Ideally, a move done by one gender role should be  balanced by some move solely 
for the other gender role.   A ladies' chain balanced by M alm 1 1/2  in the 
same dance would serve this purpose.    Or consider the following
A1      Balance and swing neighbor.A2      Men allemande left 1 1/2 and swing 
partner.B1      Long lines forward and back.  Women chain to neighbor.B2      
Women allemande right (4).        1/2 hey, neighbors start passing left 
shoulder, until           neighbors face each other on the side they started 
the dance (8).        Neighbors pass left shoulders and turn sharply left to 
meet new           neighbors (4).
On the other hand some very popular dances, such as 3-33-33 by Steve Zakon, do 
have a gender role imbalance.   
Michael Fuerst      802 N Broadway      Urbana IL 61801       217-239-5844 
Links to photos of many of my drawings and paintings are at 
www.ArtComesFuerst.com 

--- On Mon, 2/27/12, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Overused figures
To: "Caller's discussion list" <[email protected]>
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Monday, February 27, 2012, 5:21 PM

For me, it's from my dancing and also from a comment I heard from a dancer.  
I've been to dances where men AL 1 1/2 was used 5 or more times.  The comment 
was from a lady who thought waiting for the men so much was  boring.  I think 
it's a nice move for 1 or 2 dances in an evening, 3 at the most if the rest of 
the choreography makes it worthwhile.  Guess I've enjoyed circles as a dancer, 
maybe because they weren't used that much in one program. 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg McKenzie" <[email protected]> 
To: "Caller's discussion list" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 5:37:39 PM 
Subject: Re: [Callers] Overused figures 

What is so great about the "ProgramPlanning Matrix" is that it seems to be 
based upon input from a number of experienced, key people.  Nevertheless, 
the matrix does place a significant burden on programmers.  If you add in 
local preferences and personal preferences the task of programming becomes 
much more of a challenge.  In general this is probably a good thing. 

I agree that it is the variation in the transitions, the music, the 
dancers, and the calling styles that adds excitement to contras.  I'm not 
too concerned, personally, with "overused" figures.  For me it is the 
non-basic figures that seem to be "overused."  Keeping it simple and 
accessible allows greater participation which is what insures lots of 
variation in the people you interact with at each dance, and this--in my 
opinion--is the real draw of contras. 

If you think a figure is "overused," what is the basis of your opinion?  is 
it: 

- comments from dancers 
- comments from programmers 
- personal preference 
- or something else? 

Just wondering. 

- Greg McKenzie 

***************** 

On Mon, Feb 27, 2012 at 10:53 AM, <[email protected]> wrote: 

> I agree. 
> Does anyone else think that Men allemande Left 1 1/2 is overused? 
> How about Circle Left 3/4?  Lately, I've been programming specifically  to 
> avoid having a circle in each dance.  It's surprisingly  difficult to find 
> dances that don't have circles. 
> 
> Donna Hunt 
> "Life may not be the party we hoped for, but while  we're here we should 
> dance." -unknown 
> 
> 
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