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Morris Minors
United Kingdom
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 12 ส.ค. 2013
Mainly Morris Dancing
Rackback Morris Dance at the Driffield Day of Dance, 2024.
Hull's Rackaback Morris can be seen doing their opening dance at the second annual Driffield Day of Traditional Dance.
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Wansford Cloggers in "The Stag" beer garden at the Driffield Day of Dance, 2024
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The Wansford Lock Cloggers dance to Michael Turner's Waltz in the beer garden at "The Stag" inn in Driffield.
Green Ginger Garland Rope Dance at the Driffield Day of Dance, 2024.
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Hull's Green Ginger Garland Dancers included their Rope Dance at the Finale in the Methodist Church car park. The church had been most supportive and accomodating in helping to make the day a great success.
Rattlejag Morris dancing at the Driffield Day of Dance, 2024
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Rattlejag Morris travelled from their Nottinghamshire base to entertain the people of Driffield. They brought quite an orchestra to back them up. Here they are dancing at the Finale in the Methodist Church car park.
Driffield Day of Dance 2024 Makara Morris dance "Stool of Repentance".
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Makara Morris seen dancing here on the site courtesy of Boro Tyres for the second annual Driffield Day of Traditional Dance.
Lincoln Big Morris 2024: Lincoln & Micklebarrow dance at the Lawn.
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Lincoln and Micklebarrow Morris Men are seen performing at "The Lawn" as part of the Lincoln Big Morris on 7th Sept, 2024. The Big Morris usually involves over twenty teams dancing around the city centre and Cathedral Quarter in historic Lincoln on the first Saturday in September every year.
Beverley Garland at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival 2024
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Beverley Garland Dancers making the most of an unexpected long sunny period after a terrible wet morning.
Bridal Arch in Hull's Fruit Market at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival, 2024.
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Morris Dancers form a Bridal Arch in Humber Street.
Audience Participation saturation at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival, 2024.
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Just when you thought the Press Gang was a thing of Hull's past, yet more of the public find themselves in the grip of "Tinners", including two little girls being taught by Grandma how to grow old disgracefully.
Audience Participation Circassian Circle at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival 2024
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Carrying on with the audience participation theme, the teams introduced unsuspecting members of the public in Humber Street to an ancestor of the Hokey Cokey! Fans of Sponge Bob Square Pants will recognise the tune as the "Oyster Girl" which can often be heard playing in the background. The sun was shining after a torrential morning.
Audience Participation to the "Shepherd's Hey" at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival 2024.
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The sun came out upon us after a bad start.
Yet another audience participation "tinners" at the Hull Folk and Maritime Festival 2024.
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More hapless innocents are dragged off the street to participate!
A damp audience participation "tinners" at the Hull Folk & Maritime festival.
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When the heavy morning rain eased off to a steady drizzle some brave souls ventured out for a quick audience participation "Tinners".
Makara Morris at the Trout Inn in Wansford.
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Makara Morris made their first visit to The Trout Inn, Wansford near Driffield and can be seen here dancing "Dandelion Clock" to John Kirkpatrick's "Jump at the Sun". Although it is just around the corner from Wansford Village hall, where they practise, the Trout was alwas closed on a Monday so Makara never danced there. It is now fully open under new management. It is ideally sited beside the ...
The Raving Maes in Beverley.
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The Raving Maes from Hessle brought their unique Morris style to the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance. They are seen here at the Finale in Flemingate.
Harlequin Morris dance out in Beverley
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Harlequin Morris dance out in Beverley
Clogarythm dance at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
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Clogarythm dance at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
Yorkshire Chandelier dancing at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance in 2024.
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Yorkshire Chandelier dancing at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance in 2024.
Rackaback Morris at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
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Rackaback Morris at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
Cricket on the Hearth at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance, 2024
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Cricket on the Hearth at the Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance, 2024
Beverley Garland Dancers on their home ground.
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Beverley Garland Dancers on their home ground.
Ravens Morris perform at Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
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Ravens Morris perform at Beverley Folk Festival Day of Dance.
Makara Morris dancing "Yorkshire Diamonds" for 8 at the Beverley Folk Festival
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Makara Morris dancing "Yorkshire Diamonds" for 8 at the Beverley Folk Festival
Harlequin Morris in Beverley 22nd June 2024
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Harlequin Morris in Beverley 22nd June 2024
The parade of Morris Dancers arrives at the Market Cross in Saturday Market, Beverley.
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The parade of Morris Dancers arrives at the Market Cross in Saturday Market, Beverley.
Makara Morris Dance "Dandelion Clock" at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival.
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Makara Morris Dance "Dandelion Clock" at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival.
Makara Morris Dance "Gollums For 8" at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival
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Makara Morris Dance "Gollums For 8" at the 2024 Beverley Folk Festival
Beverley Folk Festival 2024 Final Dance Off
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Beverley Folk Festival 2024 Final Dance Off
Hull Regency Dancers do the "Duke of Kent's Waltz" in front of Beverley Guildhall.
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Hull Regency Dancers do the "Duke of Kent's Waltz" in front of Beverley Guildhall.
excellent guys so important to keep our traditions alive , brilliant , thank you for posting this .
that was great.
Very interesting dance. Particularly the two circles moving in opposite directions. Good music excellent dancing.
What is this?
A ritual casing of the spell Summon Greater Demon.
It's a form of English Morris Dancing. Makes a change from darts & dominoes while you are enjoying a drink outside a riverside pub on a rare summer's evening.
Very good! From a xtan in America.
It’s funny when English people think they have culture
Interesting. Parts of it remind me of Gujarati dandiya ras.
Haha. VERY first thing that I thought of. My kids are half Gujarati and a quarter Irish.
Are you summoning a leprechaun?
Iv'e heard of groups of armed grands roaming the streets but I thought it was pish posh.
Really enjoyed that , thankyou ❤
Glad you enjoyed it.
♥
Love these dances.
Lovely! Made my feet tap too!! 😂
Morris dancing. My secret love.
Love it.
I rather think the gentry would approve!
It’s meant to be about fertility. I think somebody there is confusing the message.
Sorry Susan but there is no scientifically proven corellationship between Morris dancing and fertility, otherwise the Yorkshire Wolds would be overrun with little Morris dancers and Morris danceresses. On the otherhand, all exercise is recommended for keeping one's equipment in good order. The strange and confusing attire of some men in the video is down to their steam punk alter ego. Some have adopted the lower wear normally favoured North of the border, where the diet of porridge, haggis and deep fried Mars Bars make maximum ventilation essential. Yorkshire dancers usually remain faithful to loosely cut trousers (bicycle clips optional) which provide safe accomodation for their ferrets.
Cute!
Keeping cultural history alive. Excellent.
Guess you had to know about it happening , i wasnt aware it was happening or i would have popped down
Sorry to hear you missed it, Paul. There is another big gathering in Newark on 20th & 21st July. www.newarktraditions.org.uk/ You can often get info on planned events from the Morris Federation, Morris Ring and Open Morris websites. I don't know how well it was publicised locally but in many places the media seem unsympathetic. When Kingston Upon Hull was city of culture in 1917, in addition to the regular Day of Dance, 27 teams danced in the town for the Morris Federation AGM in the September. Not a single mention in the Hull Daily Mail, nor on BBC Look North nor even in the promotional literature produced (at public expense) by the City of Culture team.
😂😂😂 free free, Morris
No idea why this popped up in my recommended but I smiled the whole way through!
Watch it, that tune's going to get the rappers going!
They removed the blacking from faces becauseof the africans being offended,this is why we need to vote reform before all our customs are gone
Don't we look good!
Isn't this the oompa loompas's song? (1st Willie Wonka movie.)
Sounds very like it. The middle bit is "The Old Bazaar in Cairo".
I can confirm that the side is Powderkegs Morris. Thanks for sharing this great video!
Thanks, Rachel.
I think that dog should be Makara's mascot. He or she just wants to be in that dance.
It is just waiting for them to throw a stick!
Well done!!
"And be you blithe and bonny, Converting all your sounds of woe Into hey nonny, nonny." [Shakespeare] Jeannie Robertson's song chimes with Much Ado, but probably best to say no more (wink, wink) of what the squire's bells are ringing to.
Tune and dance both called Call Me
I think the team are Powderkegs Morris
Thanks, Stewart. Will amend the post.
What is this? Spring celebration?
No. Just a Monday night practice session but they had decided to practice by the lock instead of in the village hall as it gave a pleasant backdrop for a video. Lots of people pass along this road without realising the lock is there. The navigation used to be crucial for getting barges from Driffield to Hull and thence to towns throughout the Yorkshire river system and the local canal society are working hard to make it fully navigable again. Morris is not just part of our living tradition, it is great fun too. I recommend it to you!
Brilliant.
Brilliant thank you guys !!!!!
Not a leek in sight!!!
Ah, My hometown, I actually live in the Angel, just up the road 😅
Lovely and informative, cheers!
I look stupid
I think you all look great and you did have a go! Sing like nobody's listening Dance like nobody's watching Be yourself Enjoy yourself
I think you all look great and living life is all about having a go Just remember Penguee, Sing Like there's no one listening, Dance like no one's watching, There's no one else in the world like you. Be yourself!
brilliant to see young ones dancing so well .sad that some people too busy to stop to watch .
yes
Nice. Anyone tell me te name of the dance and the tune, please?
Slight variation to the one i remember from last week! ;p
What is the history of this dance?
Hi David, Not entirely sure as most Morris is the result of fusion over time and unrecorded. I always take definitive Morris origin stories with an extremely large pinch of salt. I believe the group learnt it via "Freaks in the Peaks". The style is Border Morris (from the English/Welsh borders), usually a more aggressive style associated with raising beer money by unemployed labourers and relying on formation and body movement rather than complex stepping. The tune is one of the many versions of "The Cuckoo's nest" found throughout the English speaking world, often accompanied by a naughty song, although, as far as I know, there are no words that correlate direct to this particular version. Hope this helps.
Thanks Morris, I guess the origin is lost in the mists of time. It is a wonderful dance and I hope that our British cousins continue to hang on to their musical folk heritage in the world of "pop." One of my great-grandmothers came from Torksey in Lincolnshire, not too far from Hull. I wonder what songs and dances she heard and saw in her youth in the 1840s and 1850s before coming to America? That is a rhetorical question only, of course.
David Brook Hi David, I know Torksey well. Today it is a very small place but in your great grandmother's day would have been a bustling Junction, packed with barges travelling between the River Trent and the Foss Dike which led to Lincoln & Boston. She may well have travelled up to Hull by river, as some of my ancestors did. The people of Lincolnshire were know as "Yellowbellys" by Yorkshire folk. Many explanations but again no definitive answer why. One of my favourite Lincolnshire songs was "Brigg Fair". There are plenty of recordings on You tube. This one th-cam.com/video/VpM_JQNBVYs/w-d-xo.html is very slow but may be more understandable to the ear and has some good photos of Victorian Lincolnshire. "Tatterfoals" who danced at the Hull Folk Festival are from Scunthorpe, about 20 miles upriver from Torksey. You may be interested in some of the Morris dancing info on our website www.morrisminors.wordpress.com.