Formed in 1985, the aim of Quayside Cloggies has been to retain and perform one of England's dance traditions and to support local charities by way of collections when we dance out. Our Charity for this year is the Dorset Air Ambulance. TRADITION The North West Morris is probably the most colourful of English dances. The elaborate costumes, together with the large number of dancers that take part, provide a show which stands out among crowds and noisy streets. Costumes are often decorated by rosettes, ribbons, strings of beads and badges. Clogs are almost always worn, with brass nails and eyelets and bells attached to the laces. Cloggies perform a popular selection of north-west clog morris dances. Most of our dances are traditional, originating from the counties of Lancashire and Cheshire, but we have created a number of our own dances in keeping with the style. The morris dances performed in the North West tradition come from the Lancashire and Cheshire, counties in the North West of the UK where women would dance in the street wearing clogs. In the mills, workers had to wear wooden soled shoes (leather soles rotted on the floors which were kept wet to keep the air humid), so people took their inspiration for the dance from the clatter of weaving machines and used their working shoes on the newly paved streets. The heyday of the Morris in the North-West seems to have been the first half of the 19th century. At this time morris dancing regularly accompanied the rush cart to the Church at the annual wakes holiday in the late summer. For a long time, the North West Morris has been a processional dance, performed whilst moving along the streets. It is worth noting that in Lancashire the procession was, and in some areas still is, a favourite form of celebration. Even today the Whit Walks and annual carnival parades of Lancashire‚ towns echo this fondness for processions, and it is not surprising that the Morris fits in well with these occasions North West Morris follows the same general pattern wherever it is found. However, versions performed by different teams vary considerably and it is usual to refer to these versions by the name of the place where they were collected or performed. There are many traditional dances identified by their places of origin such as Fleetwood, Colne and Lostock. This form of the Morris has been particularly associated with the annual wakes Festivals during the nineteenth century. However there was a growing opposition to the drunkenness and fighting that often accompanied the rush cart processions.( So what's new ). Times have changed however and the Morris teams were decimated by the Great War and the changes that it brought with it. Fortunately, during the 1920's, girls and women's teams became predominant in the north-west and since the 1930's many mixed teams have survived. |