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Our 23rd annual HFAA Workshop and Meeting returned
to Folklore Village Farm in Dodgeville, Wisconsin. Set on the edge
of a restored
prairie
35
minutes west of Madison, WI, Folklore Village offered a lovely,
rural setting for hardingfele classes, dance workshops, concerts,
lectures, and our members’ annual meeting.
The teachers this
year were:
Hauk
Buen - Hardingfele
Karin
Brennesvik and Sigbjørn Rua - Master Dance Instructors
Andrea
Een - Hardingfele
Dan
Trueman - Hardingfele
Julie
Barton - Hardingfele
Hauk
Buen, our guest fiddle teacher, is a master of both the Telemark
and Numedal playing styles. The richness of Telemark music may need
no introduction to
American
audiences. The beauty of the Numedal hardingfele tradition is in
the detail, especially in the hands of master fiddler Buen. Numedal
is a small valley in Buskerud county (northwest of Oslo); its music
carries some of the oldest traditions in hardingfele music. Other
dialects may have had virtuosos who built up their traditions more,
but there are few traditions that have such a driving and danceable
rhythm. Many of the fiddle tunes are made up of short motifs that
are repeated with variations and slight changes of ornamentation
and bowing in order to create swirls of sound and build momentum.
Our dance workshops featured Norwegian national
dance champions Karin Brennesvik and Sigbjørn Rua
teaching the dances of Numedal. The Numedal springar and gangar
have a special flavor all their own, opening with a seemingly stately “walking
part” that can be interrupted with flashes of acrobatics
on the part of the man, continuing with a laus or free dance for
the man and woman, and ending with an exhilarating couple turn.
There are some other surprises in these dances, as well as a very
special form of tremannsdans (one man leading two women). There
was also a review of the Halling springar, which was taught
in 2005, plus Telespringar and gangar sets
at the evening dance parties.
Hauk, Karin, and Sigbjørn are well
known to many in our American community
through their participation in
Scandinavian folk dance camps on two coasts, Christmas Revels
in a number
of cities, concert tours, and earlier HFAA workshops. We were
delighted to be able to offer the opportunity for more of
you
to learn from them and get to know them personally. They and
our American instructors are all well known for their teaching
skill.
The music and dance at this year’s Workshop captivated
all levels of musicians and dancers, in an environment
that has been called “the warmest and most supportive in
North America!”
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