Rather than  "Head couples pass through, separate and go around one to form lines at the sides,"   the following might be helpful
 "Head couples pass through, separate and go around one to the position of  lines at the sides, with partners facing each other across."
 
Michael Fuerst      802 N Broadway      Urbana IL 61801      217 239 5844



On Friday, May 8, 2015 3:03 PM, Jack Mitchell <jmitchell.nc@gmail.com> wrote:


Could you clarify the B2 of this dance?   You say that you form lines at the sides and swing.  But the lines don't go forward and back at any point. Is your partner in the opposite line from you or in the same line?

Sent from Outlook

_____________________________
From: Michael Fuerst via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net>
Sent: Sunday, May 3, 2015 4:20 PM
Subject: Re: [Callers] Itty-bitty dances, triplets, odd numbers
To: Caller's discussion list <callers@sharedweight.net>


A four  couple contra I call sometimes is  "Vet's Revenge"  by Colin Hume  Duple Improper

A1  Neighbor couples (1's with 2's, 3's with 4's)  star left
        Middle couples (2's with 3's) star right
A2   Neighbor couples allemande left 1 1/2 
        Women chain to partner
B1    All four couples promenade in a circle a bit more than 1/2 around to form a square 
              (until the original couple 1 is in  position 3 of  a square, i.e., facing the music)
               This must be done somewhat quickly
        Side couple women chain across
B2    Head couples pass through, separate and go around one to form lines at the sides
         All swing partner, finish with the two couples now in the middle facing the nearest end,
             and the two couples at the end facing the middle

 
Michael Fuerst      802 N Broadway      Urbana IL 61801      217 239 5844



On Sunday, May 3, 2015 2:54 PM, Kalia Kliban via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:


I just called a tiny dance last night, and went through several of my
triplets along with a big pile of English 3-couple dances that we did to
old-time tunes (that was a little weird for me but the dancers enjoyed
them, so what the heck).  I was grateful to have the few triplets I had,
and I'd like to expand my collection.  The ones I used were
Microchasmic, David's Triplet #7 and Ted's Triplet #24, which all have
distinctive bits in them (contra corners, round two/drop through, and a
cast to invert then 1s lead up, respectively).  I like triplets that
have some choreographic substance to them, something for the dancers to
chew on.

Do you have favorites you enjoy dancing as well as calling?  I get the
impression sometimes that triplets are "that thing you do to fill time
until the real dancing starts," but 3-couple sets can be a whole lot of
fun.  And sometimes they can save your butt as a caller.

We had lots of odd numbers last night, so in addition to the triplets
and 3-couple English dances I used dances like Domino 5 (5 dancers) and
Pride of Dingle (for 9).  For a short while we had 4 couples and did
contras but most of the evening was "other."  Got any good dances for
odd numbers?

Kalia
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