Hello Tony,
Thanks for those suggestions.  Inflation Reel was the first contra dance I
ever called, and it remains a favorite of mine.  My previous response to
using Trade By was before I saw this part of the discussion.
Using your suggestion would definitely work if I have a line long enough to
use a double progression.
Thanks,
Rich
On Tue, Mar 14, 2023 at 3:00 PM Tony Parkes <tony(a)hands4.com> wrote:
  The only real trouble I can see with calling Trade By
for a single
 progression is that the couple that does the partner trade will be standing
 there, watching the other dancers who are ignoring them, for close to 32
 measures. If you’re going to do it, you’ll need to warn everyone – just as
 you would in teaching the contra framework to any newbie – that this will
 happen to all of them eventually.
 Tony Parkes
 Billerica, Mass.
 
www.hands4.com
 New book! Square Dance Calling: An Old Art for a New Century
 (available now)
 *From:* Jerome Grisanti <jerome.grisanti(a)gmail.com>
 *Sent:* Tuesday, March 14, 2023 2:31 PM
 *To:* Tony Parkes <tony(a)hands4.com>
 *Cc:* Rich Sbardella <richsbardella(a)gmail.com>om>; Caller's discussion list <
 callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 *Subject:* Re: [Callers] Re: Contras for a Crowd that does not Swing
 Tony (and Rich and others),
 I'm just learning to call to MWSD dancers, and learning how to gauge what
 will work out of the box, what will work with a heads-up phrase, and what
 needs a little teach.
 With that in mind, how do you think dancers would respond to "trade by"
 without a preceeding "pass thru," to maintain a single progression. The
 power of habits.
 Jerome
 On Tue, Mar 14, 2023, 1:57 PM Tony Parkes via Contra Callers <
 contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
 I’ve led several Intro to Contras sessions at National S/D Conventions.
 The first dance in the session was typically my Inflation Reel, with a
 Trade By added after the Pass Thru. (Trade By: If you’re facing someone,
 pass thru; if not, do a partner trade [like a California Twirl without
 hands]). This gives a double progression and means I don’t have to explain
 waiting at the ends or crossing over. I’ve always also used Shadrack’s
 Delight, which I wrote to appeal to traditional dancers and MWSDers alike.
 For the most part, I’ve found that MWSDers quickly get into the groove of
 dancing to the phrase, as long as they’re in longways formation. (I tell
 them that contra dancing is “square dance basics with round dance timing.”)
 But the moment I put them in squares, with the hope of doing some of my
 favorite Lancers or other quadrille figures, they think they can “relax”
 and clip the timing.
 Tony Parkes
 Billerica, Mass.
 
www.hands4.com
 New book! Square Dance Calling: An Old Art for a New Century
 (available now)
 *From:* Rich Sbardella via Contra Callers <
 contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
 *Sent:* Tuesday, March 14, 2023 12:29 PM
 *To:* Caller's discussion list <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 *Subject:* [Callers] Contras for a Crowd that does not Swing
 Friends,
 I have been asked to lead an intro to contra dance session at a square
 dance convention.
 I will have time to lead 3-4 contras, and I am looking for suggestions.
 My main concern is that most modern square dancers do not swing, they
 simply twirl under.  With that in mind, I need contras which have no more
 than an eight count swing yet reflect the spirit of the modern contra
 scene.
 One major difference between contra dance and MWSD is square dancers are
 not trained to dance to the phrase of the music.  I will most likely begin
 with a circle mixer to encourage a full 8 count swing and to emphasize
 dancing to the phrase.
 I am not looking for contra dances with MWSD basics, but rather typical
 contra basics.  Any suggestions?  I can certainly find some among my
 collection, but perhaps there is a gem I might miss.
 Thanks,
 Rich Sbardella
 Stafford, CT
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