Do Si Do 2 ~ Kentucky Square Dances

Do Si Do 2 ~ Kentucky Square Dances is an Appalachian Circle Dance. It was published by Ida Levin in 1928 in Kentucky Square Dances. It is a Custom dance. It is a multipart dance. The minor set lasts 280 bars.

Ida Levin describes an early form of "square dancing" which is actually danced in a large circle. This bears some similarities to the dance which Cecil Sharp called The Running Set 10 years before.

Every "change" of a dance begins win an introduction, first Ida gives the calls for this:

  1. Join hands, circle left all the way around.
  2. Swing home
  3. Corners, too.
  4. Don't forget your partner

And then she explains what the calls mean:

  1. All couples join hands in a circle and walk to the left completely around.
  2. Partners join both hands and swing once around.
  3. Each gentleman joins both hands with the lady on his left and swings her once around.
  4. Each gentleman joins left hands with his partner and swings her once around

(At this time "Swing" was a generic term which meant roughly: "turn in a circle", it did not mean the modern partner swing.)

One essential figure for this style of dance is the do-si-do. This is not the standard back to back figure we all know. I will call it simply "do-si" so as to avoid confusion with the better known variant. Sharp, Levin and Shaw all give descriptions of the do-si-do and all of them are different. In fact, Levin gives two different versions and this dance uses both. The following is how Levin says the first should be called:

  1. Out to the right and circle four once around.
  2. Partners join left hands and swing half around.
  3. Give opposite your right hand and dance all the way around.
  4. Promenade, both hands joined.

Which means...

  1. First couple walks to the last couple, all four join hands in a circle and walk to the left completely around.
  2. Partners then join left hands and change places.
  3. Each gentleman joins right hands with the opposite lady and swings her completely around.
  4. Each gentleman takes his partner on his right and joins both hands crossed with the right above the left. The visiting couple passes to the right of the other one, around behind that couple's place and back to its own place in the circle. Simultaneously the other couple describes a circle following the visiting couple and finishes by turning into its own place.

After the introduction a "change" is performed. The first couple leads to the right and dances a particular figure with the second couple. Then the first couple moves right again to dance the same figure with the third couple. As they move on to the fourth couple the second couple moves right to dance with the third couple (at the same time). Both 1s&2s then move on to the 5s&4s. When they move on to the 6s&5s the third couple will start up with the 4th. And so on until everyone is dancing.

Quoted from Ida Levin:

A figure danced by all couples in the circle is called a Change. In each Change the first couple walks to the couple on the right, dances with this couple, then with the next couple on the right, and so on until it has danced with all the couples in the circle. In leading the lady to the next couple the gentleman takes her left hand in his right.

In the majority of these Changes, when the leading couple has danced with all but the last couple in the circle it does the Do si do (No 1) with this couple (...)

When the first couple moves on to the fourth couple, the second couple simultaneously walks to the couple on its right and begins dancing with this third couple (a couple must be careful not to lead off to the couple on the right too soon, and in order to avoid confusion the prompter may call "Next"). As each couple completes the trip around the circle it takes its own place in the circle and remains there, dancing with the other couples as they coume along.

When all the couples have danced the Change, the prompter calls "Swing home, corners too" (...)

...

Three Changes are called while the same couples are on the floor.

This example shows only one Change, not three. I have chosen the figure "Do Si Do No. 2" (which is slightly different frome the version used at the end of the dance.

Again Ida gives calls:

  1. First couple go to the couple on the right.
  2. Circle once around.
  3. Swing opposite clear around.
  4. Partner by the left and swing clear around.
  5. On to the next.
  6. Next couple out to the right.
  7. Swing home, corners too.

and meaning...

  1. First couple walks to the couple on the right.
  2. These four make a circle as follows: the first man gives his left hand to his partner and his right hand to the second lady. The second gentleman gives his left hand to his partner and his right hand to first lady, which bings both gentlemen with their back s to the center of the circle. In this position they walk to the gentlemen's right completely around.
  3. First gentleman, joining right hands with the second lady swings her completely around. Simultaneously the second gentleman joining right hands with the first lady swings her completely around.
  4. Partners, joining left hands swing completely around.
  5. First couple repeats 2, 3 and 4 with the next couple on the right.
    First couple continues in this manner until it has danced with all save the last couple, with whom it daces Do si do (No. 1)
  6. When the first couple moves on to the fourth couple the second couple simultaneously walks to the couple on its right and repeats 2, 3, 4 and 5.
    Repeat this figure until all the couples have danced.
  7. Each gentleman, joining both hands with his partner swings her once around, then joining both hands with the corner, that is, the lady on his left, swings her once around.

Ida gives two kinds of figures, some which can be danced in groups of 2 couples and fit into the framework described above, and some which require the whole set to be involved. Some of these whole set figures seem designed to be danced once to give people new and somewhat random partners for a round dance. Others seem to give everyone the "next" partner and presumably are intended to be repeated until everyone is back to their original home.

The animation plays at 120 counts per minute normally, but the first time through the set the dance will often be slowed down so people can learn the moves more readily. Men are drawn as rectangles, women as ellipses. Each couple is drawn in its own color, however the border of each dancer indicates what role they currently play so the border color may change each time through the minor set.

Intro
 
1-12Circle left, all the way around
13-15Partner two hand turn
16-18Corner two hand turn
19-22Partner left hand turn
Figure
 
1-11st couple lead right
2-4Men turn their backs to the center of the minor set (ladies in) and circle four clockwise
5-8Neighbor right hand turn
9-12Partner left hand turn
13-13On to the next
14-16Men face out (ladies face in) and circle four clockwise
17-20Neighbor right hand turn
21-24Partner left hand turn
25-252nd couple starts, 1s+2s on to the right
26-28Men face out (ladies face in) and circle four clockwise
29-32Neighbor right hand turn
33-36Partner left hand turn
37-371s+2s on to the right
38-40Men face out and circle four clockwise
41-44Neighbor right hand turn
45-48Partner left hand turn
49-493s start, 1s+2s+3s on to the right
50-52Men face out and circle four clockwise
53-56Neighbor right hand turn
57-60Partner left hand turn
61-611s+2s+3s on to the right
62-64Men face out and circle four clockwise
65-68Neighbor right hand turn
69-72Partner left hand turn
73-734s start, 1s+2s+3s+4s on to the right
74-761s normal do-si, others: men face out and circle four clockwise
77-80Neighbor right hand turn
81-84Partner left hand turn
85-851s stay home, 2s+3s+4s on to the right
86-88Men face out and circle four clockwise
89-92Neighbor right hand turn
93-96Partner left hand turn
97-975s start, 2s+3s+4s+5s on to the right
98-1002s do-si, others: Men face out and circle four clockwise
101-104Neighbor right hand turn
105-108Partner left hand turn
109-1092s stay home, 3s+4s+5s on to the right
110-112Men face out and circle four clockwise
113-116Neighbor right hand turn
117-120Partner left hand turn
121-1216s start, 3s+4s+5s+6s on to the right
122-124Men face out and circle four clockwise
125-128Neighbor right hand turn
129-132Partner left hand turn
133-1333s stay home, 4s+5s+6s on to the right
134-136Men face out and circle four clockwise
137-140Neighbor right hand turn
141-144Partner left hand turn
145-1457s start, 4s+5s+6s+7s on to the right
146-148Men face out and circle four clockwise
149-152Neighbor right hand turn
153-156Partner left hand turn
157-1574s stay home, 5s+6s+7s on to the right
158-160Men face out and circle four clockwise
161-164Neighbor right hand turn
165-168Partner left hand turn
169-1698s start, 5s+6s+7s+8s on to the right
170-172Men face out and circle four clockwise
173-176Neighbor right hand turn
177-180Partner left hand turn
181-1811s finish, 5s stay home, 6s+7s+8s on to the right
182-184Men face out and circle four clockwise
185-188Neighbor right hand turn
189-192Partner left hand turn
193-1932s finish, 6s+7s+8s on to the right
194-196Men face out and circle four clockwise
197-200Neighbor right hand turn
201-204Partner left hand turn
205-2053s finish, 6s stay home, 7s+8s on to the right
206-208Men face out and circle four clockwise
209-212Neighbor right hand turn
213-216Partner left hand turn
217-2174s finish, 7s+8s on to the right
218-220Men face out and circle four clockwise
221-224Neighbor right hand turn
225-228Partner left hand turn
229-2295s finish, 7s stay home, 8s on to the right
230-232Men face out and circle four clockwise
233-236Neighbor right hand turn
237-240Partner left hand turn
241-2416s finish, 8s on to the right
242-2527s+8s do-si and finish
253-255Everyone partner two hand turn
256-258Everyone corner two hand turn

If you find what you believe to be a mistake in this animation, please leave a comment on youtube explaining what you believe to be wrong. If I agree with you I shall do my best to fix it.

If you wish to link to this animation please see my comments on the perils of youtube. You may freely link to this page, of course, and that should have no problems, but use one of my redirects when linking to the youtube video itself:
https://www.upadouble.info/redirect.php?id=DoSiDo2-KentuckySquares

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The dance is copyright © 1928 by Ida Levin. My visualization of this dance is copyright © 2023 by George W. Williams V and is released under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

This website is copyright © 2021,2022,2023,2024 by George W. Williams V
Creative Commons License My work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Most of the dances have more restrictive licensing, see my notes on copyright, the individual dance pages should mention when some rights are waived.