Nothing wrong with teaching a figure and assigning it a name for the
duration of the dance or duration of the program--even if that name is
commonly used elsewhere. I would suggest so-di-so, but an
immediate following or preceding do-si-do may well leave the dancers
confused and/or the caller tongue tied.
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On Sun, Sep 17, 2023 at 7:41 AM Katherine Kitching via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
What interesting timing for Michael to write
"Some terms, such as Rory
O'More, petronella and California twirl should be banished for more
descriptive phrases--in this case "balance and slide/shift". "
I am about to introduce Mad Robins to my group for the first time in its
15 year history (reminder, we are an island here in Halifax where 99+
percent of the dancers never dance anywhere else)....
and I was feeling reluctant to use the term M.R., since it goes against
the principle I try to use here for our "always lots of beginners" group,
of using intuitive, descriptive names for my figures. But also a bit torn
because I do love the term "mad robin" and we will probably only use it in
one dance :)
I had been seriously considering the term "Mirror Do-si-do" as an
alternative - because to me, this describes the term perfectly - my dancers
know what a dosido is, and now they will do one- watching their
"reflection" do the same thing across the set.
But! I know that "mirror do si do" unfortunately has another meaning in
the lexicon of figures...
I have been weighing the decision because I am quite sure 99-100 percent
of the dancers have never danced a real mirror do si do, and I feel 96-100
percent of them will never go on to do so.
I thought I might even introduce the concept saying "just for your
interest/in case you go on to dance anywhere else, in the bigger contra
dancing world, this figure is called a " mad robin" and a "mirror do si
do"
is something different..."
I think Michael's comment has emboldened me to go down this route :)
Kat in Hfx NS Canada
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