Issue 2417: Scottish Lilt or Jig
- Object
- The Scottish Lilt (Dance)
- Submitter
- Stephen Webb (SJW)
- Assigned to
- Viktor Lehmann
- Priority
- Normal
- Disposition
- Needs help
- Description
-
Solo Highland man/ woman dance for 8 steps in 9/8 jig Recommended Music: Drops o’ Brandy or Broase and Butter Provenance not known Danced in competitions certainly pre-1968
Previous Actions
- Date March 22, 2021, 5:46 p.m.
- User Stephen Webb (SJW)
New issue submitted
- Date Dec. 26, 2022, midnight
- User Viktor Lehmann (tone2tone)
Assigned changed to »tone2tone« (previously »None«)
Disposition changed to »Fixed« (previously »New«)
Thank you, Stephen. Added the two recommended tunes and notes to the dance.
- Date Dec. 28, 2022, 2:16 p.m.
- User Anselm Lingnau (anselm)
This is considered one of the “national dances” of Scotland and it shows up as such in highland-type dance publications. I would be reluctant to ascribe it to Ms. MacNab because it definitely has an independent existence outside of her collecting, and this sends the wrong type of signal. According to D. G. MacLennan in Highland and Traditional Scottish Dances (1950), it originated in Perthshire after 1746.
Also note that for competitive purposes the dance is usually danced to a completely different tune, a retreat march (also in 9/8 time, but not a jig) called Battle of the Somme, by P/M Willie Lawrie.
- Date Dec. 31, 2022, 5:29 p.m.
- User Viktor Lehmann (tone2tone)
Disposition changed to »Needs help« (previously »Fixed«)
Thanks Anselm. I exchanged some information we got from Stephen against your input in the extra notes. Shall I do something about the MacNab collection entry? This collection reflects the London Branch list, and I don’t know how we should diverge from that. Any feedback welcome!