Anyone know of this? I threw it together as a simple beginner's lesson
teach-the-basic-moves dance, and I assume it, or something very similar, is
already out there. No response from the first bunch of callers I emailed.
-Ron Blechner
(title unknown / untitled)
Improper
A1: N ____ + Swing (16)
A2: Circle L 3/4 (6)
P S (10)
B1: LLFB (8)
Star L 1x (8)
B2 P Alle L 1x (8) (forgiving)
Ladies Chain (to N) (8)
Here's the mixer that I've used many, many times.
Redwing Mixer
Written by Sybil Clark and the McLain Family (Bickie, Raymond, Raymond Jr.,
Alice, Ruth)
Gents progress one place to the right each time.
A1 Ladies forward and back,
Gents go forward, turn right, and go to next lady on right
A2 Promenade with new partner,
end in ballroom position with joined hands pointing to center of circle
B1 With the foot nearer center of circle, touch heel, touch toe, and take
two elegant slides into the center
Do the same thing with the foot away from the center to return to place
B2 Abandon all pretense of elegance and do the same thing in double time
Heel, toe, heel, toe, slide slide slide
Heel, toe, heel, toe, slide slide slide!
Above is the way I've always called this dance, but I believe it was
originally written with no promenade. The A1 had all going forward and
back twice, and the A2 had the ladies going forward and back, and the gents
going forward and on to the next.
Some groups get a kick out of having everyone call the "heel, toe, slide"
part of the dance out loud. And, if you've got a big enough circle and a
daring band, it's fun having the band playing in the middle of the circle.
Jacob Bloom
Date: Sun, 29 Sep 2013 11:11:13 -0400
> From: Michael Clark <michael.clark(a)wmich.edu>
> To: Caller's discussion list <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
> Subject:
>
> Re: [Callers] Favorite mixers?
> Message-ID: <0MTW00JAK7J4H600(a)mta01.service.private>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed
>
> Thanks Kalia for getting this discussion started. You and others
> might be interested in going back into the Callers archives for a
> couple of earlier discussions on mixers, one in March 2012 started by
> David Millstone, I think, and one on waltz mixers in October 2010
> started by Chrissy Fowler. It looks like there's some overlap between
> now and the earlier discussions, but not a lot.
>
> Here's a mixer I use fairly often that I don't think has come up
> recently or in the earlier discussions. It's a reordering of one I
> learned from the English caller John Turner when he was over here in
> the mid-90's. (As he presented it, the promenade was the end of the
> sequence.)
>
> A1 Partner balance and swing
> A2 Promenade
> B1 Ladies to the center and back (clap on count 4); gents the same,
> end facing your partner around the ring (i.e., gents face CCW, ladies CW)
> B2 Allemande Right partner (=#1) once and a half, Allemande Left the
> next (=#2) once and a half to face the next (=#3, your new partner)
>
> I always think of this as "John Turner's Mixer," but I wrote him some
> years back to see if he had title and author information on it. He
> calls it "Grand Chain Allemande" but couldn't remember where/when he
> had collected it or who might have composed it. I wonder if John
> Sweeney or any other English dance leaders who read [Callers] might
> know something about it.
>
> Mike
>
> At 02:42 AM 9/28/2013, Martha Wild wrote:
> >I have a big circle mixer I really like, I'm not sure who wrote it
> >or the name of it, perhaps if someone else recognizes it they can
> >help me out there. I just call it the Balance and Pass mixer so I
> >know what it is.
>
I've just finished a full summer camp season, with 4 week-long camps in
just under 8 weeks and some home-town gigs in between. I feel pretty
wrung out. I've also had seasons when I overbooked and had a big
concentration of local gigs (11 gigs and a weekend, plus a pile of
performance rehearsals, in 8 weeks) that left me similarly pooped. I've
carefully booked the upcoming season to leave myself more down time, and
it's helping a lot. No more than one gig a weekend, with occasion
weeknights.
My question is for the other callers who call a lot, especially if you
travel to do it. What sorts of things to you do to take care of
yourself when your schedule is really intense? How do you keep your
calling fresh, and your attitude good? Do you have any personal
routines that help you focus? Aside from the fact that what we're doing
is mountains of fun, it's also a lot of work and takes careful
concentration and preparation. There's a local square dance caller who
does something like 320 gigs a year. I need to ask him sometime how he
does it, but he's always moving too fast to engage in conversation.
Maybe this is one of those questions that falls too far toward the
"advanced" end of the discussion spectrum. I don't know. But it's one
I'd love to hear from other hard-working callers about.
Kalia
The first couple times I danced this I copied it down, so I know that this was a version of the original. I believe it was Carol Ormand who called the dance both times, but I'm not certain.
Can anyone share their opinion on why the caller would have chosen to make the change in the dance? orientation or flow?
Rocks & Dirt Erik Weberg Type: Contra Formation: Duple-Improper Level: Int
A1 -----------
Neighbor allemande Left 1-1/2 (8)
Women's Chain (8)
A2 -----------
Long lines, forward and back (8)
Ladies by the Right, Gents go round
Women allemande Right 1-1/2 (8) while gents Orbit CCW to the other side
B1 -----------
Partner balance and swing (16)
B2 -----------
Circle Left 3/4 (6)
Square thru to the new ( OR 3 place circular hey without hands )
Ngh Pull by Right - P Left - Ngh Right on to the next with your left
OR Pass 1st Ngh by the Right, Partner Left, Neighbor Right face the next for an alm Left
original dance on Erick's site - A1 N B/S A2 Ladies Chain; Orbit {Ladies Al'd R 1-1/2 while men orbit ccw 1/2 way around}
~
When I dance, I cannot judge, I cannot hate, I cannot separate myself from life. I can only be joyful and whole, that is why I dance. ~Hans Bos~
~