Hi Robert,
I may be totally missing the point but, in *Just Because*, the chain and
allemande are with *different* people. I agree that's a common bit of
choreography with a well established history - particularly so in squares.
In the dance I referenced (and how I interpreted - perhaps erroneously -
the original request), the person you chain to and the person you allemande
with are the *same* people, and the moves proceed directly from one to the
other for more than a minor fraction (see below).
I'm happy to let go any claim to uniqueness for this approach, should it
matter. We all just add little bits to the foundations we've inherited.
Thanks,
Don
Greenfield Tornado – Becket – Don Veino 20161218
*A1*
Left Diagonal Slice & Take to Gent’s Side (Neighbor Swing)
[First time can be straight across Give & Take; Alternate A1 = Diagonal
Circle Left 3/4, N Swing]
*A2*
Ladies Chain (to P)
Partner Allemande Left 1+1/2x
*B1*
Full Hey, Gents Pass Right to start
*B2*
Partner Balance & Swing
*End Effects*: Wait out crossed over on Left Diagonal at ends.
(Note: as covered in my blog post on this dance, the same sequence but for
the A2 was independently done previously by Linda Leslie as her dance
*Greenfield
Storm*. I modified my dance title as shown to honor hers, once I became
aware of it.)
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 9:38 PM, Robert Livingston <rlivngstn(a)yahoo.com>
wrote:
Don..and all,
Dover, VT, in a square dance; "Just Because" Ted Glabach, caller:
A1 Head Ladies Chain - Back
A2 Sides...the same
B1 Allemande Left on the Corner (8)
come home and Swing with Your Own (8)
B2 Take the Corner maid and we'll all Promenade (8)
Because, just because (8)
Tag B3 Because, just because
Not a modern era dance, not in contra formation, but still in play.
Bob Livingston
------------------------------
*From:* Don Veino via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
*To:* Don Veino via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
*Sent:* Thursday, April 13, 2017 8:51 PM
*Subject:* Re: [Callers] Ladies Chain to Allemande Left (Was: Does this
dance already exist?)
In case anyone might be under the assumption that I'd claimed to have
invented the Ladies Chain or similar... :-)
My understanding of the context of the original post was looking for a
modern era dance featuring Ladies Chain with Courtesy Turn, proceeding
directly to a full Allemande Left with the same person. That's the sequence
in my dance I referenced (and haven't encountered elsewhere before).
Fascinating and informative Chain history thread please continue...
-Don
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