[Callers] More substitute terms for the g-word

Cheryl Joyal clmjoyal at gmail.com
Wed Mar 14 11:35:53 PDT 2018


I first heard Dugan Murphy use “right shoulder round” and it worked well.  I have adopted it and it is well received and does work well for me calling wise 

Cheryl Joyal
630-667-3284

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 14, 2018, at 11:12 AM, Angela DeCarlis via Callers <callers at lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:

Quick note to all: while "Right Shoulder 'Round" seems like a mouthful at four syllables, the words are easily spoken in two beats of music (or two and a half depending how you count). It takes only half a beat more to say than common moves like "Balance and Swing" or "Allemande Left," and takes exactly the same amount of time to say as "Go Forward and Back." Common phrases like "With Your Neighbor Dosido" take nearly twice as long to say. 

So before you judge a phrase as unwieldy, give it a few test runs by yourself, to a beat or to recorded music. :)

Angela 

> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018, 10:53 AM Bob Hofkin via Callers <callers at lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> Andrea,
> 
> The discussions make it clear that: (1) there is a need to use
> terminology other than "gypsy," at least in some venues, and (2) there
> is no generally-agreed substitute term.
> 
> A lot of callers see that as an impediment to clear and concise
> teaching/calling. I have certainly experienced confusion and annoyance
> as a dancer. I believe that the folk process will provide a solution,
> but I appreciate the efforts to accelerate what could otherwise take
> many years to resolve.
> 
> I appreciate the reports of what different callers are trying and their
> degree of success. At the same time, it makes a lot of sense to avoid
> rehashing the same arguments, as you suggest. Right now, we're in an
> empirical phase--trial and error--and rapid dissemination of results
> seems like the way to go. If that process suggests a few good
> candidates, it might be time to debate their merits.
> 
> Bob
> 
> On 3/14/2018 03:31, Andrea Nettleton via Callers wrote:
> > Hi everyone,
> >      Here we are once more, sharing our likes and dislikes, our preferred term (I’ve shared and still like whimsy, but look-see got my attention) of the moment.  But why are we circling this wagon again? Though everyone is polite, and thankfully we haven’t begun to rehash whether gypsy is a slur or not, I also see no fresh approach, no new insight, to clarify for one and all a single, simple, right answer.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m not sure there is one.  But I’m positive we won’t get there by having more of the same back and forth we’ve already had.  While I  R eyelemande my neighbor, you’re going to R shoulder round yours, and as far as I can tell, that’s where we are and will be.  Could we please maybe back away from the specifics a bit, and see if we can generate a new way of framing the debate?  And if we can’t, just let the experiment continue without rehashing the already well trodden ground?
> > Thanks,
> > Andrea
> >
> >
> > Sent from my iPhone
> >
> >> On Mar 13, 2018, at 11:53 PM, Cara Sawyer via Callers <callers at lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> >>
> >> Jo Mortland of the Chicago Barn Dance group here came up with Dipsy. Nice and silly and sounds similar enough it requires no explanation. Sort of like Kipsy!
> >>
> >> Guess what they say about great minds is true!
> >>
> >> Sent using two thumbs
> >>
> >>> On Mar 13, 2018, at 14:41, Perry Shafran via Callers <callers at lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> I happen to *like* right shoulder round and have liked it ever since three callers at a dance event used it and it went rather flawlessly.  I like the fact that it is actually descriptive in what you're doing.  I think that the more we try to invent made-up words to try to make it sound fun and whimsey, the more we are likely to upset dancers who don't like that we're changing terms as it is.  It may *sound* like a boring descriptor, but I feel my job as a caller is to describe the move and let the dancer decide what the mood is going to be for that individual dancer, based on their own feelings and their own connection to the music.  So I plan to stick with "right shoulder round".
> >>>
> >>> Perry
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> From: Martha Wild via Callers <callers at lists.sharedweight.net>
> >>> To: Caller's discussion list <callers at sharedweight.net>
> >>> Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2018 2:03 PM
> >>> Subject: [Callers] More substitute terms for the g-word
> >>>
> >>> Interesting discussion on the Portland Country Dance Community Facebook page. Lots of great suggestions. A lot of people really don’t like “right shoulder round” (I’m one of them). I tried one of their suggestions last night - Kipsey - and it worked amazingly well. Easy to say, particularly when you are cutting down the calling to one word (what do you do with right shoulder round? shoulder? Ick.) And everyone can hear the similarity and knows what to do. I had tried spiral for a while and people just seemed confused. The other suggestion that I noticed today was from Susan Michaels - “look-see” That has the virtue of a similar rhyming two syllable call, and it’s upbeat and fun and has emphasis on facing the other person. Check out the discussion. https://www.facebook.com/groups/62950211264/permalink/10155943260651265/
> >>>
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