On 9/3/2013 12:00 PM, John Sweeney wrote:
Hi Kalia, you said, " It's that turn in the middle of the line of 4's travel
that I was comparing to Dublin Bay."

Yes, I understand completely.  This is not the first time I have seen the
"down the hall, turn, go backwards" called Dublin Bay by contra dancers.

I suspect that in England we would be much more likely to say, " as in The
Gay Gordons" or " as in La Chapelloise"

Do I remember correctly that in Gay Gordons the 2 dancers turn over the same shoulder? It's interesting how differently we think about these moves. The distinctive thing about the "Dublin Bay" move for me is the moment of transition from _leading_ down (or up) to _backing_ down (or up), making it a long travel in one direction interrupted by a change of face, and I really enjoy turning toward the person I'm traveling with. So that would make the Dublin Bay move quite distinct from the Gay Gordons, despite their strong similarity in other ways. The Gay Gordons parallel turn is also really cool, but in a very different way. And for someone who doesn't do this sort of dancing at all, they'd all look pretty much the same :>) I love how such small distinctions can make such a huge difference to how something feels.

Kalia

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