Information AboutJig |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT JIG | |
| irish styles of music | |
| folk music | |
| european folk dances | |
| scottish country dance | |
| irish dance | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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The jig (sometimes seen in its French Language or Italian Language forms '''gigue''' or '''giga''') is a Folk Dance type as well as the accompanying Dance Tune Type , popular in Ireland and Scotland . It is a popular tune-type within the traditions of Irish Dance Music and Scottish Country Dance Music , second only to the Reel . It is transcribed Compound Meter . ''Double jigs'' are always transcribed in 6/8; Slip Jig s are always written in 9/8. ''Single jigs'' are most commonly transcribed in 6/8, but sometimes also in 12/8. ''Slides'' are transcribed in both 12/8 and 6/8. The most common structure is two eight-bar parts, each of which is repeated (AABB). There are a number of tunes with three or more parts, and some in which the length of one or more parts varies from eight bars. As with most other types of dance tunes in Irish music, at a session or a dance it is common for two or more jigs to be strung together, flowing on without interruption. In Cotswold Morris , a jig is a dance performed by a single dancer, or sometimes two. Its music is not usually a ''jig'' in the sense given above. ORIGINS AND ETYMOLOGY While it is often stated that the jig is of Irish origin, it is more than likely that this dance-type originated in the Germanic countries. A closer look at the etymology of this word reveals that Gig (g {Link without Title} g) in its several variant forms describes a certain type of (repetitive) motion. Examples such as Icelandic "geiga" (which means to "rove at random" or "take a sudden unexpected direction"), the High German "Geigen" (a "back and forth motion") to the Low German Dialect s such as that spoken in the Swiss Canton of Bern (where "gyg-ampfe" is called a Reel when it is in fact a jig). REFERENCES |