In a few squares a few moves leave ladies 1 and 2 on the side with gent
2 and ladies 3 and 4 on the other side with gent 4. Gents 1 and 3 are
then the "lonesome gents". The set-up and subsequent figures typically
repeat in the obvious fashion with gents 2 and 4 being the lonesome gents.
David Harding
Other identifying terms:
Active/inactive couple or person, for certain dances when it is descriptive, or impractical to use numbers. (Often 3 or 5 couple sets, 2+1 mixers, Virginia reel variants, squares, or Scottish dances)
Right hand / left hand (lady/gent) for squares
1st corner/2nd corner or right hand/left hand for contra corners (these are not necessarily neighbors, nor shadow/partner at set ends, nor are they precisely previous/current/next neighbors in a double progression)
Inside/outside for mixers or couple dances
Those who can, those who want, those who did/didn't
Leader (for lines)
Leads/Follows (squares, mostly)
Was top/bottom on the list?
Lone person/9 pin (mixers, odd number of dancer sets)
A/B for royal (double) squares
That's what springs to mind.
Neal
Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device
Is there ever a designation for doing something alone?
-Amy
On Sep 23, 2015, at 10:18 PM, Don Veino via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Back in 2008 I wrote a dance to celebrate my first year of contra dancing
and Chris Weiler was kind enough to go through it with me. In doing so I
heard my first mention of the Who-What-How Much format for dance
description.
I'm working on a personal project where I'd like to be sure I've identified
all the "Who" roles in that model. For my purposes, I'm doing this in the
context of contras, traditional squares, triplets, family dances, etc. (but
not necessarily English, Ceilidh, Scottish, etc. - though I'm not closed to
gathering any that may exist uniquely therein).
I've listed below what I've collected so far from my personal cards deck
review & research through several published works.
Are there any Whos I've missed?
Please note: I've deliberately left the primary role designation for last
as I wish to avoid rehashing that topic once more. Let's please just accept
there's a designation for the primary roles and agree they'll be determined
by circumstance and conscience, as fits a given dance community.
Thanks!
Don
ROLE DESIGNATORS - "WHO"
Partner
Neighbor
Corner
Opposite
Everyone (All)
Center/End
Shadow/Trail Buddy
Couple
Top/Middle/Bottom; Ones/Twos, etc.; Heads/Sides; First/Second, etc. (var.
of Couple or Primary Role)
Travel Buddy (4F4)
Active/Inactive (is this distinctly required, or is it always an alternate
name for another role var., e.g.: 1s?)
Neutrals/Ends (var. of Couple or Primary Role)
Ring of N (4,8, etc.)
And of course...
Primary Role (Lark/Raven, Righty/Lefty, Lady/Gent, Talls/Smalls, etc.), in
plural or specific variation (e.g.: Talls, Raven 2, End Lady)
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Several years ago I enjoyed dancing a square that I believed was written by
Roger Whynot, but I cannot remember the square. I think it began with
couple one Fwd and Back, then Couple one goes fwd into a three point star
with the nearest side couple. As they turn the star, they unwind into two
facing lines of three. After that I am lost.
Does anyone recall such a square or a similar square? I would appreciate
any help>
Rich
Back in 2008 I wrote a dance to celebrate my first year of contra dancing
and Chris Weiler was kind enough to go through it with me. In doing so I
heard my first mention of the Who-What-How Much format for dance
description.
I'm working on a personal project where I'd like to be sure I've identified
all the "Who" roles in that model. For my purposes, I'm doing this in the
context of contras, traditional squares, triplets, family dances, etc. (but
not necessarily English, Ceilidh, Scottish, etc. - though I'm not closed to
gathering any that may exist uniquely therein).
I've listed below what I've collected so far from my personal cards deck
review & research through several published works.
Are there any Whos I've missed?
Please note: I've deliberately left the primary role designation for last
as I wish to avoid rehashing that topic once more. Let's please just accept
there's a designation for the primary roles and agree they'll be determined
by circumstance and conscience, as fits a given dance community.
Thanks!
Don
ROLE DESIGNATORS - "WHO"
Partner
Neighbor
Corner
Opposite
Everyone (All)
Center/End
Shadow/Trail Buddy
Couple
Top/Middle/Bottom; Ones/Twos, etc.; Heads/Sides; First/Second, etc. (var.
of Couple or Primary Role)
Travel Buddy (4F4)
Active/Inactive (is this distinctly required, or is it always an alternate
name for another role var., e.g.: 1s?)
Neutrals/Ends (var. of Couple or Primary Role)
Ring of N (4,8, etc.)
And of course...
Primary Role (Lark/Raven, Righty/Lefty, Lady/Gent, Talls/Smalls, etc.), in
plural or specific variation (e.g.: Talls, Raven 2, End Lady)
I am in England. 90% of my bookings are for "Barn Dances" or "Ceilidhs".
The ones I run go under the name "Dancing for Fun" with a description of:
" Come and learn a wide range of wonderful dances, from 17th Century Jane
Austen style to 21st Century Ceilidh, including Square Dances, American
Contras, English Barn Dance, Contra Waltzing and the Polka!"
And yes, I really do call of those at ONSs ( not ONS's. :-)
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent
Greetings all,
I know this has been discussed before, but I am gathering a list of descriptive titles for
one-night-stand dances. Especially looking titles that work in describing in a way that would be acceptable and understandable to the people organizing these events. (i.e. Do they really want their event to be called a one night stand? )
Here's a start:
One-shot-deal
Barn Dances
Special Event dances
One-off.
Anyone have any more?
sue
Sue Hulsether
shulsether(a)mac.com
www.suehulsether.com
608-632-1267 Cell
608-629-6250 Home
P.O. Box 363
Viroqua, WI 54665
For those interested, the closest I've seen it resembles is To Live is To
Dance by Jim Kitch, which is basically:
Ladies Chain
1/2 Hey, loop L to next
Next N B+S
Circle L 3/4, P rollaway
Gents start 1/2 Hey
P gypsy swing
... which is a fun dance, as well.
The dance I listed is similar with 2 heys and 2 swings, but a gents-focused
version but with a mad Robin instead of a circle - rollaway.
I've titled mine Leaf on the Wind, seeing nothing closer.
On Sep 14, 2015 12:05 PM, "Ron Blechner" <contraron(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi callers,
>
> I was hoping this dance, or something very similar, might be identified:
>
> Becket
> A1: Gents Alle L 1.5 (8)
> 1/2 Hey (8) (NR, LL, PR, GL)
> A2: N Gypsy R 1/2 (2)* (to face next N)
> Next N Gypsy + Sw (14)
> B1: Mad Robin (8)**
> 1/2 Hey (8) (GL, PR, LL, NR)
> B2: Gents Pass L (2)
> P Gypsy + Swing (14)
>
> * Been debating teaching / calling this as a gypsy or "loop right". I
> think either works, but ideas welcome.
> ** Gents in front, CW
>
> Thanks,
> Ron
>
[image: Inline image 1]
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All dances will be TAUGHT all weekend. No experience is necessary. No one
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Try here:
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Rich Sbardella via Callers" <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>, trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2015 10:40:12 AM
Subject: [Callers] Toss the Wench
Does anyone know a dance called Toss the Wench, and if there is a piece of music married to the dance?
Rich Sbardella
Stafford Springs, CT
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