by Barry Leiba
The definition of the call at the Plus level is a bit vague. Here it is, as published by Callerlab in their Plus definitions dated 7/1/91:
The bits of this definition that are vague are the parts about the "tracks" and the explanation of when the call ends. When you're actually dancing, of course, it's no problem to find the parallel ocean waves. Still, the lead dancers, for instance, have to be sure to go far enough and not to stop in the wrong wave.
So how can we make the definition less vague? To answer that, we first have
to look at the "work in tandem" part of the definition. The full range of
IN TANDEM calls aren't valid until the C1 level, but we can still
talk about simple tandems at Plus. A TANDEM (or TANDEM DANCERS)
is no more than one dancer behind
another, so that the trailing dancer could put her hands on the shoulders
of the leading dancer. When we tell dancers to work IN TANDEM we mean
that they should work together, as though they were a single dancer. With
that knowledge, we can define the start of TRACK II as IN
TANDEM PARTNER TRADE. Look at the accompanying diagram, and note that we have tandem
dancers with the heads in the lead to start. In that sense, the completed
DPT formation is actually TANDEM COUPLES FACING OUT, so when
we have the tandems trade, we end with TANDEM COUPLES FACING IN, or
starting DPTformation. Note that, since the tandems worked as units,
the heads are still in the lead.
Now that we've started the call, we need to finish it. Let's use TRACK II's number "2" in a different sense; we'll say that so far we've done TRACK 0. From here we'll EXTEND THE TAG the appropriate number of times -- twice for TRACK II. Thus, TRACK I will give us QUARTER TAG formation, TRACK II will give us parallel waves (half tag formation), TRACK III will end in ¾ TAG formation, and TRACK IV results in completed DPT (full tag formation). The definition of TRACK II thus becomes "IN TANDEM PARTNER TRADE, EXTEND THE TAG TWICE". This is, in fact, the definition that's used to arrive at the other TRACK calls, though, historically, TRACK II came first.
This definition also makes it clear that no one can ROLL after a TRACK II. While it might seem that the beaux can roll right and the belles can roll left after the call, ending TRACK II AND ROLL in starting DPT formation, the actual motion at the end of the call is straight ahead for everyone, so no one has rotating motion for ROLL.
Another TRACK II variation that shows up here and there is LEFT TRACK II. For that, the beaux take the inside track and the belles take the outside track, so that everyone passes left shoulders and forms left-handed waves. Or, with our more precise definition, IN TANDEM LEFT-SHOULDER PARTNER TRADE, THEN LEFT-SHOULDER EXTEND THE TAG TWICE, and so we can do LEFT TRACK III and so on as well.
Still another variation is CROSS TRACK, which starts from lines facing out. In CROSS TRACK, the centers TRADE with each other while the ends CROSS FOLD. That results in starting DPT (zero tag). Now everyone EXTEND THE TAG TWICE to end in parallel waves.
Since we have TRACK II defined as a TAGGING CALL, we can do with it as we can with any tagging call, by doing TRACK BACK TO A WAVE, TRACK YOUR NEIGHBOR, TRACK CHAIN THRU, and so on (and we can do the same with CROSS TRACK). In a future column, we'll have a comprehensive look at these TAGGING CALL variations.