Set Dancing Resurging Among Younger Generation in Ireland
Set dancing is experiencing a revival among the youth in Ireland, with clubs like Galway Céilí Club attracting enthusiastic participants. Rooted in traditional Irish music and history, set dancing offers a genuine and authentic experience for those seeking a connection to their cultural heritage. Discover the story of this dance form's resurgence on Nationwide at 7pm today on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player.

In the back room at Mary Mullen's bar in Galway city, three musicians with fiddle, mandolin and banjo are playing music while around 30 young people, all in couples, are dancing. Their energy and joy feel contagious. This crowd has just come from their set dancing class and this now is a freer, informal session, half class, half céilí.
Joe Gray and Ryan McKenna set up Galway Céilí Club last year. It is a set dancing club and it has taken off. It is part of a wider revival of set dancing that is taking root among a younger generation in pockets across the country, including in Daingean Uí Chúis, Co Kerry, and in Dublin.
What has happened to spark this new interest in one of Ireland's oldest forms of traditional dance, whose future just a few years ago as the country came out of the Covid lockdown looked most uncertain, even bleak?
\"Last year myself and Ryan started Galway Céilí Club and the thing just kicked off out of nowhere,\" says Joe Gray. \"People really have a hunger for it, they really want to dance, they really enjoy it.\"
Set dancing is derived from the quadrille, a courtly dance which spread from the ballrooms of Paris. It was adapted to local Irish music when itinerant dance masters brought it to rural communities in the 19th century.
\"I teach every Monday in the Cobblestone,\" says set dancing teacher Louise O’Connor \"and from January of this year we have a lot of new people coming in\". \"I think people are dying for something authentic and real to be part of, especially since Covid,\" she says.
Set dancing is different from céilí dancing. It was deemed \"foreign\" by the Gaelic League. Decades later, it did not find favour with the new Irish state. However, set dancing continued to be danced in rural communities across the country, most especially in Munster, and now it is being discovered by a new generation.
Watch more of their story on Nationwide at 7pm today on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player.
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