Today, there are six predominant styles of Morris dancing, and different dances or
traditions within each style named after their region of origin. • Cotswold Morris: dances from an area mostly in
Gloucestershire and
Oxfordshire; an established
misnomer, since the
Cotswolds overlap this region only partially. Normally danced with handkerchiefs or sticks to accompany the hand movements. Dances are usually for 6 or 8 dancers, but solo and duo dances (known as single or double jigs) also occur. • North West Morris: more military in style and often processional, that developed out of the mills in the North-West of England in the 19th and early 20th centuries. •
Border Morris from the English-Welsh border: a simpler, looser, more vigorous style, occasionally danced with blackened or coloured faces. •
Long Sword dance from
Yorkshire and southern
County Durham, danced with long, rigid metal or wooden swords for, usually, six or eight dancers. •
Rapper sword from the
Northumberland and Durham Coalfield, danced with short flexible sprung steel swords, usually for five dancers. •
Molly dance from Cambridgeshire. Traditionally danced on
Plough Monday, they were feast dances that were danced to collect money during harsh winters. One of the dancers would be dressed as a woman, hence the name.
Joseph Needham identified two separate families of Molly dances, one from three villages in the Cambridge area and one from two in the Ely area.
Cotswold ,
Wells, England – Exeter Morris Men Lionel Bacon records
Cotswold Morris traditions from these towns and villages:
Abingdon,
Adderbury,
Ascot-under-Wychwood,
Badby,
Bampton, Bidford,
Bledington,
Brackley,
Bucknell,
Chipping Campden,
Ducklington,
Eynsham,
Headington Quarry,
Hinton-in-the-Hedges,
Ilmington,
Kirtlington,
Leafield (Field Town),
Longborough,
Oddington, Sherbourne,
Stanton Harcourt,
Upton-upon-Severn and
Wheatley. Bacon also lists the tradition from Lichfield, which is Cotswold-like despite that city's distance from the Cotswold Morris area; the authenticity of this tradition has been questioned. In 2006, a small number of dances from a previously unknown tradition was discovered by Barry Care,
MBE, keeper of The Morris Ring Photographic Archive, and a founding member of Moulton Morris Men (
Ravensthorpe, Northamptonshire)—two of them danceable. Other dances listed by Bacon include Border Morris dances from
Brimfield,
Bromsberrow Heath,
Evesham,
Leominster,
Much Wenlock,
Pershore, Upton-upon-Severn,
Upton Snodsbury,
White Ladies Aston, and miscellaneous non-Cotswold, non-Border dances from
Steeple Claydon and
Winster. There are a number of traditions which have been collected since the mid-twentieth century, though few have been widely adopted. Examples are Broadwood, Duns Tew, and Ousington-under-Wash in the Cotswold style, and Upper and Lower Penn in the Border style.
North West The North West tradition is named after the North West region of England and has always featured mixed and female sides, at least as far back as the 18th century. There is a picture of Eccles Wakes painted in 1822 that shows both male and female dancers. Historically, most sides danced in various styles of shoes or boots, although dancing in
clogs was also very common. Modern revivalist sides have tended more towards the wearing of clogs. The dances were often associated with
rushcarts at the local
wakes or holidays, and many teams rehearsed only for these occasions. While some teams continue to rehearse and dance for a single local festival or event (such as the Abram Morris Dancers), the majority of teams now rehearse throughout the year, with the majority of performances occurring in the spring and summer. The dances themselves were often called 'maze' or 'garland dances' as they involved a very intricate set of movements in which the dancers wove in and out of each other. Some dances were performed with a wicker hoop (decorated with garlands of flowers) held above the dancer's head. Some dancers were also associated with a tradition of
mumming and hold a
pace egging play in their area. , Yorkshire in 1987 The
Britannia Coconut Dancers, named after a mill not far from
Bacup, are unique in the tradition, in that they used sawn bobbins to make a noise, and perform to the accompaniment of a brass ensemble. They are one of the few North West Morris groups that still black up their faces. It is said that the dance found its way to the area through Cornishmen who migrated to work in the
Rossendale quarries. Carnival morris dancing shares a parallel history with North West morris dancing but began to evolve independently from around the 1940s onwards. It remains extremely popular with upwards of 8,000 current dancers. Girls' carnival morris dancing is highly competitive and characterised by precise, synchronous routines with pom-poms (or 'shakers') executed to pop music. It is performed almost exclusively by girls and women in Lancashire, Cheshire and parts of North Wales. Performances typically take place in sports halls and community centres and participants more closely align with British carnival performances such as jazz kazoo marching bands, entertainer troupes and majorettes, than with the morris performances of the folk revival. In 2005, playwright Helen Blakeman staged 'The Morris' at the Liverpool Everyman, inspired by her childhood experience as a carnival morris dancer. In 2017, an exhibition of photographs taken at a carnival morris dancing competition in Southport by artist, Lucy Wright was presented at Cecil Sharp House.
Border The term "Border Morris" was first used by E. C. Cawte in a 1963 article on the Morris dance traditions of
Herefordshire,
Shropshire and
Worcestershire: counties along the border with Wales. Characteristics of the tradition as practised in the 19th and early 20th centuries include: blackface or coloured facepaint (in some areas), use of either a small strip of bells (in some areas) or no bells at all (in others), costume often consisting of ordinary clothes decorated with ribbons, strips of cloth, or pieces of coloured paper (known as 'raggies'); or sometimes "fancy dress", small numbers of traditional dances in the team repertoire, often only one and rarely more than two, highly variable number of dancers in the set and configurations of the set (some sides had different versions of a dance for different numbers of dancers), and an emphasis on stick dances almost to the exclusion of hankie dances.
Sword dancing Usually regarded as a type of Morris, although many of the performers themselves consider it as a traditional dance form in its own right, is the
sword dance tradition, which includes both
rapper sword and
longsword traditions. In both styles the "swords" are not actual swords, but implements specifically made for the dance. The dancers are usually linked one to another via the swords, with one end of each held by one dancer and the other end by another. Rapper sides consist of five dancers, who are permanently linked-up during the dance. The rapper sword is a very flexible strip of spring-steel with a wooden handle at each end. The longsword is about long, with a wooden handle at one end, a blunt tip, and no edge. Sometimes ribbons are threaded through a hole in the tip of the sword, and the dancers grab on to them during the course of the dance. Longsword sides consist usually of five to eight dancers. In both rapper and longsword there is often a supernumerary "character", who dances around, outside, and inside the set.
Other traditions The English
mummers play occasionally involves Morris or sword dances either incorporated as part of the play or performed at the same event. Mummers plays are often performed in the streets near Christmas to celebrate the New Year and the coming springtime. In these plays are central themes of death and rebirth. Other forms include Molly dance from
Cambridgeshire. Molly dance, which is associated with
Plough Monday, is a parodic form danced in work boots and with at least one Molly
man dressed as a woman. The largest Molly Dance event is the
Whittlesea Straw Bear Festival, established in 1980, held at
Whittlesey in Cambridgeshire in January. There is also
Stave dancing from the south-west and the
Abbots Bromley Horn Dance. Additionally, there is a specifically Welsh version of the art One Nantgarw dance, Y Caseg Eira, is derived directly from notes made on traditional Welsh dances from the 1890s. These notes were made by Ceinwen Thomas in the 1950s from the childhood recollections of her mother, Catherine Margretta Thomas. Others are more modern inventions made in the style of older dances. ==Music==