I have a couple of Tony's books, but I just checked, and not the one
containing Ashoken Hello. I'd be curious the choreo for that.
I've heard a few callers call The Big Easy, and most recently it was Liz
Nelson, locally, early in an evening with a gaggle of new dancers, and she
prompted it with the allemande Right.
The one on The Caller's Box has it as a Left.
I guess the other issue, which, now that I'm thinking about L vs R in
details, is that from Robins role, an alle R puts it at 38-40 beats of
clockwise rotation, which 26-28 beats is consecutively.
Hm.
Changing the alle to a DoSiDo solves that, keeps the timing and keeps it as
glossary moves, and flows well from a promade.(alts: pass thru across +
twirl, or R+L Thru)
A1: N B+S
A2: N Prom, Robins DSD 1.5x
B1: P B+S
B2: Circle L 3/4, Bal, Cali Twirl
This dance searched brings up Yoyo Zhou's "Larks in the Afternoon"
A1: same
A2: Larks Alle L 1.5x, Robins DSD 1x
B1: same
B2: same
And also is similar to Linda Leslie's Berlin Contra:
A1: same
A2: LLFB, Robins DSD 1.5
B1: same
B2: Bal Ring, 2s Arch, 1s Dive
(Essentially, the Big Easy but Robins DSD. Now I'm curious which dance came
first?)
And of course, Diane Silver's Easy Peasy:
A1: same
A2: LLFB, Larks Alle L 1.5
B1: same
B2: Circle, bal, cali.
Adding in a chain and/or a star and dropping the promenade and I have at
least a dozen other dances in my box. (Appetizer, Push the Button, Too Hot
To Trot, Simplicity Swing, Spend Some Time Together, Harmony Supper Line,
Dick & Mary's Departure, Baby Rose, et al)
... but this niche of "simple dance with a courtesy turn, one role doesn't
stay mostly in one spot, no star, no chain" is something I know I've looked
for programming gigs and left wanting.
I'll leave this thread going as more callers see it and have dances to
think of. I may temprarily dub the DSD version "The Big Hello".
-Julian
On Sat, Oct 22, 2022, 9:16 AM Tony Parkes via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
When I wrote Ashokan Hello, I realized that the
left-hand turn was
counterintuitive after a neighbor swing. But I needed it to be left because
the next moves are a right-hand balance and box the gnat. I decided that
the forward and back (between the swing and the turn) canceled the
handedness. Obviously if it leads into a two-hand balance (the norm these
days), the turn can be with either hand.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.
www.hands4.com
New book! Square Dance Calling: An Old Art for a New Century
(available now)
*From:* Bob via Contra Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
*Sent:* Saturday, October 22, 2022 8:31 AM
*To:* contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
*Subject:* [Callers] Re: dance name? - Big Easy variation
Per my card on The Big Easy, it’s an allemande left after the long lines
and before the partner swing. But I’m away from my books for a while and
can’t go back to the source. I bet I got it from The Rosen Hill Collection.
Her note on the dance says ‘This is a very easy version of “Ashokan Hello”
by Tony Parkes, for use as a first contra dance of the evening where
newcomers are plentiful.‘
\Bob
On Oct 21, 2022, at 21:53, Jerome Grisanti via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I wonder if Julian's notation assumes Robins right allemande unless
otherwise specified. I'm only guessing. Julian?
On Fri, Oct 21, 2022, 1:15 PM Lisa Greenleaf via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
The only change I’d suggest is Robins Allem R since that is the free hand
after a swing.
Lisa
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 21, 2022, at 11:47 AM, Julian Blechner via
Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hi all,
I have a question about a variation on Becky Hill's Big Easy, which I
see as:
Big Easy Becky Hill
A1: Bal Ring, Neighbor Swing (often changed to N B+S)
A2: LLFB, Robins Alle 1.5
B1: P B+S
B2: Circle L 3/4, Bal ring, pass thru
An easy variation I like, say, to introduce the courtesy turn early in
the evening
and to have the Larks not have to be relegated to keeping
basically in one spot for 7/8ths of the dance, has:
A2. N Prom, robins alle 1.5
B2. Circle L 3/4, bal, cali twirl
It's enough of a change - especially for one of these easy glossary
dances -
that I figure someone may have claimed it as a new dance, and was
looking for author and title. I didn't see this variation listed in The
Caller's Box website.
Thanks,
Julian Blechner
he/him
p.s. Folks may know me as "Ron". I've been using a new first name.
Pronouns are the same. I'm slowly trying to change my online presence, get
a new website, etc.
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