>
> Alan Winston asked:
>

Slip-jgs are usually played with   DAH-du-dum DAH-du-dum DAH-dum-dum

> (nine beats in a measure, with emphasis on the first beat of each triplet).
> Are you taking three (ONE-two-three) waltz steps per measure, or one
> (ONE...TWO...THREE) waltz step per measure?
>

Alan, three waltz steps per measure. When I danced in Louisville, the
Monday Night Band often used The Butterfly or The Snowy Path for the waltz,
and it took me a while to realize that these were not, in fact, waltzes.
And as I suggest, not all slip jigs can be felt as a waltz, as I've
painfully discovered.

The Butterfly in particular is very hypnotic as a (turning) waltz, since
the phrases seem to drive on and on rather than regathering as in most
waltzes.

But perhaps this is a regional taste.

When I discovered "Another Jig Will Do," and saw it was written for a
two-part slip jig, I asked for "The Snowy Path." I assumed people would
waltz, and in fact they did, in Louisville. Elsewhere, I've found myself
trying to explain why I'm asking them to waltz.

--Jerome



-- 
Jerome Grisanti
660-528-0858
http://www.jeromegrisanti.com

For the good are always the merry,
Save by an evil chance,
And the merry love the fiddle
And the merry love to dance. ~ William Butler Yeats

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