Brooke has a dance called "Belle Meade Branle" which does exactly that. It is 
smooth.



Seth Tepfer, MBA, CSM, PMP (he, him, his)

Senior IT Manager, Emory Primate Center
[cid:07de4b7f-009e-4837-9b80-92db60af7341]<https://outlook.office.com/bookwithme/user/[email protected]?anonymous&ep=signature>
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________________________________
From: Angela DeCarlis via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, April 8, 2025 11:08 AM
To: Jerome Grisanti <[email protected]>
Cc: Julian Blechner <[email protected]>; Harris Lapiroff 
<[email protected]>; Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Subject: [External] [Callers] Re: New dances: Set and Link Contras

Hello all!

I was combing through some emails I'd intentionally left unread and found this. 
Did any of you nerds ever iterate on or test out other choreographic ideas with 
this figure? I especially liked Harris's idea about Set and Link -> Long Wave.

Ang

On Sun, Nov 17, 2024 at 11:22 PM Jerome Grisanti via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
I could visualize that a set & link followed by a hey could have good flow, 
especially if the people who are not the first to cross the set cast to their 
original starting place before crossing.

Jerome Grisanti

On Sun, Nov 17, 2024, 9:23 PM Julian Blechner via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

Thinking more about this, it cool be better if the next move is walking, like, 
a rollaway doesn't flow as good to, say, a star, than this could. Eh?

Best,
Julian

On Sun, Nov 17, 2024, 3:07 PM Harris Lapiroff 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Embarrassingly when I wrote these I hadn’t really considered that it has more 
or less the same effect as a rollaway! (Andrea Nettleton pointed out the same 
to me.)

I do think it having a feeling more like a Petronella is one difference, but 
I’m musing on what else there is to it besides novelty. One thing I’m wondering 
is, if the person on the inside track just turns halfway, they can get into 
long wavy lines. Not sure without testing if that would feel satisfying or not! 
I’ll have to write another and do another living room test 😅

Best,
Harris

On Sun, Nov 17, 2024, at 2:07 PM, Julian Blechner wrote:

Harris,

Thanks for raising this topic.

I'm curious the differences in momentum and such that will allow this to have 
different moves following it, compared to a rollaway with 1/2 sashay.

I like your first example, because following it with a balance and Petronella 
spin may be more cohesive percussively that another way for people to just 
trade places.

Have you other thoughts in mind about this?

In dance,
Julian Blechner
He/him
Western Mass

On Sat, Nov 16, 2024, 2:45 PM Harris Lapiroff via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

I think I slightly miswrote the choreo in my description of a set and link. I 
believe it's actually the Larks who go through the middle and Robins go around 
the outside.

On Sat, Nov 16, 2024, at 2:32 PM, Harris Lapiroff via Contra Callers wrote:
I wrote this up as a blog 
post<https://chromamine.com/2024/11/set-and-link-contras/>, but I also thought 
this list would appreciate it and have interesting thoughts to share.

It occurred to me recently that I don’t think there are any contra dances that 
feature a set and link figure. This is a figure from Scottish Country Dancing 
which follows this sequence (assuming becket formation for this write up):

1. Couples face the other couple across the set, taking convenient hands with 
their partner along the side
2. All balance right and left (4 beats)
3. All turn over their right shoulder as they trade places along the side of 
the set with the robins going through the middle and larks going round the 
outside (4 beats)

It could be thought of as a petronella twirl for two or, perhaps, as a mad 
robin halfway with twirling. If none of those descriptions work for you, 
there’s also a video of the figure in 
action<https://youtu.be/hI-ebAspZzY?si=gkIDl8WmCzFc5HO4&t=16>. (Note the video 
is to a leisurely Scottish strathspey, but it can be done to a jig or reel at 
contra tempo just fine.)

I decided to write a couple:

Set And Link Contra
Harris Lapiroff
Becket CCW

A1
Set and link (trading with partner)
Balance the ring
Petronella twirl

A2
Neighbor balance and swing

B1
Set and link (trading with neighbor)
Balance the ring
Petronella twirl

B2
Partner balance and swing

Note A1: Each time through after the first, the set and link should start with 
a big balance to the right to progress to new neighbors

And a slightly more complex, but still accessible, one:

Broken Link
Harris Lapiroff
Duple Improper

A1
Neighbor balance and swing

A2
Set and link (trading with neighbor)
Robins alle L 1½

B1
Partner right shoulder round
Partner swing

B2
Circle left 3
Pass through up and down
Next neighbor DSD

Note: Can also be done in becket by starting with B2, skipping the pass 
through, and changing to a slide left progression at the end.

I danced these through with a few dancers in a living room and they worked. I 
was worried the “Set And Link Contra” wasn’t appropriate for any crowd, being 
too simple and repetitive for an experienced dance but too tricky for 
beginners. Some of my test dancers agreed, but others thought that it was 
satisfying enough to dance to work – which I could see maybe working for a late 
evening brain-off-dance-trance vibe.

A few open questions I have about these dances:

- In “Set And Link Contra,” is the big balance right to progress satisfying or 
awkward? We didn’t have enough dancers to test the progression. A different 
option might be to make it Becket CW and slide left, then balance back to the 
right. (I suspect slide right, balance right would feel too muddy.)
- The balance right and then left sequence isn’t natural to contra dancers. Is 
there a way to lead into it that makes it more natural? (Notably: a couple of 
my test dancers had done at least a little Scottish and they both liked it, but 
one dancer who had only done contra found it awkward.)
- Alternatively is there a different way of doing that balances that would be 
more at home in a contra? I think balancing together and away wouldn’t give 
good momentum into turning over the right shoulder, but perhaps balancing in 
and out in a ring would work?
- In “Broken Link,” I’m still not sure if the set and link into a robins left 
hand allemande sequence feels good. When I tested it myself it felt flowy in a 
weaving sort of way, but some of my test dancers reported it was awkward. We 
didn’t take time to workshop it to see if the flow felt better once the set and 
link was more familiar.
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