Bob Livingston has another great Dip and Dive for a five couple square.
Perhaps he will share it.
Rich
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 5:33 PM, Tom Hinds via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Laur,
Even with great music and calling it's tough to create excitement when the
hall feels empty. I've tried to think of everything I can do to make that
kind of evening fun. My personal choice is to call a large proportion of
contras where the dancers swing their partner not their neighbor. The
logic is this: If you swing your neighbor in every dance, especially early
in the evening, what is there to look forward to? With partner swing
dances only, when you get a new partner you haven't swung him/her 10 times
before hand.
In general I usually run contras until everyone has swung their neighbors
and then end the dance. So for me contras with a partner only swing is
preferred when numbers are small.
And I include many dances that are in other formations and also take some
time to teach and dance. Here's one.
Dip and Dive for Five (my name)
Formation is a small circle of 4 couples numbered 1-5. There's sort of a
home place but this is not critical.
I learned this from Fred Park and if my memory is correct it comes form
the border area between West Virginia and Ky.
Couple 1 swings in the center of the set, others form a square around
couple 1.
Couple 1 faces up or down, heads dip and dive- takes 16 beats
Couple 1 faces a side couple, dip and dive....
8 dancers join hands and go forward and back. Go forward and back again
and bring couple 1 back where they belong.
Break
Allemande left grand right and left. With partner, turn back (5th hand is
with partner and is a left allemande). Swing partner at "home".
I usually call break, figure, break, figure etc.....
Tom
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