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+ View Older Messages

Re: Outside Partner Technique
Posted by Serendipidy
6/6/2008  4:18:00 PM
Anonymous. Maybe I should have said outside of the toes and not toe. You have not seen some of the ridiculouse foot positions that I have seen with the inexperienced.
Re: Outside Partner Technique
Posted by anymouse
6/5/2008  10:25:00 AM
"If you were having an examination to become a teacher and on a Spin Turn you said for the man step four does not go straight back down the LOD. You might fail. And yet we all know that step four for the man goes diag to wall."

Your argument is based on a flawed premise.

For most dancers, the thickness of the body from front to back is on the order of half its width from side to side. This means that the space occupied by one body square to the LOD is also sufficient for two bodies sideways to it. We do not detour out of our partner's way, we move through the same space that they previously occupied, or at times sharing the space with them by both feathering our bodies relative to the direction of movement - the two fitting sideways through the space one occupied square.

The reality is that the backwards CBM step needs to curve very slightly to one side of the original body outline, but it really doesn't need to go off to the side. And it's important that it makes its slight curve in a way that keeps the thighs tending together. Separating the thighs into an actual sidestep, or getting the trend of the movement going off towards the wall rather than flowing down the LOD would cause an ugly lack of coordination with the forward partner who must move directly down the LOD. A frequent problem even in world finals, unfortunatley.
Re: Outside Partner Technique
Posted by SocialDancer
6/5/2008  2:27:00 PM
"For most dancers, the thickness of the body from front to back is on the order of half its width from side to side."

Ah, those were the days. Sadly in my case this is no longer so.
Re: Outside Partner Technique
Posted by Serendipidy
6/3/2008  7:56:00 PM
Social Dancer. It was the second step on beat three of a Reverse Turn.
Back to the Fishtail. Do you really care where the third step goes.
I saw a teacher who was having trouble teaching some beginners the Fishtail. He modified it. He simply said we all know what a Lockstep is. Then on the second step bring the LF into a Lock position behind the right. Unlock and do a normal Lock Step. By doing it that way with the right side leading followed by the left seemed to work.I don't remember that the third step got discussed at all.
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