On 3/5/2016 1:01 PM, Rich Sbardella wrote:
Kalia,
You make a good point. My most successful contra for such applications
has been Haste to the Wedding in a proper line.
I have had trouble with the cast at Party Dances. Do you demonstrate
it? How do you describe it?
A demonstration is the easiest, and I'll often demo it more than once to
be really clear. Do it with the music, too, so folks get an idea of
when everything happens and when they need to be done.
I like your suggestion of Washington Quickstep. I
might try it with 1.s
DSD, then 2s DSD instead of R&L Thrus.
Super smart. R&L through is a tough move for a ONS situation. Anything
you can do to simplify it is a good idea.
Kalia
On Sat, Mar 5, 2016 at 3:54 PM, Kalia Kliban via
Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net <mailto:callers@lists.sharedweight.net>>
wrote:
On 3/5/2016 10:44 AM, Rich Sbardella via Callers wrote:
I rarely call a contra at a One Night Party Dance, but
occasionally I am
asked to. I have a few in my cards, but can anyone make some
sure fire
recommendations.
Assume 95%-100% non dancers.
Just getting to the duple minor progression can be quite a process.
The simplest duple minor I've got is not technically a contra (it's
an English ceilidh dance), but works well as a mine-sweeper to see
whether more complex duples will work. It's called the Itchington
Long Dance (Hugh Rippon, 1990). Star L/R; cnrs dosido; 1s
down/bk/cast; 1s swing and look down for new Ns. If your crowd is
up for it and you've got room, the B2 can be a general P swing, but
I like to do it just for the 1s to make the progression clearer.
Washington Quickstep (a contra chestnut) is good too, and if the 1s
lose track of who needs to be on the right after the swing, nothing
terrible happens. Star R/L, 1s dn/bk/cast; R&L thru over/bk; LLFB,
1s sw.
Kalia
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