Spent the day in Sacramento dancing C4. My brain is full! The style here is "throw the baby into the river and see if she learns to swim". I think a few more weeks of this and I will really see some RAPID progress. Fortunately I have managed to avoid getting badly frustrated, which is a feat for me :-). I don't like to be bad at things, and this method of learning is... well, if I'm not making constant mistakes, the stuff isn't difficult enough.
I AM making progress though. Definitely. It is amazing to watch. Things I didn't know before, I can now do with ease. The human brain is such a strange and fascinating thing!
Had an errand at OSH and got there THREE MINUTES after closing. Sigh. Tomorrow. Now, time to finish cleaning up the family room. A good third of it's already done.
I AM making progress though. Definitely. It is amazing to watch. Things I didn't know before, I can now do with ease. The human brain is such a strange and fascinating thing!
Had an errand at OSH and got there THREE MINUTES after closing. Sigh. Tomorrow. Now, time to finish cleaning up the family room. A good third of it's already done.
no subject
Yes, contra is one type of longways set. All the contra dances I've seen have been duple minor longways sets. What makes them 'contra' is that the first couple reverse positions at the beginning of the dance. In classic longways dances, all the men are on the right as viewed from the head of the hall, and all the women on the left. That's called 'proper.' When the men are on the left and women on the right, that's 'improper.' If the arrangement is staggered, with alternating couples proper and improper, that's contra. (American contra is a subset of French contre, BTW, with emphasis on fast and simple dances.)
Duple minor means that you dance once through the 32 or 64 measures of the dance with one couple, and at the end you've 'progressed' so that now you're dancing with a new couple. These are also 'hands four' dances. A triple minor is a variant of this where the 2's and 3's move up the line taking turns being 2's or 3's, until they finally get to the head of the line and become 1's.
There are also fixed 3 couple set dances, where you just dance with those other two couples for the entire dance. There's also Confesse (2 men, 4 women), a fun little dance the directions of which look like stage directions for a bi-poly orgy. Then there are 4 couple set dances, some of which are longways and some squares. But the longways minor dances are popular because they can be danced by "as many as will."
For the flirtatiousness, I find ECD preferable to contra. The slightly slower music gives you more time to practice the lowered eyelash trick, and the quirked brow, and the winning smile.
As far as the difference between vintage and ballroom dance goes, what I've been told by the experts (which I'm not) is that ballroom is a derivative set of the older dances, stylized for country club events and suchlike after WW II. All I can say with certainty is that I like the vintage dance people a whole lot more than people I've met who go on about dancing ballroom. For me, it's a matter of the difference between snobs and folks who dance to have fun. I think there are some actual differences too - like which way a waltzing couple rotates - but mostly it seems to be attitude.