Haste to the Wedding is pure magic.   I have used it more times than I can 
remember, with groups large and small, with dancers aged in single digits and 
dancers whose age approached three digits, at private parties and big urban 
public dances, and yes, at weddings.  It never fails and it never grows old.   
I sometimes mention, "This dance was already old while America was still 
young," because it does go back a long way.  Don't know whether you were able 
to use the original music, but this is one chestnut that hugely benefits from 
its own tune -- which fortunately, lots of bands play.  Glad you had fun with 
it!

Jon Southard
www.jonsouthard.com


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeff Kaufman
Sent: Wednesday, September 08, 2010 11:09 AM
To: Caller's discussion list
Subject: [Callers] Dances like Haste to the Wedding? [bcc][faked-from]


Yesterday I called Haste to the Wedding [1] after an influx of new dancers and 
as a recovery from a dance that was a little too hard for the group.  I 
expected it to go well, but I was surprised by how well, actually.  With the 
clapping in time with the music in the B parts and the extra time for the pass 
through, a lot of people who'd been confused by progression and how this whole 
thing worked seemed to get it in a way that helped for following dances as well.

Does anyone have suggestions for other dances that work similarly, teaching 
progression?

Jeff

 [1] Something like:

     A1 * (8) Circle L
        * (8) Circle R

     A2 * (8) Star R
        * (8) Star L

     B1 * (8) P dosido
        * (2) Clap, Clap
        * (6) P swing

     B2 * (8) N dosido
        * (2) Clap, Clap
        * (6) Pass Through

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