A Breton: fest noz (sometimes hyphenated as Breton: fest-noz; "night festival" in Breton) is a Breton traditional festival, with dancing in groups and live musicians playing acoustic instruments.
Although it is all too easy to write off the Breton: fest nozou and French: fêtes folkloriques as modern inventions, most of the traditional dances of the Breton: fest noz are ancient, some dating back to the Middle Ages, providing a way for the community to grasp hold of its past and relish a deep sense of being with ancestors and with place.[1]
The plural in Breton is Breton: festoù noz, but the Goadec Sisters (a family of traditional singers) used to say Breton: festnozoù, and the French may also say in French French: des fest-noz.
On 5 December 2012 the Breton: fest noz was added by UNESCO to the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[2]
A Breton: fest noz (: Breton: festoù noz) is a traditional dance festival in Brittany. Most Breton dances are social dances, in a group. Currently, many Breton: festoù noz are also held outside Brittany within diaspora, bringing the Breton culture to life outside Breton territory. This term is known since the end of the 19th century but is given as a name only since the 1950s.
In the past, the dances were sometimes used to trample the ground to make a firm earth floor in a house or a solid surface for farm work (the "aire neuve" dances), to which people from the neighbourhood were invited, which explains the presence of stamping movements in some of the dances. For a long time the church banned "kof-ha-kof" (stomach-to-stomach) dances, meaning dancing in pairs. These festivals were a chance for young people to meet and size each other up, on a social level, by their clothes, and to see how quickly they got tired, since dances sometimes continued for a long time and involved complex and swift steps that required effort and skill.
These days, Breton: festoù noz are still very popular, mixing the different generations. Most of the villages have a Breton: fest noz at least once a year, organised by the sports clubs, the school, etc. It is a way to express their culture and identity, and to share common values with friends of a night. As in many group folk dances, one talks of sometimes reaching a trance state because of repetitive music, and physical exertion. During the summer and tourist season, in many ways, taking part in a Breton: fest noz is for many people like an alternative way of going to a night club.
There are hundreds of traditional dances, of which the most well-known are gavottes, Breton: [[an dro]], Breton: 'hanter dro, Breton: plinn, and Scottish. During the Breton: fest noz, most dances are practised in a chain or in a circle (everyone holds hands), but there are also dances in pairs and "choreographed" dances, meaning dances enriched with precise artistic elements (sequences, figures, etc.).
The major study on Breton dancing is "La tradition populaire de danse en Basse-Bretagne", book written from his thesis dissertation, by Jean-Michel Guilcher (new edition by Coop-Breizh, Chasse-Marée/Armen, 1995).
There are principally two types of music at these festivals: music sung a cappella (Breton: [[kan ha diskan]]), accompanied with music or purely instrumental. Before the invention of microphones and amplified instruments, the instruments that were most often used were the Breton: [[Bombard (instrument)|talabard]] (a sort of oboe or shawm) and the Breton bagpipes (Breton: binioù kozh), due to their high volume. Also popular was the diatonic accordion, the clarinet, and occasionally the violin and the hurdy-gurdy. After the Second World War, the Scottish bagpipes (Breton: binioù bras) also became common in Brittany thanks to Breton: [[bagad]]où (pipe bands) and thus often replaced the Breton: binioù-kozh. The basic clarinet (Breton: treujenn-gaol, 'cabbage core' in Breton) had all but disappeared but has regained popularity over the past few years.
Other than the traditional instruments, there are nowadays groups with many different styles of music ranging from rock, jazz, to punk and also mixes with styles from other countries. String instruments (the violin, the double-bass, the acoustic guitar, the electric guitar, the bass guitar) and North African percussion instruments have long since been adopted. To varying degrees, some Breton: fest noz groups also use electronic keyboards and synthesisers (Strobinell, Sonerien Du, Les Baragouineurs, Plantec, etc.). Brass instruments are becoming increasingly commonplace, often bringing with them sounds approaching those of Oriental music.
Just after the revival of the 1970s, the standard was to alternate a couple of singers (a cappella or Breton: kan a diskan) and a couple of musicians (Breton: biniou and Breton: [[Bombard (instrument)|talabard]] generally). It was common to see the holding of "free stages". Currently, couples of singers (kanerien) and couples of musicians (sonerien) play alternately with a band. Bands play more instrumental music and often the practice of the dance is different from the two other ways to conduct the dancers.
Between every "suite" (three dances), there are short breaks where dancers socialise by chatting to other dancers or visiting the traditional buffet of local dishes like French: [[crêpe]]s, French: [[Galette-saucisse|galettes-saucisses]], French: [[far Breton]], and Breton: [[kouign-amann]], with local cider, beer, and Breton: [[chouchenn]], a mead-like drink made from fermented honey.