Dancers stand out Improper on the ends, to prepare for the progressing new
neighbors with whom they'll circle left.
A1 indecent
L1 R1
R2 L2
balance & petronella
indecent
Becket-ccw
R1 L2
L1 R2
balance & petronella
A2 progressed
improper
L2 R2
R1 L1
balance & petronella
indecent
Becket
R2 L1
L2 R1
Partners swing
B1 Becket
L2 R1
R2 L1
Robins chain
progressed
improper
L2 R2
R1 L1
circle right 4 places
B2 progressed
improper
L2 R2
R1 L1
turn alone to face Next Neighbors ⁋
new set
improper
L2 R2
---------
R1 L1
L2 R2
---------
R1L2
circle left 2 places
progressed
indecent
R2 L2
L1 R1
Neighbors swing
My concern with "reverse-improper" is confusion with what some might call
"reverse-progression improper", with 1s below 2s, Lark left and Robin when
facing into the minor set. Chris Page (among others) have called this
"progressed indecent", see
https://contrachoreography.wordpress.com/2013/11/06/the-twenty-four-duple-m….
That said, I'm generally fine with whatever folks use, so long as they
clarify themselves when needed.
— Chet Gray
dance caller
Louisville, KY
<chetgray+calling(a)gmail.com>
(502) 419-7008 <+1-502-419-7008>
On Tue, Mar 3, 2020 at 3:21 PM Erik Hoffman via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
On this new dance, *Name Impending*, it’s interesting,
and it took me 5
minutes to figure this out but:
It can start either improper or reverse-improper. That’s because, either
way, three Petronella turns put you on the Lark’s side with your partner
(one with the Lark on the left, the other with the Robin on the left). Then
the partner swing puts everything in order. So you can start this dance
improper, then let it flow. When couples come in on the end they can stand
“crossed over” or not. It might be confusing, if one doesn’t cross over, to
do the Petronellas in a Lark-Lark-Robin-Robin circle, but it’ll, as noted,
straighten out momentarily.
As I’m considering this, we may note that, when circling left ¾ into a
swing, it’s far smoother for the Robin to draw into that swing with the
Lark on the right. Using Petronella turns makes it smooth either way.
An aside: I’m not sure if others feel this way but, I really don’t like
calling the reverse-improper formation “indecent.” I think using that name
is, well, sort of ugly and, to me, not funny. Maybe I’ve finally made it to
being an old curmudgeon… At any rate, I’ll continue to call it
reverse-improper.
~Erik Hoffman
Oakland, CA