Tony,
Thanks for the dance and for the insights on R&L Thru. I often avoid using
a R&L Thru because of the difficulties, and I have been looking for easy
dances to introduce the move.
Rich
Stafford, CT
On Wed, May 25, 2016 at 3:58 PM, Tony Parkes tony(a)hands4.com
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Rich Sbardella wrote:
<<I am looking for a few dances that have a star right, star left sequence
that are appropriate for a crowd with a significant number of beginners,
that I can use as a first, second, or third dance of the evening.>>
Yankee Reel (Ted Sannella)
Duple improper
A.1 Star right, star left
A.2 Ones down center, up outside to place
B.1 Ones swing partner (8 counts), then neighbor (8 counts)
B.2 Half promenade, right and left through
I use this a lot with mixed floors (i.e. high percentage of first- or
second-timers, but not ONS). I’ve found that the B.2 combination makes it
relatively easy to get the concept of RLT across: I get them to do the half
promenade, then explain that RLT is almost the same traffic pattern except
that instead of couples staying together, the lady is going to go between
the opposite two. It’s the best luck I’ve had teaching RLT, which for my
money is the hardest move in contra/NE square dancing because it’s a
compound move: you go straight and then you turn, and you turn in a way you
weren’t expecting. The most common error is for people, especially in the
lady’s role, to turn solo right after the pass through. The analogy with
half promenade seems to forestall this.
(If you’re in an area where people give right hands in RLT, there’s
another common error: they hold on too long and get pulled around to face
back the way they came. You need to emphasize dropping hands and waiting
for the courtesy turn before they change facing direction.)
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.