1. Considering whether to broaden the definition of a peal (and other lengths) so that many of the 'standard performance' requirements currently in Section K would effectively move to Section P (Performance Reporting) where they would be disclosed if not followed – the 'norms' approach.
2. Incorporating layered method ringing, such as a 12-bell performance rung using two Minor methods.
H. I think it is possibly OK to get rid of the term Standard from Performance, but do not think it is necessary to change the terminology from Performance to Block. The requirements then in Section II are just to do with the reporting of published performances. Essentially, if a performance is not published, we are not concerned about it. If it is then it is reasonable to expect that the report should state any deviation from the performance norms. A performance is just a piece of ringing intended as a performance (rather than a practice), whether public or not (solely for the participants).To be pedantic, this section is a categorisation of Performance (Blocks) by length rather than Names given to them.
H6. Long Length is inconsistent with the definition of the others in this list. Why does it need to be defined as a Peal rather than Block (or preferably Performance).
H7. I don't see why a date touch has to be rung in the year concerned, rather it is a performance where the length is chosen to commemorate a particular year (just usually the current year).
H8. Somewhere along the line the requirement for reporting of Record Lengths only when they are above 10000 changes has been lost - but see my view on Long Lengths below.
I. These seem like further requirements for a published performance (now section L).
L. These are the requirements of a published performance (not just Long Lengths), excepting that where any of these requirements are not met they have to be declared in the performance report.
I wonder whether it is really necessary to have any special requirements for Record Lengths - remember the issue caused by the Cambridge Handbell ringers ringing the longest lengths without umpires or notice because they hadn't really thought that they were exceeding previous performances - as far as I am concerned they are still the record lengths for the methods.
L8. How many performances are rung nowadays with handbell ringers ringing only one bell? Although this was previously only a requirement for record lengths, it would make sense to include it for all performances, as the performance report should state when this was not the case.
L9/10/11. Requirement, or polite request/recommendation?
M3. I think this change reintroduces the problem of 7 extents in single methods being described as spliced, as a peal of 7 extents can still be described as a Block.
2. Incorporating layered method ringing, such as a 12-bell performance rung using two Minor methods.
M4. I would also describe individual methods as layered if two or more groups of bells never intermingle throughout the plain course.There are 20 such methods in the CCCBR Library and 8 in the Provisional Library.
M5. Perhaps better to say "include the Composition with the Performance Report" otherwise the RW might consider it necessary to print it, rather than just have it attached on Bellboard.
Q6. Needs also to say "and any new Methods to be named and recorded in the CC collection according to the latest naming and classification". For example, "Bottom Block Maximus" is not in the current collections as Blocks were introduced in a decision after the peal was rung, and it is false in the plain course.
Wow. That is completely different from what I thought we'd agreed we were doing, which was crafting a set of definitions (not rules) to allow folks to consistently record what ringers have done, a descriptive activity. What you have just described is the classic prescriptive view, making rules folks must follow: this is the root problem with what the council has been doing since the beginning of the last century, the source of our continuing woes, and the thing the whole fix-it activity was supposed to remedy.
Why introduce more terms? Why not just refer to 'practising a touch' as
opposed to 'performing a touch'? (A choir would practise an anthem before
it performed it.)
A record length might not be a Long Length. Consider a fiendishly false
Major method where the longest known touch is (say) 6400. If someone
discovers and rings a 7200 that would be a record length but it would be
less than 10,000.
A case for one could be made, and if it were, we would not want this
descriptive framework to break, so it should use the broader definition.
Requirements are 'rules' about what is required for certain things, but I
thought our goal was to remove from the requirements section anything about
'what' is rung and limit it to 'how' it is reported or 'how' names are
allocated or 'how records are recognised'.
On Apr 21, 2016 11:12 AM, "John Harrison" <deci...@jaharrison.me.uk> wrote:
> But then you conflate different things and create awkward categories. If a
> teenager is someone between 10 and 20 in full time education, then what do
> you call someone between 10 and 20 who is not in full time education?
> Common sense would define him/her as a teenager not in education.
That's a fair argument, essentially saying that the rule for what constitutes a peal should be kept as simple as possible - a single criterion of 5,000 or more changes (perhaps also with a performance, as opposed to practice, intent). Simplicity always has a lot of merit!
I might argue that, additionally, "rung without interval" is an important criterion that distinguishes a peal from a miscellaneous performance (or non-standard performance, or alternative performance). In doing so, I'm arguing for a slightly more complicated rule for what constitutes a peal than you are.
But in the end we are just arguing about what constitutes the optimal set of rules that govern the use of important method ringing terms (or equivalently, the optimal definitions for important method ringing terms). And this is exactly the debate that I think is needed, ultimately with a decision-making mechanism such as voting because we'll never all agree.
Don, on the other hand, seems to be saying something different.
> It is:
>
> - To provide orderly ways of describing things that do not implicitly rule
> out the possibility of doing anything not previously codified.
>
> - To recognise a wider range of performance standards without undermining
> the respect for performances that meet widely accepted norms.
I agree those are the aims, but I don't see that achieving them involves anything more than modifying the current rules (i.e. moving the goal posts). Some MC and former MC members would argue that the current Decisions provide orderliness, and that the introduction of non-method blocks achieved the other goals you list above.
It is an important criterion [rung without interval], both related to current ethos and historic
precedent, which is why it is stated as a norm and why variation from it
should be declared. But that doesn't make it a 'rule' and it doesn't mean
that we have to create a name like 'non standard performance' for a bucket
into which all things that don't meet any 'rule' are dumped. A performance
is a performance. Most comply with the norms. Some deviate in ways that
make them more challenging. Some deviate in ways that make them less
challenging. Some deviate in ways that make them interesting. But they
are all performances. When compiling records it may be appropriate to note
those that are more/less challenging and/or interesting.
They could do that today and submit it to Bellboard, and it would be published there just fine. It would probably even rise to the top of of the Featured Performance list. But no one has done that, and they won't unless we incite them to do so (which this conversation may well be doing! :-). Twisting ourselves into knots over what stupid people might choose to do will only result in rules that interfere with sensible people doing innovative things. Given that stupid things will be immediately recognized as such, I know which problem I'm more concerned with; and it's the same one that's actually occurred in real life.
It's also worth asking "and if they did, what harm would result?"
These are the same people who voted *for* non-method blocks, one of the stupidest ideas ever foisted on ringing.
Tim reacted strongly to my suggestion that...
We are taking about performances, and I don't see any ringer having a
problem with the concept that a performance is a continuous piece of
ringing. Thus before a service, typically there are several short
performances, whereas a peal or a quarter is a single performance.
A better example of a norm not to be rolled into the definition of a peal
(or other length performance) would be the current requirement for each
bell to be rung by the same person or persons throughout.
I think "optimal" would have to include "that most ringers could understand", and we seem to have abandoned that. Exactly what constitutes a peal has, in my estimation, reached monkey fist knot proportions, enough that I'm certainly having trouble understanding it now.
Oh, good. That means my own passionate contributions might be forgiven!
While imagining things people *could* do:
(All that said, I also remain firm in my conviction that this is all better than what the council's rules are now, and I'd certainly advocate for replacing the current mess with this, if the opportunity were presented and my opinion sought. Just let's not fool ourselves into thinking it's not knotty.)
It says: 'Performances comprising ... are considered to be true'. I read
it to mean [in addition to the general definition of truth] these special
cases are also deemed to be 'true'.
It would be much easier to understand as three separate exceptions, rather
than them all being worked into a complex inter-related set of clauses. I
had to read it several times to try to work out what it meant.
I hope you aren't suggesting that any performances must be integer
multiples of an extent.
Quite apart from being an arbitrary constraint, it would make some
performances impossible, eg date touches of Doubles or Minor
The current complexity is viewed as absurd, and certainly reduces enjoyment of the game, and increases fuming, fussing, and well- and ill-informed commentary by broadcasters. This is definitely not a model I want to follow.
I disagree. If presented with the blue line or place notation, I think most ringers would think New Grandsire, Caunton Doubles, Meson Maximus and Oxford Minimus were methods, and have no idea why the council disagrees with them. Fortunately this is an area where the alternatives proposed by this group are a big improvement: New Grandsire still doesn't exist, but the other three are methods.
I wish we could get away from equating rules with definitions.
Definitions are about what words mean and rules are about what people may
or may not do.
I'm sorry, but this is a horrible trade-off. It is saying "if there is a conflict between what ringers what to do and the convenience of record keepers, we will err in the direction of making things easier and tidier for the record keepers." This is becoming the slave of our own tools. It's like going to a store and being told "I'm sorry, no, you can't buy two of these things because the computer only knows how to sell you one." If our tools don't work the way we want, they are what needs to be fixed.It is also, to a large degree, what got us into the situation we are in. Let's not make the same mistake again.
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Yes, they will but compromises should be based on common sense.
As an example of the mixed stage, partial extent question, consider the
band at Anytown celebrating the 700th anniversary of Anytown's royal
charter by ringing a quarter of 700 Anytown Doubles plus 700 Anytown Minor.
(They've got a composition that varies the hunt bell to get the length of
Minor.) Can they call it a true quarter peal?
I do think that truth is a fundamental part of defining a performance and it seems to have disappeared from our definitions.
... but will reply further to this and other recent posts on Monday.
In response to the partial extent question, this could become problematic when ringing things like (say) Naremburn TB Minor ... I suggest that the wording be changed to:
c) Not more than one touch (?round block) consisting of a non-integer number of extents, in which each of the possible rows occurs no more than the next higher integer number of times.
Doubles and Minor has four building blocks: (1) Doubles with a fixed Cover, (2) Doubles with variable cover, (3) Minor, and (4) Mixed Doubles and Minor (with either a fixed or varying cover when ringing Doubles).(1) is tested for truth at the Doubles stage, whereas (2) - (4) are tested at the Minor stage.
... An alternative rule might be that there can be up to one partial extent in each of (1) - (4). This would make the Anytown performance true.
Which is better and more common sense? (And are there any alternative approaches?)
On Fri, May 6, 2016 at 5:36 AM, John Harrison
<deci...@jaharrison.me.uk> wrote:
> In article
> <CA+16xEfF=GnW2ndKWyYcbKC2u3ayiY+Ky=Y+b74Y-Vt...@mail.gmail.com>,
Which makes the advanced peals of spliced with 14 x 360 rung by the C18
Yorkshire bands illegal.
As far as I can tell, from the current Decision on peals, these [i.e. 14 X 360 of Minor] are
'illegal' anyway
Can't we have an over-riding disclaimer at the start of the Decision to say that 'peals
complying with the Decisions current when they were rung (if
applicable) will not be retrospecitvely 'unrecognised' should the
Decisions change in the future'?
Why not have a rule that makes historical performances compliant. I've already suggested one. We seem extremely reluctant to make R3 permissive rather restrictive.
Why can't I ring an extent of triples plus a touch of major?While considerably less likely, why not an extent of major plus a touch (or extent) of triples or a touch of caters?
In article
<CA+16xEf8LT-nGyAnEqnFd7uq...@mail.gmail.com>,
Tim Barnes <tjbar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I still have reservations on a bell not being rung by the same person(s)
> throughout becoming a disclosure, but the performance still being
> considered a peal.
Suppose that and a friend sat outside and between you listened to the whole
of twelve hours of well struck 8-bell ringing, and suppose that you had the
ability to work out the method and composition by listening, and to confirm
that it was true.
You would know by listening that the bells were being swung full circle and
not chimed by a machine. You would surely be convinced that a very long
peal had been rung.
What you could not know from the outside is who was ringing.
Now consider two scenarios:
A - 8 people emerge and claim to be the ringers. You congratulate them on
a well struck peal.
B - 12 people emerge and claim to have rung in relays, two hours on and one
hour off. You apologise for your mistaken belief that a peal had been rung
when it hadn't.
None of the ringers can claim to have rung the whole peal, but that's not
the question. Has a peal been rung or has it not? Common sense says a
peal has been rung.
Haven't you just contradicted yourself? Doesn't this new document rubber-stamp the erasure by the Council of peals that pre-Council had been viewed as peals?
Did you have a further suggestion? Are you suggesting that 14 X 360 of Minor should, in fact, be considered true?
Derek
On May 7, 2016 9:52 PM, "Don Morrison" <d...@ringing.org> wrote:
> So when in these various discussions we appeal to "tradition" we really only mean "recent tradition"?
>
> Whatever that means.
In my reply to Adam, I don't think I was appealing to any type of tradition. I was making a comparison to the current decisions and saying we weren't adding any new restrictions.