King David's Dance
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- Tune Database entry
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Tune Name: King David's Dance
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Tune Type: 2/4 Dance
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Composed By: David N. Siegel
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Arranged By: DN Siegel
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Year Composed: 2004
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- Posts: 168
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 6:37 am
- Location: Israel (The Galilee)
King David's Dance
Named after one of our more famous Kings, for his spontaneous dance before the Ark of the Covenant on its way up the mountain to be returned to Jerusalem.
- Attachments
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- Hornpipe 2-4 KING DAVID'S DANCE.bww
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- KngDvdDnc.GIF (17.9 KiB) Viewed 16052 times
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- Posts: 40
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 7:20 pm
- Location: Dubai, UAE
- Contact:
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- Posts: 411
- Joined: Sat Apr 10, 2004 10:11 pm
- Location: New Jersey Somewhere between a EDRE and a BIRL
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VERY VERY NICE!........Definitely one I will be learning!
Pardon my ignorance but, Is there a type of dance that can be done to this tune?.......It has a flow that may fit a dance?
Again you put alot of yourself into your writing and it shows!......Well Done!
Pardon my ignorance but, Is there a type of dance that can be done to this tune?.......It has a flow that may fit a dance?
Again you put alot of yourself into your writing and it shows!......Well Done!
Cait Am Biodh Na Puirt Nach Faigheadh Na Piobairean
(Where would the tunes be the pipers could not find)
(Where would the tunes be the pipers could not find)
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- Posts: 168
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 6:37 am
- Location: Israel (The Galilee)
The dancing to which this tune refers was one of "spontaneous joy," as oppossed to something correographed. The beat structure might be more typical of the eastern Med, than modern Highland dance. (Though I wonder sometimes how much conformity, Calvinism and competition have done to native Highland dance.)
I'd love to see a very light-fingered drummer put a score to this, playing against the stressed off-beats.
I'd love to see a very light-fingered drummer put a score to this, playing against the stressed off-beats.
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- Posts: 45
- Joined: Tue Aug 03, 2004 2:25 pm
- Location: USA
simply amazing !!
this tune is amazing ! I definately would like to see you write more tunes like this ! it reminds me of your garnet hill tune !!!
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- Posts: 411
- Joined: Sat Apr 10, 2004 10:11 pm
- Location: New Jersey Somewhere between a EDRE and a BIRL
- Contact:
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I can think of a few dummers (SORRY....DRummers).....that would be up to the challenge.....I will pass on the tune and see what they come up with......and then overlay the drum score and tune together to see how they sound.....Should be along in the next few days.......They like a challenge!.
Cait Am Biodh Na Puirt Nach Faigheadh Na Piobairean
(Where would the tunes be the pipers could not find)
(Where would the tunes be the pipers could not find)
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- Posts: 40
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 7:20 pm
- Location: Dubai, UAE
- Contact:
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- Posts: 168
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2004 6:37 am
- Location: Israel (The Galilee)
Well, my side of the Fertile Crescent isn't really "belly-dance country." I was thinking more of the spontaneous expressions of faith as done in dance, maybe at weddings, or when someone experiences what they are certain was a miracle. Besides, with the epidemic in youthful obesity these days, even in much of the third-world, the very idea of belly-dancing has taken on a new twist--or should I say, a new jiggle, or two.
The GHB does have a long-ish tradition of good service for Arab cultural events. I have even given a Christian Arab friend of mine from a neighbouring village a gift of playing the pipes for a Debka (a rowdy all-male line-dance) at his wedding.
Today's innovation is tomorrow's tradition. Sometimes I feel like that medieval MacCrimmon pupil who watched his master head off to town, and when his master was out of earshot, he started working on a Neil Dickie tune (maybe The Clumsy Piobaire).
The GHB does have a long-ish tradition of good service for Arab cultural events. I have even given a Christian Arab friend of mine from a neighbouring village a gift of playing the pipes for a Debka (a rowdy all-male line-dance) at his wedding.
Today's innovation is tomorrow's tradition. Sometimes I feel like that medieval MacCrimmon pupil who watched his master head off to town, and when his master was out of earshot, he started working on a Neil Dickie tune (maybe The Clumsy Piobaire).
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- Posts: 40
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 7:20 pm
- Location: Dubai, UAE
- Contact:
Ah, yes, I love dancing the debka....I suppose the men don't know that we ladies dance it with our female Arab friends behind their backs I lived in Jordan for two years and we plan to go back to the middle east in the near future.The GHB does have a long-ish tradition of good service for Arab cultural events. I have even given a Christian Arab friend of mine from a neighbouring village a gift of playing the pipes for a Debka (a rowdy all-male line-dance) at his wedding.
Today's innovation is tomorrow's tradition. Sometimes I feel like that medieval MacCrimmon pupil who watched his master head off to town, and when his master was out of earshot, he started working on a Neil Dickie tune (maybe The Clumsy Piobaire).
lol. I almost have to do that! My instructor despises The Clumsy Lover, The Pumpkin's Fancy, and almost anything else of that sort![/quote]