In Another Nice Combination, dancers Pass P by R to Shadow DSD which is a
right (handed) move, before returning to a partner swing. There is no
choice required since DSD is almost always right shoulder.
Rich
On Sun, Mar 27, 2016 at 7:16 PM, Jonathan Sivier via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I've not encountered problems with dancers not
doing the figures
described in the dance, but I have experienced a certain amount of
dissatisfaction when dancing dances with similar figures. I think there is
a tendency to want to alternate hands/shoulders as you encounter other
dancers. Similar to a hey or Right and Left Grand if you pass one person
by the right the tendency is to want to interact with the next by the
left. This can be overcome, but requires thinking about what the next
figure is rather than just doing it and it can make it difficult to "get
into the groove" the way many dancers like to do. I don't think this is
always the case, but I have certainly come across occasions when it just
seemed like we were turning by the wrong hand or whatever.
Jonathan
-----
Jonathan Sivier
Caller of Contra, Square, English and Early American Dances
jsivier AT illinois DOT edu
Dance Page:
http://www.sivier.me/dance_leader.html
-----
Q: How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?
A: It depends on what dance you call!
On 3/27/2016 3:24 PM, Kalia Kliban via Callers wrote:
I called Young Adult Rose last night and
experienced a near-complete
dancer revolt about the shadow allemande. The dance is written with a
circle left 3/4, pass P by R along the line then allemande shadow R 1x,
before coming back to P for a balance and swing. The dancers all
_really_ wanted to do the allemande by the left. I tried calling it a
few times with the R hand, then gave up and called it L and they were
all much happier. Anyone else experienced this?
Kalia
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