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Up a double, Siding, Arming
Country Dances, Ancient and Modern

Dances in The Country Dance Book (Part 6) (Cecil Sharp, 1922)

The Dancing Master, 10th ed.

From AberdeenHenry Playford 1698
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Assembly
Bare NecessitiesTriple Minor

The Dancing Master, 11th ed.

Childgrove ~ SharpHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
Childgrove ~ Sharp (mod)Henry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp (mod) 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
Crosbey Square ~ SharpHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922
Colin HumeDuple Minor
Indian QueenHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
The Princess 1701 ~ SharpHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
The Queen's JigHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
The RoundHenry Playford 1701
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
A Playford Ball
Bare Necessities
Duple Minor

The Dancing Master, 12th ed.

Love NeglectedHenry Playford 1703
Cecil Sharp 1922
Colin HumeDuple Minor
Nowill Hills ~ SharpHenry Playford 1703
Cecil Sharp 1922
Colin HumeDuple Minor
Up With AilyHenry Playford 1703
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

The Dancing Master, 6th ed.

Never Love Thee More ~ SharpJohn Playford 1679
Cecil Sharp (mod) 1922 Playford Assembly
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

The Dancing Master, 9th ed.

Mr. Beveridge's Maggot ~ SharpHenry Playford 1695
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

The second Part of the Dancing Master

Bury Fair ~ SharpHenry Playford 1696
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesTriple Minor
The Geud Man of Ballangigh ~ SharpHenry Playford 1696
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

Tunes of other Country-Dances

Mad Robin ~ SharpJohn Playford 1687
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

Twenty Four New Country Dances

Apley House ~ SharpHenry Playford 1702
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Brett LarsenDuple Minor
Jack's MaggotHenry Playford 1702
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
Old Noll's Jig ~ SharpHenry Playford 1702
Cecil Sharp 1922
Colin HumeDuple Minor

The English Dancing Master

Drive the Cold Winter Away ~ SharpJohn Playford 1651
Cecil Sharp 1922
Colin Hume4 Couple Longways
MundesseJohn Playford 1651
Cecil Sharp 1922
MGM and Reunion3 Couple Circle

The Dancing Master, 4th ed.

Epping ForestJohn Playford 1670
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Ball
Bare Necessities3 Couple Circle
The Mulberry GardenJohn Playford 1670
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Assembly
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

The Dancing Master, 7th ed.

Fourpence, Ha'penny, Farthing #1John Playford 1688
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
The Jockey #1John Playford 1688
Cecil Sharp 1922
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor
Sion HouseJohn Playford 1686
Cecil Sharp 1922 Playford Assembly
Bare NecessitiesDuple Minor

The Dancing Master, 14th ed.

Hunt the Squirrel ~ 1709John Young (Playford family) 1709
Cecil Sharp (mod) 1922
A Playford Ball
Bare Necessities
Triple Minor
Number
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After being disappointed by the country dances which he could find still extant in England Sharp turned his attention to the various editions of The Dancing Master — and only them, he did not publish interpretations of any later works.

Sharp clearly felt that Country Dancing fell into a decline after about 1670:

A critical examination of these successive editions (of Playford) shows that the dance degenerated very rapidly during the period covered by them, and the large number of dance-manuals subsequently issued by Walsh, Thompson, Waylett, and others furthermore proves that this decline continued during the two following centuries...
—Cecil Sharp, The Country Dance Book part 5, 1918, p. 9

I'm not sure what his metrics were for this decline, but he was convinced of it. Perhaps he just didn't like duple or triple minor dances?

Dealing with Playford's text presents challenges which do not arise when you record a living tradition. Playford is sometimes consise to the point of obscurity, he did not seem to employ a proof reader and there are mistakes in his text (in that the figures he describe don't work together, or don't fit the music, etc.), and finally he used words whose meanings have now been lost.

Sharp had to do his best to figure out what was meant from these descriptions. And he did an amazingly good job of it too. Not always perfect. Now with 100 years of hindsight we know things he didn't, but if he hadn't started we won't have that hindsight.

Playford frequently says "Sides all". What does that mean? The concept of siding had died out in the Country Dance tradition around 1700 (the last Playford dance that used it was in 1670) and no one in England in 1900 knew. Sharp came up with an interpretation, and later in his life a different interpretation. We don't know if either is correct.

Or take the word "salute" Sharp interprets that as "honour" — which certainly fits the modern meaning of the word (a respectful greeting). But the Lovelace Manuscript makes it clear that "salute" meant "kiss" on the dance floor.

Look at Row well ye mariners, Playford describes the dance as:

Lead up a D. forwards and back · That again : First man two slips cross the Room one way, the woman the other · Back again to your places : Fall back both · Meet again : Clap both your own hands, then clap each other's right-hands against one another's; clap both your own hands again, then clap left-hands, then clap both hands again, then clap your breasts, then meet both your hands against one-another · The same again, only clap left-hands first :

First man sides with the next wo. and his wo. with the next man, doing the like till you come to your own places, the rest following and doing the same.
The dance consists of two 16 bar parts. The first is well defined, but for the second we have only that people should "side" (whatever that is) with their neighbors and then (somehow) progress. Now siding is a move which takes 4 bars and leaves one where one started. It does not progress and it leaves 12 bars of music unaccounted for.

Sharp faced all these challenges and presented us with well over 100 danceable reinterpretations of Playford.

The various parts of the Country Dance Book are:

This website is copyright © 2021-2025 by George W. Williams V
Creative Commons License My work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Most of the dances have more restrictive licensing, see my notes on copyright, the individual dance pages should mention when some rights are waived.