Ron Blechner wrote (after giving examples of transitions that some might call awkward):
And maybe the answer someone might give is “these are
all bad flow”. Yet people seem to like many dances with them in it. I would be interested
to find out why.
The idea that every transition must be ultra-smooth is a fairly recent one, compared to
the length of time that contras and squares have been around. It appears to have become
prominent in the square dance revival in the late 1950s, and in the contra dance revival
in the mid-1970s (I may be off by a few years in both cases). Both contras and squares
began evolving into their present forms around 1800 (to use a very round number).
And I think flow can be given too much emphasis. I’ve heard modern square dance callers
speak of “overflow,” which happens when there is too much movement in one direction (say
clockwise). Those I’ve heard have spoken of it as if it’s a bad thing, but there are
people in that network who appear to think flow should take precedence over other criteria
for a good sequence of moves. There’s been a trend away from using “forward and back” over
the last two or three decades, and I can’t remember the last time I heard a modern caller
follow a circle left with a circle right.
In contras, I think it depends on where in the music the transition occurs. I wrote
Shadrack’s Delight (1972) in a deliberate mix of traditional and modern style; it ends
with a courtesy turn into a do-si-do with the next neighbor. I don’t think I would have
put a transition like that in the middle of the dance even then; I’ve avoided it in most
of the routines I’ve written since.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.
www.hands4.com<http://www.hands4.com>
New book! Square Dance Calling: An Old Art for a New Century
(to be published Spring 2017)