[r-t] Spliced Cinques & Max

Stephen Penney stephen at ucalegon.com
Wed Sep 22 10:51:23 UTC 2010


PABS: "So Compositions in more than one method in which the change of method
does not occur at the lead-head and/or the half-lead are not called
'Spliced'."

RAS: "That's fine.  You can designate any change of the Stedman as the
lead end, so you simply state that the lead end change is the middle of a
quick six."

So if you were ringing, say, Spliced Bristol Max and Stedman Cinques, with
two points at which you go from Bristol to Stedman, the first beginning a
4th row of a quick six, and the second with a full slow six (Erin start),
would that not be 'spliced'? What would it be described as?

What about a composition that starts with Stedman (at the 4th row of a
quick six) and ends with Bristol, with all changes of method at the end /
beginning of a slow six?

Percy







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