Jim: Yes, Vicki Herndon from Chattanooga, and I, Vicki Morrison from Tallahassee, are
indeed two different people! Yes, I saw the video she posted on FB and I got in touch with
her to make sure I understood the dance. The dancers in the video are a little hard to
see, but perhaps it would clear up the confusion to watch it, assuming folks are able to
open this link. Not sure if non-Facebookers can.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10204059403144353&set=vb.120257350…
It is correct as I wrote it originally. When you go DTH, #1 lady on the end turns alone,
#2 lady and #2 gent i the middle make an arch, the #1 gent pops through, the lady #2
twists around and #2 gent ends up on the outside and everyone is next to their partners.
It's the same figure as April Blume just posted for a dance called "Pam's
Four". Andrea Nettleton says the only name she knows of for this figure is
"Right hand high, left hand low".
Thanks for all the comments! If anyone ever finds out the name of the dance I'd love
to know. I'm looking forward to calling it!
--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 7/23/14, Eric Black via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Subject: Re: [Callers] Name this Robert Cromertie dance!
To: Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
Date: Wednesday, July 23, 2014, 4:37 PM
Oops.
I should have read my own card more carefully.
The dance titled “Dixie Gal” starts
with: A: Long lines F & B, gents
allemande left 1-1/2; Bal & Swing
*partner*
Different dance. Sorry. Back to
work.
-EricEric Black
eric@mirador.comhttp://eric-black.com
On Jul 23, 2014, at 1:21 PM, Dave
Casserly <david.j.casserly(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Ok, sounds like I was wrong.
If the line gets inverted entirely, then Keith is
correct that this dance doesn't work. Neighbors
are on the same side of the set to start the lines down, so
they'll be on the same side coming back up, which
won't work with a partner swing next.
I'm pretty sure I've danced this dance
before, but with Lady 2 doing a normal right-hand-high,
left-hand-low, while Lady 1 turns alone. If that's
not Robert's instruction then we must be missing
something with the dance.
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014
at 4:10 PM, Eric Black via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
wrote:
Sorry, I forgot that I
have scanned images of my cards so I can check before I go
home.
I misremembered, the dance as I have it from Robert
Cromartie is called “Dixie Gal”.
The note about the Dixie Twirl move
is: Dixit Twirl: don’t let go!
Left-most leads under arch made by right-most pair to
other side, right-most
sweeps across to other side. Inverts the
line, left-most down is left-most up.
This is kind of like a “Right Hand High, Left
Hand Low” except that it’s a line of 4, not just 3
(usually a gent and 2 ladies).
I suppose it’s open to interpretation as to whether
the “4 vs. 3” distinction warrants a different name for
the move.
I’ve also heard it described as a “California
Twirl for couples”.
I got it from Robert, don’t know when. I
see that it’s published in Give and Take, my copy of which
is at home. Theremay be more explanation
there (or rather, less?).
-Eric
Eric Blackeric@mirador.comhttp://eric-black.com
On Jul 23,
2014, at 12:29 PM, Dave Casserly via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
wrote:
Yes, that's my
interpretation as well (or, in Keith's words,
"W2 Dixie twirls the two M, while
W1 lets go and turns alone").
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014
at 1:52 PM, Kalia Kliban via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
wrote:
So
while the rest of the line is turning itself inside out, W1
is not involved at all? I thought W1 was part of the
inversion, thus ending up on the R end of the line once it
was facing up. I was having the same confusion Keith was.
So to clarify, lines of 4 down the hall after the N
swing. W2 (2nd from the L) raises R hand to swap the
gents, while W1 simply turns to face up. At the end of
this maneuver all are next to their partners in the line
o' 4, ready for to come back up the hall and swing.
Have I got that right?
Kalia
On 7/23/2014 10:34 AM, Dave Casserly via Callers wrote:
Ahh, I see: it's the A1/A2 where there's confusion.
It's the second
*lady* who does the right hand high, left hand low.
So, after that
move, she is facing up the set, with her neighbor in her
left hand, and
her partner in her right hand. The first lady is on
the left end of the
set, facing up. So the balance and swing is on the
side of the set, not
in the middle. The gents do NOT stay in the same place
after the down
the hall; they switch places with each other when coming
up.
On Wed, Jul 23, 2014 at 1:28 PM, Keith Tuxhorn <keithlmt(a)gmail.com
<mailto:keithlmt@gmail.com>>
wrote:
A1/A2... I'm on the outside, holding my
N's R hand... With the Dixie
twirl, I'm still in that spot. When we
bend the line, my P and I are
above the 2s, in reversed position.
B1: All are swinging in the center of the set.
When the swing
finishes, all are back to IMP position where
they started.
B2: With one petronella, I move to the side
with my P. When I CA
twirl, I'm turning with a N to progress.
In B1, if the M cross to their P and swing,
then you progress the
wrong way. Is the instruction left out in B1
"W cross to P"... ?
Keith
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