I have that exact dance as To Wedded Bliss by Mark Goodwin (2014). I
use that in my Lesson and then, after teaching ladies chain and right &
left through, follow that with my dance The Lesson (2009) which is
A1 -----------
(8) Neighbor Do-si-do
(8) Neighbor swing
A2 -----------
(8)
Ladies chain
(8) Long lines, forward and back
B1 -----------
(8) Right & left through
(8) Partner promenade across
B2 -----------
(8) Circle Left 3/4
(4) Balance the Ring
(4) Pass through
and yes, I know it doesn't have a swing - it's in the
lesson and I want
to minimize the use of partner swings so that new couples don't get
bad habits.
Michael Barraclough
www.michaelbarraclough.com
--
On Mon, 2016-10-17 at 22:45 -0400, Luke Donforth via Callers wrote:
Hello all,>
I was thinking about what I do at the "welcome to our contra dance"
introduction, and what dance would easily move in to that. Noodling around with moves, I
thought of a sequence with glossary moves, but I didn't have it in my box. Anyone
recognize it?>
Improper>
A1 -----------
(8) Neighbor Do-si-do
(8) Neighbor swing
A2 -----------
(8) Men allemande Left 1-1/2
(8) Partner swing
B1 -----------
(8) Promenade across the Set
(8) Long lines, forward and back
B2 -----------
(8) Circle Left 3/4
(4) Balance the Ring
(4) Pass through
During the introduction, I often teach the
progression with a "ring balance, walk past this neighbor", and I wanted
something that included that. There are lots of great accessible dances with that (The Big
Easy, Easy Peasy, etc), but I'm not seeing one with a partner promenade (something I
also use in the introduction; to go from a big circle to lines of couples for a contra
set). >
If someone already wrote it, I'll happily give them credit. If not,
I'll call it "If you can walk, then you can dance" (which I'll note is
not an if and only if statement).>
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