Hi Perry,
I've included my notes below. Before I called a workshop at a camp I had a
practice party at my house, and it made a HUGE difference. I hope you'll
find it helpful. Consider a modification to the end of D2 that takes an
appropriate amount of time (I usually use Gaye's modifcation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_BZn92P11Q).
Have fun!
Erik Erhardt
https://statacumen.com/dance/
Yankee Dutch Crossing
Adapted by Joseph Pimentel (Cardinal Collection, 2004) for contra dancers
from the original English country dance, "Dutch Crossing," by Ernst van
Brakel (1990).
Formation: For 8 couples, arranged as in two short improper contra lines,
side by side.
Music: any lively reel; medleying two 32-bar tunes is once through the
dance.
Description:
That fiendishly challenging yet ultimately satisfying dance "Yankee Dutch
Crossing" is the contra-fied version by Joseph Pimentel (2004) of the Ernst
van Brakel "Dutch Crossing" (1990), a four-part dance for sixteen dancers
with the characteristic "Xs and Os" clockwork right-and-left stars.
Video of Yankee Dutch Crossing from Pinewoods:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RL1ulnHEuNY
Gaye's modification:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_BZn92P11Q
Plan for 60 minute teach for new dancers, then 15 minutes to dance through
twice.
Sign-up Sheet
Sign up with a partner in a 16-person set, show up on time.
Dance
*Part I*
Note significant people:
"Opposites/Buddies," standing across from each other in original hands four
"Hey friends," standing along line across hall
Note: Dancer orientation is tricky. During walkthrough, it is often
helpful to walk a move or two and say “freeze”, then explain where they
are, how they should be oriented, and what will happen next (with whom,
ending where). Then call the next move or two as they walk it. Repeat.
*Part I, Heys*
1st & 3rd time through: Hey Across the hall
2nd & 4th time through: Hey Up-and-down the hall
Dancers will hey with their hey friends along the line in front of where
they start.
A1 ----------
Bal & square-thru:
(4) Opposite/Buddy, Right-hand balance
(2) Buddy pull-by R, turn to face P
(2) P pull straight by L
(8) 1/2 Hey with P and hey buddies
those facing in center pass R to start
those facing out turn over L-sh to start
end by passing your partner by Left and connecting hands,
person approaching from the end feels like
they roll to follow their partner in the circle
"Pass your partner, circle right"
"As pass partner by left, take both hands with partner and *Lady* roll away
from right to left to face Buddies up and down (across). Circle right
with the *Gent* in the lead of partner."
A2 ----------
(4) Circle Right 1/2 way w/original Opps (Gent in lead, L on P's left)
(4) face Opp, with P fall back (moving away from Opp)
Alt: Gaye Fifer: (4) Balance -- I prefer original.
(orientation: facing original direction with same Opposites, but your
original line has been inverted so that Gents are on the right)
(8) Opp DSD
B12 ----------
Repeat A1 & A2 to return to place
Difference:
B2 (4) Circle Right 1/2 way w/original Opps (Lady in lead, G on P's left)
Words to use:
Same neighbor, balance right, hey up and down (across)
"As pass partner by left, take both hands with partner and *Gent* roll away
from right to left to face Buddies up and down (across). Circle right
with the *Lady* in the lead of partner."
(orientation: Back to original position)
*Words to use when calling (always clearly emphasize directional cues)*
*A12*
Face up and down (across)
Buddy right-hand balance, pull by right, partner left
Hey across (up and down), right in center, left on outside, right in
center, roll with partner
Circle right with *Gent* in the lead half way, fall back (facing up and
down/across) in original lines
Buddy do-si-do.
*B12*
Face up and down (across)
Buddy right-hand balance, pull by right, partner left
Hey across (up and down), right in center, left on outside, right in
center, roll with partner
Circle right with *Lady* in the lead half way, fall back (facing up and
down/across) at home
Buddy do-si-do.
Part II, Dutch Crossing
reminder: Xs and Os change each time through
"Am I an X or am I an O, right-hand star, here we go!"
"Am I an X or am I an O, shake right hands, ready, go!"
Note two different "teams"
"X team" on two intersecting diagonals from opposite corners
"O team" made up of the 2 middle people on each side of whole set
X team follows the path of a diagonal hey, using hands
O team does a R&L grand around their large circle
A3 ----------
(4) with Opps: star R
(4) X team star L 1/2 in center or balance on ends
WHILE O-team pull by L around circle (Os on the outside, nice and slow)
(4) in 4-somes: star R 1/2
(4) X team star L 1/2 in center or balance on ends
WHILE O-team pull by L around circle (Os on the outside, nice and slow)
A4 ----------
repeat A3 to home places
B3 ----------
(16) P B&S
B4 ----------
(10) with Opps, circle L 1-1/4 to face a new wall
"move that circle, you've got to face a new wall"
(6) Opp DSD
(orientation: you're looking "up and down" or "at the side wall")
Alt: B4 Gaye Fifer: (4) Bal ring, (4) Cir L 1/4, (8) Opp DSD
*Words to use when calling*
*A34*
Am I an X or am I an O? Right-hand star, here we go!
(Diagonal buddy) Right, 2, 3, and Left
1, 2, 3, and Right
1, 2, 3, and Left
buddies in opposite corner, Right
1, 2, 3, and Left
1, 2, 3, and Right
1, 2, 3, and Left
Find your partner, balance and swing
*B34*
Face your buddies , Balance the ring, circle left 1/4 to face across (up
and down)
Buddy do-si-do
You’ve changed orientations, buddy right-hand balance…
"And thank your square, right there."
Repeat the entire dance three times, facing a new wall each time. Each time
through, everyone will experience a different dance position.
Teaching Notes
Plan for extra teaching time. With one or two sets, teaching and dancing
can take 45-60 minutes. For more sets, plan on 60-75 minutes.
A1/B1. The 1/2-hey includes a total of 4 passes. The final pass is by the
L-sh with partner. The transition from that pass into the circle can cause
confusion for a couple of reasons. First, people feel like they are on the
wrong side of their partner leading into the circle; man on the right and
woman on the left. Second, the person moving toward the outside of the set
in the last pass of the hey (the woman in Al, the man in B1) has to change
their direction to get into the circle. Encourage people to keep their eye
on their partner in that last pass to help draw them into the circle.
A3/B4. This figure has the exhilarating feel of a carnival ride and people
feel great satisfaction when it all comes together. Notice that the
positioning is different each time through the dance. In the R&L grand, for
example, one time through, you go clockwise around the "O" and the other
time you go counterclockwise. When people in the X-team reach the end of
their diagonal, they should make a point to do the balance, which helps
them keep the correct timing. They will resist this, because it feels
awkward. Their incentive to overcome the awkwardness is great, though,
because if they stick their hand into a "star" too early, the consequences
are dire. Making such a warning usually elicits laughter, which helps both
to relax people and to reinforce the point.
Each time through the dance, Buddies remain the same. Hey friends alternate
depending on the orientation of the lines.
On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 6:56 AM, Perry Shafran via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hi, everyone,
Can someone point me to the best resource to get the figures for Dutch
Crossing (specifically the Yankee Dutch Crossing that is frequently called
at dance weekends). With less than 2 weeks to spare, I've been asked if I'd
like to do a Dutch Crossing workshop and I think I need the figures down
pat if I'm going to do that. Thanks in advance!
Perry
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