Also, for the final move I wrote:

Promenade across the set, as a couple turn right, on to the next

It might otherwise be called like a courtesy turn, and they'd need to slide past their current neighbors to (reverse) progress at all.  Or, you could call, Robins, courtesy turn your Larks, which should work, pretty much, since they shifted right a bit already to pass their neighbors, though purists would insist on shifting left hands.

And, sorry, forgot to put the city in my sig...

--jh--
Joe Harrington
Contra dance caller and DJ
Organizer, Orlando Contra Dance
orlandocontra.org
FB: Orlando Contra Dance Community
Ig: orlandocontradance
contradancerjoe@gmail.com


On Mon, Sep 9, 2024 at 9:53 PM Joe Harrington <contradancerjoe@gmail.com> wrote:
Some searching by moves in The Caller's Box turned up nothing like A Pillar of Weathersfield except possibly some dances that don't allow viewing the moves.  I'm going with you wrote it until told otherwise.  Is it Naomi Morse?  I want to attribute it properly in my notes.

--jh--


On Sun, Sep 8, 2024 at 12:50 PM Luke Donforth via Contra Callers <contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hello all, 

Oftentimes at One Night Gigs, I'll do a mix of circle and longways set dances. With scatter mixers and specialty dances, I can fill an evening. But sometimes I get a group that "wants contras" or is looking to grow their familiarity with the dance form. 

I think Becket dances without lark/robin distinctions and no neighbor swing are AN easy option into "hands-four" contras. There are other ways in, but I'm looking for more Beckets that match that description. For a while I've had "Pluck It" in my box as a friendly option:

Pluck It
Contra/Becket-CW

A1 -----------
(8) Circle Left
(8) Circle Right
A2 -----------
(8) Left hand Star
(8) Right hand Star
B1 -----------
(8) Partner Do-si-do
(8) Partner swing
B2 -----------
(8) Neighbor Do-si-do across set
(8) Long lines, yearn left 

This is, in my opinion, pretty close to the traditional mixer Scatter Shot but done as a keeper in Becket. (It does have a DSD across the set, which in a recent thread was listed as a no-no for some callers. While I wouldn't use that move at a dance weekend, for One Night gigs I think it's accessible and acceptable). You don't have to teach ballroom swing, and if folks want to elbow swing and swap roles with their partner it doesn't really impact the dance (this is a small advantage of Becket over improper for this type of dance; different position on the side is less disorienting than different side of the set). 

What other Becket dances do folks have that don't rely on roles? No larks allemande or robins chain, etc.

On the drive home from my gig last night I came up with this one (which may already exist), written for Naomi who organizes the community dance I was at:

A Pillar of Weathersfield
Contra/Becket-CW

A1 -----------
(8) Balance the ring and spin to the right (petronella)
(8) Balance the ring and spin to the right (petronella)
A2 -----------
(16) Partner balance and swing, end facing down the hall
B1 -----------
(8) Down the hall, four in line (turn as couples)
(8) Return and face across
B2 -----------
(8) Long lines, forward and back
(8) Promenade across the Set, turn as a couple and progress
(Go between the ones you danced with, passing by left shoulder, and the new couple on your right, turn to take hands with new couple)

I'd be curious what else folks have that they use for entry-level contras when you don't have a critical mass of experience for improper dances with neighbor swings.

Thanks!
Luke Donforth
Burlington, VT
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