Hi John,

My dictionary describes "A chevron is an inverted V-shaped mark. The word is 
usually used in reference to a kind of fret in architecture, or to a badge or 
insignia...".  I think of it as an upside down V movement  (^).

(All examples here for a longways duple.)

I assume you're referring to the use in English Country Dance, such as for 
Companions (see 
http://archives.mvfolkdancers.com/2013-11-23%20MVFD%20English%20Country%20Dance%20Syllabus%20-%20Brad%20Foster.pdf).
  In this case it's only the 1st corner (1M & 2W) people doing the chevron 
movement, and in fact they actually only turn left 1/8 because they are backing 
up "straight across the set" instead of at the angle in the beginning of the 
movement.  Often this "half chevron" uses 8 counts.  4 on the diagonal, 4 
backing up.  As I read it, the 2nd corners are not doing a chevon, just a 
wait-and-cast.

I've also seen the term "full chevron" used when *all* dancers come forward 
toward opposite corner (end almost nose-to-nose) then *all* turn 1/4 (90 
degrees) left and back up along the other diagonal (also used in ECD, also 
usually an 8-count movement).

In another case, the movement of the a circle set balancing-in-and-out while 
rotating CW (left), was described by the caller teaching it as a "ring chevon". 
 I'll admit that that case didn't make much sense to me, but that's just me.

The "chevron" movement in this dance is closer to the full chevron, but only 
has 4  counts, with everyone holding hands, using balance steps, and rotating 
the entire time.  To me, the phrase "Balance the Ring, Spin the Ring" sounds 
like the rotate doesn't happen until beat 3, but I think it would work as a 
call if the dancers know what's expected of them.

Here's sort've the stop-motion in Fried Rice (all begin on their opposite side 
than their initial duple improper position):
M2  W2
W1  M1

After the 2-count balance in (women face up/dn the set, men face across):
    W2
M2  M1
    W1

After the 2-count balance out (every has rotated one place CCW around the set):
W2  M1
M2  W1

After the 4-count petronella (all are progressed, but now facing new/next 
neighbors):
M1  W1
W2  M2

On a personal note, once the dancers associate the movement with the term 
"chevron", it makes it easy for me to call the last sequence as "Chevron, 
Petronella 1-1/2", or perhaps "Ring Chevron Right, Petronella".

I suppose we could call it a Foobar or anything else and demo it.  Whatever 
gets the idea across.  When I've used the "chevron" term, dancers seem to get 
it faster.  Go figure.  😊

Your mileage may vary, but the fun should be constant, Ric Goldman

-----Original Message-----
From: Callers [mailto:callers-boun...@lists.sharedweight.net] On Behalf Of via 
Callers
Sent: Friday, August 04, 2017 2:44 PM
To: callers@lists.sharedweight.net
Subject: Re: [Callers] New Dance?

Hi Ric,
        A Chevron is already defined as:
First Corners cross diagonally by the right shoulder, turn left 1/4 to face 
out, then back up across the set to the opposite place WHILE Second Corners 
wait, then cast into their neighbour's place

        Is your Chevron something that has been used before to mean what you 
mean?

        I call your move, "balance the ring in-and-out while rotating the ring 
1 place CCW (i.e. to the R)", Balance the Ring, Spin the Ring.

            Happy dancing,
                   John                                   
                                    
John Sweeney, Dancer, England   j...@modernjive.com 01233 625 362 & 07802
940 574
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events & DVDs                   
            
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent 
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers@lists.sharedweight.net
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net

_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers@lists.sharedweight.net
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net

Reply via email to