user: Koren A Wake
waltz & break
Rollin' to the Grey Eagle
by: Rich Goss
introduces moves: down the hall, up the hall, circle, do si do, swing, balance the ring, arch & dive
formation: improper
Form a line of 4 facing down with ones in the middle. Roles/sides do not matter.
A1 | 8 | down the hall and turn alone
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8 | up the hall and bend into a ring
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A2 | 8 | circle left 3 places
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8 | partners do si do once
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B1 | 16 | partners balance & swing
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B2 | 8 | circle left 3 places
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4 | balance the ring
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4 | twos arch ones dive ⁋
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by: Don Lennartson
introduces moves: long lines, star, chain
formation: improper
A1 | 16 | neighbors balance & swing
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A2 | 8 | circle left 3 places
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8 | partners swing
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B1 | 8 | long lines forward & back
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8 | star right - hands across - 4 places
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B2 | 8 | ladles chain
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8 | star left 4 places ⁋
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by: Chris Page
introduces moves: balance, turn alone, custom, gyre, promenade
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: Claire Takemori
introduces moves: petronella, give & take, pass through
formation: improper
Short wave, Neighbor by RH, Ladles by LH in middle
A1 | 4 | balance wave
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12 | neighbors swing
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A2 | 8 | balance & petronella
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8 | balance & petronella
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B1 | 4 | balance the ring
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12 | ladles give & take partners, Swing
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B2 | 8 | circle left 3 places, reform short wave
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4 | balance wave ⁋
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4 | pass through,walk forward to new wave
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Spin off of Spring Break, Tom Lehman, for a super easy, hi-energy dance.
by: Jim Kitch
introduces moves: meltdown swing, allemande, hey
formation: improper
A1 | 16 | neighbors meltdown swing
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A2 | 8 | gentlespoons allemande left 1½
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8 | partners start a half hey - rights on ends, lefts in center
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B1 | 16 | partners meltdown swing
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B2 | 8 | ladles chain
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8 | star left 4 places ⁋
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by: Linda Leslie
introduces moves: slide along set
formation: Becket
Identify next neighbors on left diagonal.
A1 | 4 | gentlespoons give & take neighbors
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12 | neighbors swing
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A2 | 8 | ladles chain
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6 | partners promenade
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2 | slide right along set (j-hook) ⁋
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B1 | 8 | balance & petronella
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8 | balance & petronella
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B2 | 16 | partners balance & swing
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Linda's notes:
"Written for our friends Lucia Watson and Jeff Weiler so they could twirl like crazy in the chain. In 2017, I actually switched the sequences: the dance used to start at the B1. I like this much better!"
waltz & break
by: Linda Leslie
introduces moves: Rory O'More, form an ocean wave, custom
formation: improper
Dance starts in short wavy lines: from improper formation, neighbors take right hands, ladles take left in the center.
A1 | 8 | balance & Rory O'More right
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8 | balance & Rory O'More left
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A2 | 16 | neighbors balance & swing
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B1 | 8 | circle left 3 places
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8 | partners swing
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B2 | 8 | circle left 3 places and walk forward
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4 | form an ocean wave & balance - ladles by left hands and neighbors by right hands -forward and back
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4 | walk forward to ⁋
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0 | form an ocean wave - ladles by left hands and neighbors by right hands
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by: Luke Donforth
introduces moves: square through
formation: Becket
A1 | 2 | slide left along set ⁋
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6 | circle left 3 places
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8 | neighbors swing
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A2 | 8 | neighbors promenade
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8 | ladles chain to partner
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B1 | 8 | square through two - neighbors balance & pull by right, then partners pull by left along
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8 | shadows do si do once
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B2 | 16 | partners balance & swing
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Rollin' to the Grey Eagle
by: Jim Kitch
formation: Becket
A1 | 6 | circle left 3 places
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2 | pass through ⁋
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8 | next neighbors swing
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A2 | 8 | circle left 3 places
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8 | partners allemande right 1½ to long waves
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B1 | 8 | balance & Rory O'More right
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8 | balance & Rory O'More left
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B2 | 16 | partners balance & swing
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