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Slip jig

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Slip jig refers to both a style of Irish music and of Irish dance; the dance is danced to music in slip-jig time. The slip jig is in 9/8 time, traditionally with accents on 5 beats - two pairs of quarter-note/eighth-note followed by a dotted quarter note.

The slip jig is one the four most common Irish stepdances - the others being the reel, the jig and the hornpipe. It is a 9/8 time dance in soft shoes, formerly danced by women only, though today many male stepdancers dance slip jigs. In fact, nowadays, male dancers compete alongside female dancers in slip jigs. This dance is graceful and controlled, often called the “ballet” of Irish dance.

There are also traditional Irish céilí dances which are slip jigs, though these are much less common than reels and double jigs.

Because of the unique timing, the slip jig is longer than the reel for the same number of bars of music. The Oireachtas, or championship, competition speed, is the same controlled tempo -- 113 beats per minute -- as other dances. Judges prefer sliding motions with the feet, and graceful movements that seem to slip across the floor.

The slip jig is a dance where the dancer sweeps the foot upward. There are different levels of each dance, such as the tir na nog slip jig and the ulmachan slip jig. [citation needed]

While most dancers think a dance to 9/8 time is unique to Ireland, this is not true; there is also the Scottish Lilt in Highland dancing and the karsilama of Turkish dance.


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