Tony, I keep trying to imagine you saying "Braaaaiins" to a bunch of zombies, and I keep getting a fair amount of cognitive dissonance/pushback...

On Sat, Oct 29, 2016 at 10:16 PM, Tony Parkes <tony@hands4.com> wrote:

Thank you, Amy! I used it tonight at a wild church party, calling it Zombie Escape. This was a record dance, so I used the track of Brisk Young Lads that the Canterbury made for CDSS in the 1970s. It’s a jig in A minor like Coleraine, so it worked perfectly.

 

Tony

 

From: Callers [mailto:callers-bounces@lists.sharedweight.net] On Behalf Of Amy Cann via Callers
Sent: Saturday, October 29, 2016 12:54 PM
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Subject: [Callers] Calling a Halloween dance tonight? Try this circle mixer...

 

I try and call the dances of Rich Blazej whenever I can and this one's a Halloween favorite, re-done as "Werewolves and Zombies".

Garfield's Escape -- circle of couples PLUS ONE EXTRA in the center (Garfield)

A1  All into the center EIGHT steps and back, menacing the Garfield

A2  Circle left, circle right

B1  Women (werewolves) promenade single file to the right, while men (zombies) "star" by the right -- each man puts his right hand on right shoulder of the man in front - including Garfield.

B2  Caller hollers "Escape!" ("Boo!", or maybe "Braaaiiins") and all men run to the outside and swing with a woman in the outer circle. A new Garfield remains in the center.

Rich himself named this after Garfield the comic-strip cat, way back when he was cynical and funny (the cat, not Rich).
"The single man remaining at the end of the dance is entitled to a pan of lasagna and some fresh kitty litter".

My favorite normal tune for this is the minor jig Coleraine, played at a slightly slower lurch-y tempo, but if I'm lucky the band'll do the Alfred Hitchcock theme.

 

Have fun, just thought I'd share -- and I'd love to hear how it goes if you do it, and what variations emerge.

Cheers,

Amy