I'm assuming this a long-ways set for 4-6 couples, but am a bit confused as
to your instructions and the timing.
1. I get that partners are shaking hands, but what is the "1-2-3-4" bit?
Is it "advance to partner 2, shake hands across for 4, and back up 2"?
2. Why are there 24 beats to strip the willow ("arch and file through")
when you are already using 16 beats to invert the line ("all follow C1",
with no return)? The dancers are already in motion from the invert, so a
total of 24 counts should be fine for both actions. Even allowing extra
wiggle room for totally new dancers or a few additional couples, I still
don't see it really needing more than 32 beats at a standard community
dance . (A wedding party, children, or inebriated dancers will change that
math, of course.) The extra counts seem tacked on to "force-phrase" it, as
it were.
Personally, I'm betting that this dance works more like a southern or
western square than a contra: The instructions are correct, but the timing
doesn't add up "right" because it is a social dance and wasn't intended
to
fit a 32-bar phrase. If they did make it fit the phrase, the band probably
did the following:
- played a crooked / custom tune OR a tune with only a single A or B
part OR something with minimal phrasing,
- AND cut the final phrase short or extended it as needed until all the
lines were ready to resume, resulting in a variable length for the B
section.
I've had several bands pull that trick for Grand Marches and things like
this dance, and even heard a few expert groups perform mid-phrase resets to
help wayward callers.
Regardless, since we are talking about recordings and not a band, this
dance as described will struggle to fit a standard, heavily phrased 32-bar
contra tune beginning with A1--at a minimum, you'd have to move the
handshake to the end of the dance and so you can use it during a pick-up
phrase.
Failing finding something like that (and I don't have any specific
recordings in mind), my suggestion is to use a minimally-phrased or
repetitive tune suited for squares...or reconcile yourself to crossing
phrases. (It's a dance best suited for new dancers, after all; most won't
notice the difference.)
Hope that helps.
Neal Schlein
Librarian, MSLIS
On Fri, Mar 25, 2022 at 1:24 PM Linda S. Mrosko via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Music speaks and tells you what to do.
Thank you, Jiim. A good demo of what I'm trying to accomplish.
So for those who've asked what the rest of the dance does, it's pretty
simple because it's a community-style dance. I was at a party 10-15 years
ago and it was a large mixed group. The caller didn't have a name for the
dance (if anyone recognizes it, let me know), but it ended up being kind of
fun for this particular crowd:
8 Shake hands 1, 2; 1-2-3-4; step back
16 Top 2/4 couples down inside; turn solo; Rtn
16 Top 2/4 couples down outside (all follow C1)
24 Same 2/4 couples form an Arch at bottom; the rest file thru to progress
When I say top 2/4 couples, you can alter just the top couple one time
thru the dance, then have the top 2 couples or the top 3 or top 4, or maybe
the whole line the last time thru.
--
*Looking forward,Linda S. Mrosko*
*(903) 292-3713 (Cell)*
*contradancetx.com <http://www.contradancetx.com>*
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