Excuse Me (1719)
Introduction
Choreography
[Bold text represents original instructions and light text represents interpretations by Michael Barraclough]
© Michael Barraclough, 21 April 2021
Notes
- Was Excuse Me one of the most popular country dances of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries? The evidence available suggests that it was. Of the 100 plus dances which I have discovered in more than one contemporary source, Excuse Me is the one that occurs most often with six mentions in five of the eight sources researched so far. This multiplicity of sources is probably a much better guide to popularity than longevity of appearance in any one source. Inertia on the part of the publisher, or continuing payment by the Dancing Master who supplied the dance may well have resulted in publication continuing after performance had ceased and indeed, publication is no proof of performance.
- Further evidence of the dance's popularity or at least its notoriety is the following exchange in Act 2, Scene 1 of the 1657 play The Walks of Islington and Hogsdon:
Riv.Come Gentlemen shall we try our footing, here am I.Fly.And here am I.Wild.And if this Gentleman please, here I'le be.Sir Rev.Vould all mine heart Monsieur.Bella.I cannot dance believe me Sir.Fly.Nor I, we'l onely practise.Mrs Light.Excuse me Sir, indeed I cannot dance.Wild.Excuse me Sir, indeed I cannot dance? You shall not dance excuse me then, that Country trip is old, we'l have some novelty.
Confirmation that this is not an unreasonable construction to put on the exchange of words comes from a passage in the Dancing School by Ned Ward (1700) which talks of "leading up Greensleeves and Pudding Pies like birds upon a Valentines Day." Both these dances rate five mentions in the different sources and it seems to be more of a coincidence that the dances which make the most appearances are also those to which literary reference is made. - What of the dance itself? For once which was apparently so popular it contains little of obvious appeal. The dance is largely symmetrical, a hallmark of dances of this period, but it is unusual in that the second couple plays an equal part with that of the first. Quite possibly it is the tune which provided the popularity. In its form of an eight bar A music, a four bar B music and an eight bar C music it is reminiscent of earlier dances and has also appealed to all the musicians to whom I have shown it.
- From the researcher's point of view, there are several lessons to be learnt. First and foremost, comparisons of dances which appear in more than one source, of which Excuse Me is a prime example, demonstrate that there is no "correct" way to do the dance in terms of the track which the dancers are to follow. From this it follows that those seeking authenticity in performance of country dances of this period need to be far more concerned with the "correctness" of the music, costume, technique and social setting, than with the actual interpretation of the dance instruction. Secondly, there is clear illustration of the danger involved in drawing conclusions about the equivalence of terminology used in different sources where only two versions are being compared. A good example of this error is in merely using the comparison between Smith's Rant in the Dancing Master and Le Pistolet in Feuillet's Recueil de Contredances to assert that the term "siding" means a straight, forward and back type of movement without quoting anything else in support.