The Olympians Scottish Dance Band - Music For Twelve Traditional Dances Book 27 album FLAC

Royal scottish country dance society music for 12 traditional dances lp book 5. Pre-owned. The royal scottish dance band society colin dewar ( CD ). Jim MacLeod Band - The Scottish Dance World - Vinyl Record LP Album - SPA 154. £. 9.
Label: Royal Scottish Country Dance Society – RSCDS 20. Format: Vinyl, L. The Music Makars (Reel 8 x 32). Written-By – Trad.
Dance music is played across Scotland at dances or ceilidhs. Group dances such as jigs, strathspeys, waltzes and reels, are performed to music provided typically by an ensemble, or dance band, which can include fiddle (violin), bagpipe, accordion and percussion. The major names to know in this part of the musical tradition are Niel Gow, James Scott Skinner, and Jimmy Shand.
Scottish music is a huge part of Scottish culture. Spend any length of time here, a toe-tapping tune, a jovial dance and a hearty sing-a-long is almost a guarantee, and it's rarely a quiet affair. Traditional Scottish music still reverberates around the country. You'll hear street pipers blast the pipes, energetic fiddle sessions and the gentle melodies of folk songs echoing from inside pubs. So, what happens when you mix our traditional music with a spot of dancing? A proper Scottish night out! Scottish bagpipe music. You’re also likely to hear traditional music played in the streets in many of Scotland’s cities, with buskers entertaining the crowds at all times of the year with stirring renditional of beautiful Scottish folk songs and classical fiddle tunes. You might hear instruments such as: Fiddle.
Scottish Dance Music 2012. Highland Schottische: Lochaber Gathering. Scottish Dance Music 2012. The Glasgow Country Dance: Miss Milligan, W. Cunningham, Auld Luckie, Luckie Scaup.
Scottish country dance (SCD) is the distinctively Scottish form of country dance, itself a form of social dance involving groups of couples of dancers tracing progressive patterns. A dance consists of a sequence of figures. These dances are set to musical forms (Jigs, Reels and Strathspey Reels) which come from the Gaelic tradition of Highland Scotland, as do the steps used in performing the dances. Traditionally a figure corresponds to an eight-bar phrase of music.
Scottish country dances are not competitive dances, but rather a form of communication. Their main value is that you can have pleasure from the very beginning. It is definite though, that the higher your dancing skills are, the more pleasure you get during the dance. But it is very important not to forget, that the dance is always something more than just the set of movements with the music. We want, that the people through the whole Russia could have the opportunity to meet together and do dance Scottish dances, because they bring joy, raise spirit and help to develop communication skills.
Dancing Tribute to Andy Murray - there is a new dance here, The Pride of Dunblane, in tribute to Andy Murray, Wimbledon Men's Singles Champion 2013. This dance was premiered at Linlithgow Scotch Hop on 17th July 2013. For more information about how this came about, see here. A 40-bar progressive reel for couples in a large circle around the room, facing in, à la 'Lucky Seven' or 'Circassian Circle'. This dance was devised for Hazel Easey and James Williams and presented to them on the occasion of their wedding in Canonbie, Dumfriesshire on August 24th, 1996. With Caroline Bradshaw, May 1996.
Tracklist
Miss Murray of Lintrose (32 Bar Reel) | |
A1-1 | Original |
A1-2 | L'Eté |
A1-3 | La Trenise |
The Nineteenth of December (32 Bar Jig) | |
A2-1 | Original |
A2-2 | Miss Macpherson Grant's Jig |
A2-3 | Jas. Soutar of Plain's Jig |
The Duchess of York (32 Bar Strathspey) | |
A3-1 | Lady Stormont |
A3-2 | Dunblane |
A3-3 | The Banks of Garry |
Burns' Hornpipe (32 Bar Reel) | |
A4-1 | Glasgow Hornpipe |
A4-2 | Shuter's Hornpipe |
A4-3 | Santa Monica Bay |
The Reel of Five (16 Bars Strathspey; 16 Bars Reel) | |
A5-1 | Lord of the Isles |
A5-2 | Miss Caroline Thomson's Reel |
Sally's Fancy (32 Bar Strathspey) | |
A6-1 | Mrs. McLeod of Geastow |
A6-2 | Dundrennan Abbey |
A6-3 | Old Traditional Air |
Round Reel of Eight (88 Bar Reel) | |
B1-1 | Mrs. Anderson's Reel |
B1-2 | The Seabright |
Tayport Beauty (32 Bar Jig) | |
B2-1 | The Rose's Fancy |
B2-2 | The Novelty |
B2-3 | Mrs. Peggy Rae |
Seann Truibhas Willichan (32 Bar Strathspey) | |
B3-1 | My Dearie |
B3-2 | The Lost Boat |
B3-3 | The Bonniest Lass in a' the World |
La Flora (32 Bar Jig) | |
B4-1 | Miss Jane Douglas |
B4-2 | Jack's Medley |
B4-3 | Lady Ramsay's Fancy |
Miss Nellie Wemyss (32 Bar Reel) | |
B5-1 | A Scots Measure |
B5-2 | Reel of Bangholm |
B5-3 | Miss Alison Little |
Auld Lang Syne (32 Bar Strathspey) | |
B6-1 | James O. Forbes |
B6-2 | The Lichted Ha' |
B6-3 | Ben Lomond |
Other versions
Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ZRS 8009 | The Olympians Scottish Dance Band | Music For Twelve Traditional Dances Book 27 (LP) | Royal Scottish Country Dance Society | ZRS 8009 | UK | 1975 |