Um, yes, difference is in the B1, of course.
~erik hoffman
On 7/12/2015 1:30 PM, Amy Carroll wrote:
Hi Erik -
I'm thinking you mean the difference between your dance and Tony's is
in the B1, not the B2? Am I right?
Amy Carroll
Seattle
> On July 12, 2015 at 1:41 PM Erik Hoffman via Callers
> <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> On Writing Dances that have been Written:
>
> Years ago our we danced Bill Cochran's:
> /Third Friday/
> A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
> A2 Down Hall 4 in Line, Turn as Couple, Return, Fold Line
> B1 Women Chan -- over & back
> B2 Partner Balance, Square Thru Two, Partner Balance, Square Thru
> Two to next Neighbor
>
> I loved the B2 move, but wanted a partner swing in the dance, so I
> made the:
> /Second Third Friday/
> Improper
> Erik Hoffman
> A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
> A2 Men Allemande Left 1½; Partner Swing
> B1 Right & Left Thru Across the set; Women chain back
> B2 Partner Balance, Square Thru Two, Partner Balance, Square Thru
> Two to next Neighbor.
>
> And, I published it in my first book, Contra Comments.
>
> Turns out Tony Parkes had the same idea, and he wrote:
> /Friday Night Fever/
> with the only difference being the B2, where Tony's dance goes:
> B2 Partner Promenade; Women Chain
> -- Which I now like better. And, Tony wrote his dance prior to me
> Tony published it in one of his books (don't recall which)
>
> Turns out Myrtle Wilhite also wrote and published this dance, the
> same as my version, and called it /Balanced Out #2/
>
> In looking at composition dates, Tony's came first, mine second, and
> Ms. Wilhite's third -- all in the late 80s or early 90s.
>
> I'm pretty sure we all came out with this dance independently. Both
> Tony and I attribute Bill Cochran for the basic Idea. Myrtle doesn't,
> so, perhaps she came up with the dance independently.
>
> But the point of this is, we choreographers are all bound to put
> together some dance that someone else has also come up with. At this
> point, it's great to have this list to check that a sequence is
> original. It goes a long way to checking this.
>
> ~erik hoffman
> oakland, ca
>