dear Linda --
When calling Sicilian Circles, I have dancers form a
large circle. I
then actually go out on the floor and ask two couples to face each
other. I then progress around the ring, having the couples face as I
go. It actually takes very little time to do and avoids confusion
surrounding language choices.
That sounds like a good idea.
Thanks!
-- Alan
On Sep 8, 2010, at 6:03 PM, Alan Winston - SSRL
Central Computing wrote:
> Jeff wrote:
>
>
>> Yesterday I called Haste to the Wedding [1] after an influx of new
>> dancers and as a recovery from a dance that was a little too hard for
>> the group. I expected it to go well, but I was surprised by how
>> well,
>> actually. With the clapping in time with the music in the B parts
>> and
>> the extra time for the pass through, a lot of people who'd been
>> confused by progression and how this whole thing worked seemed to get
>> it in a way that helped for following dances as well.
>
>> Does anyone have suggestions for other dances that work similarly,
>> teaching progression?
>
> I'll echo others who talk about how great a dance Haste to the
> Wedding is.
> I use it early on in one-night-stand programs very often, usually as
> a Sicilian
> Circle. According to John Millar in "Country Dances of Colonial
> America", the
> tune was used in an operetta called "The Elopement" in the 1760s.
> Very similar
> dance figures to the version we use can be found in the 1770s,
> although with a
> two-hand-turn-halfway-and-turn-individually-to-face-new-neighbors
> progression,
> which Does Not Work for beginners; The Sicilian circle with pass-
> through
> progression seems to be mid/late 19th-century. Anyway, it's
> undifferentiated
> enough that it can be your first contra dance, your first English
> dance, your
> first Regency dance, your first Civil War dance.
>
> In similar circumstances, if the band knows the tune (and they
> usually do,
> especially if they're old-timey) I'll pull out "Soldier's
Joy",
> which I have
> from a mid-Victorian dance manual:
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> SOLDIER'S JOY. 80 Steps.
> Sicilian Circle ("As for Spanish Dance")
> 32-bar reel.
>
>
> A1: 1-4: Forward and back
> 5-8: Opposites turn two hands (no progression)
>
> A2: 1-4: Partners balance
> 5-8: Partners turn (could swing if wanted)
>
> B1: 1-8: Ladies chain over and back
>
> B2: 1-8: Forward and back, forward and pass through.
>
>
>
> Original text:
>
> All forward and back, swing the opposite-all balance to partners and
> turn-ladies chain-forward and back, forward and cross to face the
> next couple.
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> (You could certainly do this as an improper longways, but you'd need
> to space
> the minor sets out further than we usually do for contra, since the
> ladies
> chain is along the set rather than across it.)
>
> It's sometimes challenging to get first-timer groups into sicilian
> circle
> formation, since words that work for people with a vague clue
> ("couple facing
> couple around a circle", "radiate out like spokes of a wheel from
> the hub",
> etc) often don't for people who don't have practice in seeing the
> big picture.
> If anybody has ideas about that making that go smoothly all the
> time, I'd be
> happy to hear them. But in any case, the formation is great for
> getting the
> progression idea across since it relieves the first-timer of having
> to deal
> with end effects, role changes, etc, etc.
>
> -- Alan
>
>
>
>
>
> --
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> ======================================================================
> Alan Winston --- WINSTON(a)SSRL.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU
> Disclaimer: I speak only for myself, not SLAC or SSRL Phone:
> 650/926-3056
> Paper mail to: SSRL -- SLAC BIN 99, 2575 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Park
> CA 94025
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--
===============================================================================
Alan Winston --- WINSTON(a)SSRL.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU
Disclaimer: I speak only for myself, not SLAC or SSRL Phone: 650/926-3056
Paper mail to: SSRL -- SLAC BIN 99, 2575 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Park CA 94025
===============================================================================