Bedrule

Основная информация
Автор: Betty Grant
RSCDS: RSCDS HQ publication
Сочинен в России: Нет
Публикация:
Рекомендуемая музыка:
Параметры
Тип танца: Strathspey
Тип сета: Longwise set
Размер: 8x32
Формат сета: 4 couples
Танцующие пары: 3
MiniCribs
1-8
1s+2s turn 2H on sides (2 bars) opening out to circle 4H round to left (4 bars), 1s & 2s turn partners 2H (2 bars) & end in centre with 3s dancing in ready for …
9-16
1s+2s+3s Promenade ending with 1s casting to 2nd place
17-24
1s+3s dance RH across once round, 2s+1s dance LH across once round
25-32
2s+1s+3s dance reels of 3 on own sides 1s giving RSh to 3s
E-Cribs
1-8
1W+2W & 1M+2M turn BH | open into circle4 L | 1c+2c turn P BH (on [8] 3c dance in) into
9-16
1c+2c+3c Promenade, on [15-16] 1c cast off & 2c dance up (2,1,3)
17-24
1c+3c RHA to sidelines (1W long turn) ; 2c+1c LHA, 1c finish facing down
25-32
2c+1c+3c Rsh Reels3 on the sides (2,1,3)
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Заметки
The slightly mystifying name of this dance comes from a village in the Scottish borders, near Hawick and Jedburgh. The late
Betty Grant
of Toronto, Ontario, dedicated the dance to her great-great-grandmother Elizabeth Turnbull Dickson, who came from Bedrule and emigrated to Canada in 1834.
Bedrule
In keeping with the ancient principle that inscrutable names of Scottish dances must refer either to beverages (
Drambuie
,
Glayva
, …) or localities, the name
Bedrule
does not describe a type of domestic arrangement but belongs to a village approximately 6km (3.5mi) west of Jedburgh in the Scottish borders, south of the A698 to Hawick (pronounced
hoik, just in case anyone was wondering).
Bedrule was the home of
Betty Grant
's great-great-grandmother Elizabeth Turnbull Dickson, who emigrated from there to Canada in 1834.
In the Bedrule parish church there is a plaque commemorating Francis Anthony Blair Fasson, Lt., R.N. (1913–1942), who during WWII served as the first officer of the destroyer,
HMS Petard
, in the Mediterranean and drowned on 30 October 1942 trying to recover an Enigma encoding/decoding device from a sinking German U-boat. Fasson and his comrades did manage to salvage various code books which were important to the effort to break the Enigma encryption, and may well have crossed
Hugh Foss’ desk in Bletchley Park. For his bravery, Fasson was posthumously decorated with the George Cross.
From “Anselm's Notes on Dances”, by Anselm Lingnau
(Used by permission.)
Видео 1 Good
Видео 2 Reasonable
Видео 3 Social
Видео 4 Animation