My question is how would the lady know to syncopate going into Shadow? It looks completely unleadable to me. Now the 2nd syncopation out of the spot looks like it could be led, but that still leaves the 1st one. I have always thought the leader should do the fake to get on her foot.
I am not a fan of American style patterns where the woman is asked to syncopate or fake. It comes across as disingenuous in the follows footwork. The man can canter and alleviate this in the back twinkle measure just before the both dance line of dance in shadow position.
Orrrr! The man can syncopate as he knows what he is going to lead into and can syncopate before the start or after the first turn on 1, 2and3 and syncopate out at the end of the phrase.
@@josettemcwhirt if the goal is to fade into the follows footwork without drawing attention, a canter always is less obvious than a syncopation from the lead! That's why all the older patterns the lead will syncopation whereas more modern competition forms they will canter.
Very good routine for teaching beautiful steps
Well done. It's explained well, with plenty of demo, effective explanation 'without talking it to death'. Thank you
My question is how would the lady know to syncopate going into Shadow? It looks completely unleadable to me. Now the 2nd syncopation out of the spot looks like it could be led, but that still leaves the 1st one. I have always thought the leader should do the fake to get on her foot.
Great explanation
很好!very good!
I am not a fan of American style patterns where the woman is asked to syncopate or fake. It comes across as disingenuous in the follows footwork. The man can canter and alleviate this in the back twinkle measure just before the both dance line of dance in shadow position.
Which figure would you follow this with? Thx
Orrrr! The man can syncopate as he knows what he is going to lead into and can syncopate before the start or after the first turn on 1, 2and3 and syncopate out at the end of the phrase.
@@josettemcwhirt if the goal is to fade into the follows footwork without drawing attention, a canter always is less obvious than a syncopation from the lead! That's why all the older patterns the lead will syncopation whereas more modern competition forms they will canter.