Among the "contra-friendly squares" suggested in John Sweeney's
message of October 16 (full message below) are "Chippenham
Square" by Colin Hume and "Geezy Peezy" by Larry Edelman.
The opening moves of "Chippenham Square" are:
A1: Heads right and left through;
sides swing opposite and face the nearest head couple.
"Geezy Peezy" begins with:
Head two couples go forward and back, up
to the middle and back like that
Forward again with your opposite swing
Face the sides and form a ring
Circle left and keep in time
*** My question is, have any of you ever seen something like this
happen?
The caller (whether you or someone else, and using whatever
words) instructs, say, the head dancers to swing their
opposites, face the nearest side couple, and circle with
that side couple. In some square, one of the following
misinterpretations occurs:
1. Instead of swinging in a spot directly in front
of one of the side couples, a pair of head dancers
swing either very near the gent's home place or
very near the lady's home place. (And you believe
that they aren't intentionally dancing offset from
their theoretical position to avoid crowding but
that they actually don't understand where they are
supposed to be.)
OR
2. Head dancers swing opposites, then fall back to
home places. Then they go together with their
*partners* to circle with whichever side couple
they consider "nearest".
OR
3. Somehow (whether or not you see exactly how it
happens) dancers end up in a circle of five and
a circle of three.
I'm not asking whether you see such things happen in most squares
most of the time. What I'd like to know is how many of you can
recall seeing, even once, one of the misinterpretations described
above, either while you were calling or while you were at a dance
with someone else calling.
My point in this message, and in my message of October 14 where
I pointed out potential trouble spots in some of the squares
suggested by Lind Leslie, is not to claim that the squares under
discussion aren't contra friendly. My point is that even bits of
choreography that aren't really difficult can take more care to
teach efficiently and effectively when they are unfamiliar to
many of the dancers present than when they are familiar to almost
all.
--Jim
On Oct 16, 2016, at 8:00 AM, John Sweeney via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hi Ron,
Here are some figures that might fit your needs. But you also need
some breaks/choruses that contra dancers will find easy; you don’t have to
use ones shown with the figures.
Chippenham Square by Colin Hume
http://colinhume.com/insts.htm#ChippenhamSquare
Geezy Peezy by Larry Edelman
https://www.library.unh.edu/special/forms/rpdlw/syllabus2011.pdf
Banjos in Love by Erik Hoffman in Contradictions:
http://www.erikhoffman.com/dancescd.html
Deer Park Lancers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ1D5IZt_dc
The Lucky One by Tom Hinds in Bad Hair Decade
Perceptual Motion by Tom Hinds
https://www.library.unh.edu/special/forms/rpdlw/syllabus2007.pdf
Camille’s Quadrille by Walter Lenk
https://www.cambridgefolk.org.uk/contra/dances/camilles_quadrille.html
Beaver Lake Jig by Ted Sanella
https://www.cambridgefolk.org.uk/contra/dances/ted_sannella/beaver_lake_jig.
html
(if the men mess up the first move, then get the ladies to go to their
left hand man for the allemande right instead – the ladies are often much
better than the men!)
Western Quadrille (from Chip Hendrickson) – based on Powell’s First Sett No.
3 – 1848
A1: Men Star Left (Hands Across); Star Right, take Left with Partner to form
intersecting Waves
A2: Balance the Wave (L/R), Partner Allemande Left 1/2
Balance the Wave (L/R), Partner Allemande Left 3/4
B1: All Four Ladies Chain Half Way x2 – finish by sending the Lady around
the outside on to the next Man and turning Left to pick up your Corner
B2: Corner Promenade to Man's Home
(Original was Ladies’ Stars, but that makes the end of A2 an Allemande Left
1 & 1/4 in four beats)
Or for a slightly more complex one on the same theme:
Parisian Star
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzdwHF2EZ_k
Hope that helps. If you want any of the instructions please e-mail
me off-list.
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 & 07802
940 574
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events & DVDs
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent