I've been contradancing since 1986 and there was clapping on Petronella turns 
*then*, and there were some people who were opposed to it, and I never knew why.

I think the arguments about acoustic latency and throwing the band off are good 
explanations for why it's a bad idea to, say, clap along to the music while 
you're out at the bottom, but makes very little sense for sharp punctuations.

I remember that we used to get everybody in the hall stomping at once on 
balances, and it was kinda thrilling; I just about never hear that anymore.  I 
like the claps because it pulls the whole hall together. n(even though I myself 
will often snap my fingers rather than clapping).  It's contagious enough, too, 
that first-timers often pick it up immediately without any instruction.

-- Alan

________________________________________
From: Joseph Erhard-Hudson via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 22, 2024 11:16 AM
To: Julian Blechner
Cc: Shared Weight Contra Callers
Subject: [Callers] Re: Cures for the Claps?

The justification I heard ~25 years ago, when resistance to the claps seemed 
even greater, was that the acoustic latency in a long hall could put the band 
off kilter and it was a matter of respect to them. To illustrate: in a hundred 
foot hall, from the time the band plays a note, to the time the folks at the 
bottom clap in synchrony to when they’re hearing it, to the time the band hears 
those claps in turn, is roughly 2/10 of a second. My counter-arguments to that 
are, if everyone is clapping along the length of the hall it’s going to be 
spread out anyway and not a singular percussive counterpoint; if you’re going 
to argue that, you’d better admonish everyone to make totally silent balances 
too; musicians from Bach at his organ console to the USC marching band have 
been dealing just fine with acoustic latency issues; and we ain’t the high and 
mighty in our white tie suits at the Vienna opera house.

I recently came back from a long hiatus and was surprised to hear claps in 
novel places, such as punctuating the end of a hey. I’m delighted with that 
one: it means the dancers are actually being mindful of the musical phrasing, 
and giving the hey its full due. It’s a moment where everyone is perceivably 
dancing skillfully together. I’m with some others in being a little annoyed by 
claps after Rory’s for all the reasons given, but I’m not gonna scold or clutch 
my pearls over it. I just won’t participate or encourage. At most I might share 
why I don’t do it myself. Where claps are consistent with musical phrasing and 
don’t interfere with hand transitions, I’m always going to be in favor.

-Joseph

Sent from my phone which has some odd ideas about formatting sometimes.


On Wed, May 22, 2024 at 9:46 AM Julian Blechner via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
John Sweeney hit on a big reason I'm baffled, in pointing out that the balances 
in Petronella (the dance) are in the second half of a phrase. So what's funny 
is that in the originally Petronella, it's
Spin spin spin pause
Stomp Stomp Stomp Stomp (or steps, but, still)

And in the modern move it's
Stomp Stomp Stomp stomp
Spin spin spin pause

So the originally Petronella had everyone making percussive noise on that last 
measure. And the modern move has people filling in that pause with percussive 
sounds.

I've heard from people say "you need the beat or two to take hands" but like, 
somehow that's not true with every other move where a move ends and you need to 
join hands in a ring immediately - after a swing, bending a line of four, 
turning to a new neighbor on a progression and readying for a balance, etc.

My summation is it's just a preference.
And I notice when bands play chiller tunes for Petronella spins, fewer people 
clap, so...

...

Anyway, I also very much would love to hear any other explanations of "clapping 
in Petronellas is wrong".


In dance,
Julian Blechner.



On Wed, May 22, 2024, 12:16 PM Richard Fischer via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
Hi Maia,

I have no claim to expertise, but I'm with you. In dances where the Petronella 
claps don't interfere with anything, why not?  Dancers enjoy it, and it can 
often be one of the first things new dancers notice about unified timing. I'm 
not sure how it originated, but since the move previously was often spin first 
then a satisfying balance, maybe the claps were a way to still have that nice 
rhythmic end to the phrase. In any event, why should a caller tell a hall full 
of dancers they're wrong?

With best wishes,

Richard Fischer
Arlington, MA

On May 22, 2024, at 11:49 AM, Maia McCormick via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

tldr: those of you who are anti-Petronella claps (in general, not just in 
specific cases where they interrupt flow from the spin into the next move), I 
want to understand why!

Clapping on Petronella turns has been the overwhelming norm ever since I 
started dancing, but I know that it wasn't always this way, and that some folks 
vehemently dislike it. Well recently I've noted the (baffling?? inexplicable??) 
rise of clapping after the spin on Rory O'Moore's, which makes my blood boil 
(it's so satisfying to catch hands in the new wave out of the spin, why would 
you ever NOT do that??), and it's making me think more about Petronella claps.

Clapping on a Rory bugs me so much because it interrupts the momentum of 
spin-and-catch-hands. I'll admit that I don't understand the objection to 
Petronella claps, at least through that lens. Like certainly, in a specifically 
Cure for the Claps-type* dance (with e.g. Petronella spin into allemande left, 
Petronella spin into swing, etc.), clapping interrupts the momentum, and it's 
way more satisfying to spin directly into the next move. But given a bog 
standard "Petronella, Petronella, balance and swing" or similar, I don't feel 
like the claps interrupt the momentum or disrupt transitions, and in fact are a 
nice fun way to fill space.

To be clear, the above isn't an argument in favor of Petronella claps, just me 
explaining where I'm coming from. So now we come to my question:

1. those of you who are anti-Petronella claps, can you explain why? I want to 
understand! Is it a satisfying momentum thing that I've just never experienced 
because I'm so used to clapping? Dedication to historical accuracy? Something 
else entirely?

2. what dance(s) would you use to make your case to a contemporary contra hall, 
that aren't explicitly written as Cure for the Claps dances? Petronella spin to 
a swing feels great, and of course you shouldn't clap there (although some 
folks inexplicably do, sigh)—but if you'd prefer that we didn't clap even in a 
dance like Tica Tica Timing, then a CftC dance isn't the whole story. If you 
had the infinite good will of a contemporary contra hall, and were able to say 
to the dancers "don't clap on the Petronellas in this one and just pay 
attention to how nice it feels to X and how satisfying it is to Y", what dance 
would you use, what things would you tell the dancers to clue into, etc. to 
make your case? (And what would you ask the band for?)

Thanks as always for your expertise!

Cheers,
Maia

* Cure for the Claps contra: a dance that discourages clapping during the 
Petronella turn, often by putting moves directly after the Petronella that flow 
nicely from a spin. May be intentional or incidental. See e.g.:  The Cure for 
the Claps<https://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/thecallersbox/dance.php?id=10364> 
(Bob Isaacs), Becket in the 
Kitchen<https://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/thecallersbox/dance.php?id=17> 
(Becky Hill)


--
Maia McCormick (she/her)
917.279.8194
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