with the step. This will give you a leg up when we bring it into the whole set in later weeks.
Some dancers find the stamp and stamp step easer to travel with when first starting out. You can cover a greater distance on each stamp and stamp.
10/8
WEEK 4 | Class notes
Saturday, October 8, 2022
Merchant Set | Reel 128, Reel 192, Reel 128, Hornpipe 144
Videos for the Merchant Set can be found here.
Click and go to YouTube to see these videos.
10/15
10/22
WEEK 6 | Class notes
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Ballyvourney Jig Set | 4 Slides (32bar tunes) 4x each
10/29
WEEK 7 | CCE Quarterly Event
Saturday, October 29, 2022
Rambling House Ceili – a page of all the dances we will dance as well as a YouTube playlist and a Spotify playlist. I have tried to include most of the dances that we have covered in class in the ceili. There will be a few new ceili dances that you might not have learned yet and we are missing the Clare Plain Set at the ceili (we will be sure to dance it next time at the Butterball in November 😊).
- Connemara Set | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 184, Maggie in the Woods 96
- Haymakers Jig | Jigs 400
- Merchant Set | Reel 128, Reel 192, Reel 128, Hornpipe 144
- Siege of Ennis | Jig
- Clare Lancers | Reels 160, Reels 192, Reels 144, Reels 192, Reels 192
- Ballyvourney Jig Set | 4 Slides (32bar tunes) 4x each
- Fairy Reel | Reels
- Antrim Square | Reel 144, Jig 136, Slides 152
- Waltz
resources
- Set Dancing Resource Page | An all in one resource page for set dancers. More resources added regularly.
- Spotify Music Playlist – please save this playlist in your Spotify account. When ever possible I will add the music for each set on this playlist. A great resource for practicing or teaching the dances to your friends and family.
- Youtube Set dance playlist – please save this playlist in your YouTube channel. I will work on adding each dance we learn to this playlist. Having them all in one place will make it easy for you to learn and remember the material we cover.
- Irish Set Dance Notes – I love the way this site describes the instructions and how the instructions are laid out. If a set is on this site I usually use it first as my reference.
- Dance Minder – my friend Michael Harrison runs this site. It is a great recourse for dancing notes and music references.