Using the term corners does make more sensei a triple minor.
Rich
On Mon, Aug 21, 2023 at 10:02 PM Jonathan Sivier <jsivier(a)illinois.edu>
wrote:
      Given that it was most likely a triple minor back
in the day it may in
 fact be very closely related to Chorus Jig, which was also probably a
 triple minor at one point.  Perhaps someone liked the figures and applied
 them to another tune.  My understanding is that was very common then.
 Jonathan
 On 8/21/2023 7:11 PM, Jerome Grisanti wrote:
  Just adding to Jonathan's reply, the English
country dance Trip to 
 Tunbridge is almost exactly the same as Chorus Jig, but as a
three-couple
 set:
 
 A1: Ones cast down outside past two couples, take a peak and dance back.
 A2: Ones down the center, return, cast to second place
 B1: Ones pass right shoulder, turn first corner by the right hand;
 Ones pass right, turn second corner by the right hand.
 B2: Ones cross to their own side (proper), lines of three lead out a 
 double, turn
alone and dance back, Ones cast to bottom, threes lead to
 second place, and twos two-hand turn at top in preparation for cast.
 
 There's no balance and swing, of course, and only right-hand turns, but 
 the
structure is clearly the same.
 
 Jerome Grisanti
 On Mon, Aug 21, 2023, 6:47 PM Jonathan Sivier via Contra Callers < 
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net <mailto:
 contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>> wrote:
 
          There are a bunch of English country dances that have 
 corner/partner
figures similar to the contra corners in contra dance (i.e.
 Fandango, Prince William, etc.)  I don't know what the earliest one is, but
 I suspect the figure was well known when the early American dances were
 being devised.  The figure is included in several of the chestnut dances
 such as Chorus Jig (which I once saw listed as Cora's Jig), Rory O'More and
 Sackett's Harbor.  Somewhere I saw the figure referred to as "contrary
 corners" in something written about chestnut dances.  I don't know if that
 is a genuine name that was once used, or not.
 
     Jonathan
     On 8/21/2023 5:34 PM, Rich Sbardella via Contra Callers wrote:
      > Hey friends,
      > Can anyone shed some light on the origin of the movement and the 
especially the name "Contra Corners"?
       > Rich Sbardella
      > Stafford, CT
     
  
      >
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