user: Nicholas Rockstroh
waltz
by: Sherry Nevins
introduces moves: balance, circle, do si do
formation: improper or proper
Begin joined hands four
A1 | 4 | balance the ring
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4 | balance the ring
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8 | circle left 4 places
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A2 | 4 | balance the ring
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4 | balance the ring
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8 | circle right 4 places
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B1 | 8 | neighbors do si do once
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8 | partners do si do once (across the set)
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B2 | 16 | neighbors do si do 1½ as couples (holding partner's hand) ⁋
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introduces moves: custom, turn alone, form long waves, allemande, swing, promenade
formation: circle mixer
A1 | 8 | ladles to the center and back
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2 | gentlespoons to the center
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4 | gentlespoons turn alone
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2 | gentlespoons go back
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A2 | 0 | form long waves - ladles face in, gentlespoons face out
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4 | balance
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4 | neighbors allemande right once
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4 | balance
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4 | partners allemande left once
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B1 | 16 | neighbors balance & swing (this neighbor is your new partner)
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B2 | 16 | partners promenade along the set on the right
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Riffing on La String Bean by Julian Blechner. Changes the direction of progression around the ring and gives an easier target for the transition to a new partner (since it's the person with whom you did an allemande right). See also La Southern Green Bean for a version with Rory O'More slides.
introduces moves: star, long lines
formation: improper
A1 | 8 | circle left 4 places
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8 | circle right 4 places
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A2 | 8 | star right 4 places
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8 | star left 4 places
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B1 | 16 | neighbors balance & swing
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B2 | 8 | long lines forward & back
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8 | ones swing and face next neighbors ⁋
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by: Don Armstrong
introduces moves: down the hall, up the hall
formation: improper
A1 | 8 | neighbors do si do once
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8 | gentlespoons do si do once
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A2 | 8 | ladles do si do once
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8 | ones swing end facing down to split the twos
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B1 | 8 | down the hall and turn alone
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8 | up the hall and bend into a ring
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B2 | 8 | circle left 4 places
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8 | star left 4 places to a new neighbor couple ⁋
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waltz
introduces moves: custom
formation: improper
A1 | 16 | neighbors balance & swing
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A2 | 8 | long lines forward & back
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8 | ones swing, end facing down ⁋
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B1 | 8 | next neighbors mirror do si do, ones splitting twos
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8 | twos swing, end facing up
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B2 | 8 | neighbors mirror do si do, twos splitting ones
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8 | circle left 4 places
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by: Chris Page
introduces moves: custom, gyre
formation: scatter mixer
A1 | 4 | balance ring [1]
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4 | turn alone [2]
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4 | individual scatter promenade ⁋
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4 | find a new partner
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A2 | 8 | partners gyre once [3] [4]
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8 | partners swing
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B1 | 8 | partners promenade scatter [5]
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8 | join in rings of any number of couples [6]
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B2 | 8 | circle left 4 places
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8 | circle right 4 places
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http://chrispagecontra.awardspace.us/dances/index.htm#accretion-reel
[1] What ring? The circle at the end of B2. The first time through the dance, skip this part, and begin straight with the individual scatter promenade. (John Sweeney came up with a cool alternate beginning, with everyone in one big circle, before breaking it up into individual pieces. If so, you definitely also want the big circle for the final time through.)
David Millstone writes about a nice modification of this for ONS groups: "Chris's dance calls for folks to balance in and out, and even though I demonstrated that to a group, their inclination was to go into the center in four counts with a whoop! and their arms rising up. Who am I to fight the natural tendency of the dancers? I suspect that this feels more satisfying, and it still gives them 12 beats to say goodbye to their circle and to walk alone to find a new partner."
[2] When I'm calling for ONS (one-night-stand) groups, I'll use "say goodbye" here. Then when they gyre later on, it's "say hello, and go around them, looking at them."
[3] Those allergic to gyres may wish to substitute a do-si-do, or skip it altogether and go straight to the swing. For an ONS group, substitute the swing with a two-allemande, elbow swing, or "whatever you think a swing should be."
[4] For more advanced groups, thegypsycan be with more than one other person. And the swing can be a basket swing.
[5] Last time through the dance, I like to have everyone promenade in one giant circle. Ditto for the final circles.
[6] Here each couple needs to find a few other couples to circle with. Lone couples could always two-allemande each other. James Hutson came up with a nice term for these variable-sized circles -- blobs.The dance I consider my best. Usable both for non-dancing crowds, and with regular contra groups.
I wrote it after attending a contra dance with a number of beginners that kept breaking down over and over and over. On the way back, I thought what would have worked (a dance that intentionally broke down each time), and came up with a dance that I kept refining and simplifying down to this. It was partly also inspired by Ted Sannella's "Ted's Solo Mixer" and the scatter mixer "Set a' Crochet."
The dance's name came from ideas of planetary system formation, where larger and larger chunks of matter spiral inwards from gravity, accreting to form planetisemals, and then planets. The analogy goes bad where everybody separates every thirty seconds, but you could just consider that a periodic supernova event.
After having danced this, the A1/A2 feels sort of like the rush of looking for a partner, though here the commitment's only for 20 seconds. Kind of reminiscent of the cabeceo of tango.
by: Rick Mohr
introduces moves: pass by, custom
formation: triplet
ones improper, twos and threes proper
A1 | 2 | ones pass by right shoulders
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4 | ones go down the outside into the twos' place, twos move up
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2 | ones pass by right shoulders
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8 | ones loop to *individual* right and go around the ends of the set to end proper in twos' place
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A2 | 12 | circle left 6 places
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4 | partners allemande right ¾
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B1 | 4 | form a long wave - partners keeping right hands and neighbors taking left hands - and balance
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12 | half hey for six - neighbors pass left shoulders to begin, ends face in for a right shoulder pass - until partners meet
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B2 | 16 | partners balance & swing, end with the new twos and threes facing up proper and the new ones improper
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Rick's notes:
"The figures of this dance fit the music phrases exactly, so it can be quite satisfying if dancers are on the ball but somewhat unforgiving if they get confused.
The active couple moves continuously in A1. First they cross around the 2's to the middle position, and then without stopping they cross again and both turn right—the gentlespoon loops around the bottom couple while the ladle loops around the top couple. As the active dancers return to the middle position (proper) all join hands and match their motion smoothly into a circle left.
The circle left in A2 takes 12 steps, so be aware to call the allemande right in time for its four steps to end the phrase in time to balance the wave at the start of B1. Then 12 weaving hey steps invert the set in time for the partner balance and swing at the start of B2.
In terms of the original numbering, once through the dance leaves the couples in a 3, 1, 2 sequence."
My own notes:
Rick isn't kidding about the precision of the timing! While this is one of my favorite triplets to call thanks to the unique hey for six, it's much more unforgiving than a quick glance at the figures might indicate. The best way to teach the hey that I've found is to note that it inverts the set and that you're leaving your partner to start with. It's very important to make sure that all sets have considerable space between them. While the movement within the triplet needs to be kept tight, it's easy for dancers to lose track of which set they're in if the ends of the distinct triplets aren't adequately separated. If this isn't possible, I would suggest finding clear markers to put between the sets to delineate between them (or don't call this in that scenario in the first place!).