Dance The Great Permian Mass Extinction 19430
Reel · 40 bars · 5 couples · Longwise - 5 (Progression: 34512) · Usual number of repetitions: 5
- Devised by
- Murrough Landon (2016)
- Intensity
- 88888/66466/88888/88888/22422 = 80% (whole dance)
- Formations
-
- Hands round - 4 - and back (HR;4P;BACK;)
- Hands across - 4 (HX;4P;)
- Snake Pass (SNAKE)
- Note: This list may be incomplete and/or incorrect.
- Steps
-
- Pas-de-Basque, Skip-Change, Slip-Step
- Online Sources
- Extra Info
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I no longer remember why I ever thought it might be a good idea …
I no longer remember why I ever thought it might be a good idea to try to represent the most severe of all known mass extinctions as a Scottish country dance, but it quickly occurred to me that I could dedicate it to the memory of my friend Martin with whom I used to have many fascinating conversations about biology and evolution. It was also an interesting and brain teasing challenge to organise the figures to allow the single surviving dancer’s solo in the last four bars. The first 8 bars are supposed to represent a trilobite (on its back) though the real ones had many more legs than are here depicted by the highland arms of six dancers while the first two couples are illustrating the head. Bars 9-12 are a convergent evolutionary progression via different paths leading into bars 13-24 which represent a pair of ammonites. Fossil ammonites used to be called snakestones, so an extended version of the “snake pass” figure seems suitable. Disaster arrives in bars 25-32. The figure here starts with a warning preshock which is followed by immense supervolcanic eruptions and falling ash and lava. Enthusiastic and extrovert dancers might add their own sound effects here! In bars 33-34 the dust settles and in bars 35-36 all is still. I am not normally in favour of dancers standing idle, but a moments silence after the “great dying” which ended the Palaeozoic era feels very appropriate. Finally in bars 37-40 3rd woman dances up alone to start the repopulation of an almost empty world.
Table rows with a green background denote recordings starting with one of the recommended tunes and the usual number of repetitions for the dance (5). A yellow background means a recording with one of the recommended tunes but a non-standard number of repetitions. Recordings with a red background use a different tune and possibly a non-standard number of repetitions.
Recordings whose titles are in
Name | Artist | Album | Media | Trk | Type | Time | Pace | Clip | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Mathematicians | James Gray and Susie Petrov | Opus Dance | CD | 11 | R40 5 | 3:50 | 36.8 |
The Great Permian Mass Extinction 5/5L · R40
1- : 1c+2c circle4 & back **while{8}** 3c+4c+5c set with highland arms | cross RH ; set with highland arms | cross LH 9- : 2M & 4W change places by crossing over | casting RSh round 3c **while{4}** 1M+5W change places passing RSh between 3c ; 5W+1W+4W+2W (top) & 4M+2M+5M+1M (bottom) RHA **while{4}** 3c turn 1¼ LH 17- : *Extended snake pass:* 3M,4M,5M,1M,2M dance up W side, across and down M side **while{8}** 3W,2W,1W,5W,4W dance down M side, across and up W side (M: 2,1,5,4,3; W: 3,2,1,5,4) 25- : All set | all dance up NHJ with opposite person (not P) and cast down (M: 3,4,5,1,2; W: 4,5,1,2,3) 33- : All set | all stand ; 3W (in 5pl) dances up alone to 1pl (other W down on [39–40]) to (3,4,5,1,2)
Watch on YouTube
(YouTube must be enabled in cookie preferences to embed videos.)London Gay Gordons and friends, 2019.
Added on: 2019-06-29 (Murrough Landon)
Quality: Good
Name | Type | Date | Owner | Last changed |
---|---|---|---|---|
ML Video Session 07 | Other | 2019-04-28 | Murrough Landon | May 29, 2023, 11:51 p.m. |
ML Video Session 09 | Other | 2019-06-23 | Murrough Landon | May 29, 2023, 11:57 p.m. |
Cambridge RonDancing 2023 | Informational | Murrough Landon | July 3, 2023, 1:08 a.m. | |
Fugen & Co./Fugues etc. 2023 | Class | 2023-06-10 | Anselm Lingnau | July 25, 2023, 4:20 p.m. |