Are you asking about grapevine step? A twisting step, where you alternate the right foot
going in front of and behind the left as you walk sideways. It’s how circles (of 4 or 8)
are done in modern western square dancing, and in the last several years increasingly
seen, to the dismay of all right-thinking people, on contra dance floors.
Read Weaver
Jamaica Plain, MA
On Jun 26, 2015, at 9:01 AM, Rich Sbardella
<richsbardella(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Read,
I did not understand your reference to grapevining in MWSD. Can you elaborate?
Rich
On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 8:50 AM, Read Weaver via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net <mailto:callers@lists.sharedweight.net>>
wrote:
In my separate beginners’ workshops, I have people take allemande hold, and then move
around as fast as they comfortably can (“faster than you ever would in a dance”), paying
attention to what that feels like in their hands and arms. I then have them do it again,
starting fast and then slowing down a lot (slower than in a dance), keeping that same
feeling in their hands/arms. Then I’ll have them do a 2-hand turn with that same feeling
(my workshops most often combine contra & English), and then a circle of 4. I talk
about the circle 4 being the most boring move in contra when it’s done without weight, and
pointing out that it has quite a nice feeling when everyone is giving weight. (That’s also
where I explain grapevining—why it’s done in MWSD (giving weight isn’t part of their
style, so grapevine makes it a more interesting figure), and why it’s a bad thing to do in
contra (because it makes it so much harder to give weight).)
Giving weight is the first thing I teach in a beginners’ session, partly to emphasize how
important it is, and partly because it gives me the opportunity to point out everywhere
else where you do it, including just a little like in a courtesy turn.
Read Weaver
Jamaica Plain, MA
http://lcfd.org <http://lcfd.org/>
> On 6/24/2015 11:29 AM, Rich Sbardella via Callers wrote:
>>
>> How do you descibe giving weight, and how do you teach it for circles,
>> allemandes, and, swings?
>> Rich
>> Stafford, CT