Amy,
I would describe a gate as a connected turn in which both dancers start
facing the same direction (in this case, into the set). One dancer dances
forward while the other backpedals, with their joined hands being the pivot
of the turn. And can I emphasize again the importance of the connection
between dancers, which can make or break the satisfaction of the move.
Louise,
This looks very fun and I plan to use it sometime very soon. Cheers!
Jerome
On Fri, Apr 14, 2023, 3:22 PM Amy Wimmer via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Laura, I plead ignorance here. Will you please
describe/define "gate?"
Thanks,
-Amy
On Fri, Apr 14, 2023, 11:18 AM Louise Siddons via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hi Jerome (and all),
I have heard the left-petronella referred to as a “retronella” — which
may be a useful search term, and also produces some delight when dancers
hear it for the first time.
And although I worry US dancers would rush the gates and therefore find
this a bit unsatisfying (not to mention, no neighbour swing! Which for some
dancers is actually a positive...), I’ve had good feedback here in the UK
about my dance, There and Back:
There and Back
Louise Siddons, 2022
Becket
A1 In a ring, balance and spin to the right; gate clockwise on the side
(fill the music!)
A2 In a ring, balance and spin to the left; gate anticlockwise on the side
B1 Chain (Rh; those moving fwd out of the courtesy turn end slightly
inside the set and look right); with the next, right shoulder 'round 1.5
B2 With your partner, balance and swing
Louise.
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