Tom --
It's possible, if not likely, that what I'm calling "seems to have no sense
of flow" has different causes for different people at different times. I've
definitely seen it happening at gents/ladies dances as well as at larks/robins dances as
well as at English dances. When I lead a beginner session at a larks/robins dance I
introduce role names when teaching the swing, emphasize that larks open on the left,
ravens/robins on the right, and do a circle mixer that's just into the center and
back, swing the next etc, repeating the larks left robins right thing. So they get to
hear the role name a lot.
Of course new comers often take quite a while to get sorted regardless. Last Sunday I
called a single contra dance at a party - the party honored a queer activist who also
liked contra dancing, so the honoree wanted there to be a dance, although hardly anybody
at the party had done it before. Did a Haste-to-the-Wedding variant which only had a
partner swing, felt no need to use any role names at all (beyond partner and neighbor)
and every foursome one couple was in spent about 6 of the 8 beats available to do a right
hand star getting the star organized. I couldn't see what was going on, but
they'd pass through and circle on time, and then their foursome would be huddled like
the Peanuts kids around the sad little tree in the Christmas special and then a star would
start moving.
(This isn't an example of a "no sense of flow" problem, and I didn't see
any of that at that event.)
What I'm talking about here is that there's choreography that seems fairly
inevitable - if you're going to circle left into a half-poussette isn't the
probable direction of the half-poussette pretty obvious, or if you did a clockwise half
poussette into a mad robin why should you even have to use a role name to say who goes
through the middle first? Getting it wrong requires fighting your momentum - and some
people will do that. [Although if they're generally tentative, or late, or executing
one call and stopping and then executing the next call, then they don't have
appropriate momentum anyway.]
-- Alan
________________________________
From: Callers <callers-bounces(a)lists.sharedweight.net> on behalf of tom hinds via
Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Sent: Sunday, September 29, 2019 5:44 AM
To: callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Subject: [Callers] What can you do.....?
Alan,
You raise an interesting question. After I’ve had time to sleep on it, I’ve come up with
some other issues to raise and.discuss.
I’m curious if you have a beginning workshop before the dance.
In my opinion the skills needed for a new dancer to not only survive their first dance but
to actually enjoy it are many And that means having a beginning session that
approximates as close as possible the dance itself.
In your email you mention larks and ravens. If you do have a beginning workshop, are the
newbies given the opportunity to practice/react to their new titles? Not having that
opportunity to practice reacting to their new titles may cause a bit of confusion on the
dance floor.
Tom
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