Hi,
I am wondering if you have any dances for low numbers of dancers (perhaps 6
or less), when most or all of the dancers are beginners and adults. I am
also wondering if you have any dances (presumably different dances), that do
not require choosing a partner and are good openers for beginner adults.
Thanks as always to all,
Rickey Holt.
I can only speak with reference to calling at NEFFA, as I have never applied to DownEast. As some of you may know that Linda Leslie is NEFFA's program chair, I will note that the program chair does not select performers for contra sessions.
Regarding NEFFA 2007, the following notice is now posted at http://neffa.org/perf_app.html - The Program Committee is not prepared to take your application at this time, since it is too late to apply for this year's NEFFA Festival. Please note that the application to perform is always available during the month of September, with a deadline in October. If you'd like to get an e-mail notice of application availability, send a blank e-mail to NEFFA_Performers-subscribe(a)yahoogroups.com
So you can note on your calendar that September is a good time to check the NEFFA web site, and also arrange for a notice to pop up in your e-mail.
The NEFFA application invites you to come up with a briefly-described theme for your session, with a title of 20 characters or less. IMO, use your own judgment as to how important the theme is. If you are offering a concept that's really meaningful to you, don't be afraid to describe it. If what you really want to do is just call some hot contras, then IMO I wouldn't go overboard on the theme.
Unlike Northwest Folklife, callers and bands apply SEPARATELY to the New England Folk Festival. And I believe that this is a very good thing for beginning callers who hope to have a chance at getting onstage. This mix-and-match policy gives a fresh perspective for experienced performers, and can be an eye-opening experience for newcomers who may get to work with seasoned veterans. I will never forget calling at NEFFA with Northern Spy, a band that has worked with caller David Millstone for 25 years. And where was David during this session? Out on the floor, happily dancing to the music of his own band. NEFFA's selection process made that wonderful hour possible for me.
For what it's worth, the first year I successfully applied I asked for a "Festival Orchestra" slot, which means that instead of calling a themed, hour-long session I called two dances in the Main Hall with the assembled orchestra and then got off the stage as the next Festival Orchestra caller had a turn. IMO, the key here (as well as in submitting a session proposal) is to choose dances that you know by heart, can teach well, fully believe in, and love to share with a crowd. You don't want to have second thoughts as you approach the microphone.
If you're wondering why performer applications are required so far in advance of a festival, note that NEFFA may have 1700 performers, many of whom perform in multiple sessions (perhaps performing alone, and with a participatory dance group, and also with a concert performance group!). You can't doublebook a performer (or larger groups to which she may belong), you have to give her time to move from one venue to another, plus a bunch of other scheduling etceteras that would drive me loony to contemplate further. How scheduling was done in the days before computers is beyond me.
--
Robert Jon Golder
164 Maxfield St
New Bedford, MA 02740
(508) 999-2486
I just called a tiny dance last night, and went through several of my
triplets along with a big pile of English 3-couple dances that we did to
old-time tunes (that was a little weird for me but the dancers enjoyed
them, so what the heck). I was grateful to have the few triplets I had,
and I'd like to expand my collection. The ones I used were
Microchasmic, David's Triplet #7 and Ted's Triplet #24, which all have
distinctive bits in them (contra corners, round two/drop through, and a
cast to invert then 1s lead up, respectively). I like triplets that
have some choreographic substance to them, something for the dancers to
chew on.
Do you have favorites you enjoy dancing as well as calling? I get the
impression sometimes that triplets are "that thing you do to fill time
until the real dancing starts," but 3-couple sets can be a whole lot of
fun. And sometimes they can save your butt as a caller.
We had lots of odd numbers last night, so in addition to the triplets
and 3-couple English dances I used dances like Domino 5 (5 dancers) and
Pride of Dingle (for 9). For a short while we had 4 couples and did
contras but most of the evening was "other." Got any good dances for
odd numbers?
Kalia
Yes, of course I always tell dancers that they can walk instead of buzz, but
the buzz-step is so much more fun that it seems crazy not to teach it when
every dance is going to have a swing and usually two.
<Digression:> Yes, I love swinging, and have been loving it for fifty years
now, but why does every new dance have to have two swings? Oh no, not
Neighbour Balance & Swing, Circle Left 3/4, Partner Swing again - that's
half the dance gone with nothing new or interesting in it! (And changing the
Circle Left 3/4 to Men/Ladies Allemande 1 & 1/2 does not make it more
interesting!) I write lots of dances with one or zero swings - a zero-swing
dance can have so much good stuff in it that the dancers don't even notice
there is no swing; they are having too much fun. It always puzzles me when
people take a great one-swing dance and re-choreograph it to add a second
swing, losing part of what made it a great dance just for the sake of even
more swinging. <End of digression.>
I found it interesting that Ron said, "the buzz-step swing gets axed if I'm
short on time". If I only had time to teach one thing then the only thing I
would teach would be the buzz-step swing, and how to finish it so you end up
in the right place. I can't think of anything else that newcomers can't
learn during the walk-throughs.
Question: If you were calling for a group with a dozen newcomers in the hall
out of 100 people, and the organizers said you could have two minutes
teaching before you started the first walk-through, what would you teach?
For me the answer is obvious, every dance has a buzz-step swing; teach a
buzz-step swing.
Another reason for teaching swinging is that there are a significant number
of "experienced" dancers who have bad swinging habits. I dance all over the
USA and the UK and wherever I go there are always some people who:
- grip, clamp, squeeze, hang, press
- hold their partner in the wrong place so it is uncomfortable
- use too much strength and try to do silly things like making their
partners feet leave the floor
- lean sideways or backwards
- start twirls too late and when they are facing the wrong way so that they
end up in the wrong place
- etc.
If just a couple of those dancers pick up on any of these points and improve
their swinging then you have done good work!
Yes, I hate it when callers talk too much and take time out of dancing time.
But this can be really short:
Sample teach:
= = = = = = = =
Hi, I'm John. We have some new people here today and they are going to
spend half an hour swinging tonight, so please let's spend a minute or two
on showing them how it's done. And all you great dancers out there why not
see if you can't make your swing even better for you and your partners.
This is called a buzz-step swing.
First, let go of you partner completely. Put your left toe just behind your
right foot like this. Now walk fast on the spot. Now push with your left
foor as though you were on a skateboard and turn clockwise by yourself on
the spot. Relax your knees so you don't bounce up and down. See how
smoothly.you can turn with the minimum of effort.
Now take your partner in a ballroom hold - the man's hand on the lady's
shoulderblade - it is far more comfotable for the lady if you hold them up
high. Now relax - make sure you are not pressing on any part of your
partner.
And swing - it should be a gentle embrace where, as a single counterbalanced
unit, you glide smoothly and effortlessly around. Smile at your partner and
you won't get dizzy.
Now think of your joined hands as an arrowhead and finish pointing at the
other couple.
If you are having trouble with the buzz-step then you can always just walk.
= = = = = = = =
I just timed that and it took less than 90 seconds. Surely that is worth
doing!
Yes, some of them wont get it, but for those who do you have just greatly
enhanced their enjoyment of the evening.
Anyway, that's what I think. :-)
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent
Have my first gig for a Techno contra coming up next week. Spoke with the
band about dances selection and am culling through my cards for suitable
dances now.
Do you have any favorite easy-to-remember (not necessarily easy to call)
dances that are interesting yet support dropping out on calls quickly?
Thanks,
Don
Rich asked for dances with one or zero swings. These are some of mine, many
aimed at beginners.
Duck! (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Improper; Double Progression
A1: Neighbour Dosido
Neighbour Two Hand Turn - open into a circle
A2: Circle Left; Circle Right
B1: Men Dosido
Ladies Dosido
B2: Balance the Ring; #2s Arch, #1s Duck Through to New Circle
Balance the New Ring; #2s Arch, #1s Duck Through to face New
Neighbours
Do a quick California Twirl when you reach the end of the line
Finding Your Balance (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Becket (CW)
A1/A2: Four Changes all with Balances - Start Right with Partner and
alternate hands
B1: Balance the Ring; Men Cross
Balance the Ring; Ladies Cross
B2: Half Promenade
Yearn on the Left Diagonal to New Neighbours
Life is But A Melancholy Flower (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Improper
A1: Neighbour Dosido
Neighbour two hand Balance & Petronalla Turn for Two (Men now back to
back in the middle)
A2: Take Two Hands with Neighbour:
All Gallop* Down; All Gallop Up
B1: Start a Neighbour Gypsy; Men leave and Half Left Shoulder Gypsy with
each other
Partner Swing
B2: Balance the Ring; Petronella Turn
Balance the Ring; California Twirl
* Americans often say "sashay" - but that word doesn't give the right feel -
I mean gallop!
Rotafl (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Becket (CW)
A1: Yearn on Left Diagonal to a New Couple
Ladies' Chain
A2:Long Lines Go F & B - Men Roll the Ladies from Right to Left
Long Lines Go F & B - Ladies Roll the Men from Right to Left
B1: Tapsalteerie Hey:
Ladies Half Hey, Men Ricochet
Ladies Ricochet, Men Half Hey
B2: Flutterwheel and sweep the Men in to:
Men Dosido
Pestchye (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Becket
A1: Balance the Ring; Petronella
Balance the Ring; Petronella
A2: Hands Across: Star Left; Star Right - Men Drop Out
B1: Ladies' Chain x 2
B2: Half Promenade
Yearn to the Left
Dixie Doo-Dah (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Improper
A1: Neighbour Dosido & Swing - finish facing Down
A2: Down the Hall in Lines of Four; Dixie Twirl*
Up the Hall in Lines of Four; Bend the Line
B1: Balance the Ring; Men Cross
Balance the Ring; Ladies Cross
B2: Neighbour Two Hand Turn
Long Lines Go Forward & Back
* Dixie Twirl: No letting go: middle couple arch; end lady leads through the
arch to the other end facing up; end man goes straight across to the other
end facing up.
The Mad Gypsy (by John Sweeney)
Contra; Becket (CW)
A1: Ladies' Chain
Mad Robin - AC - Ladies through the Middle
A2: Full Hey - Ladies start Right Shoulder
B1: Ladies Gypsy
Neighbour Two-Hand Turn (or Swing)
B2: Balance the Ring; Ladies Cross
Yearn on the Left Diagonal
Someone mentioned that they didn't like the term "cross over". Whenever I
use it I mean pass by the right shoulder and turn right to face each other.
I also describe it as "half a gypsy to change places".
I hope you find some of those useful. Please let me know if you use them or
have any feedback.
Thanks.
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing in Kent
I really, really don't like the term "giving weight". It is a technical
term that is too easily misunderstood. As soon as you mention giving weight
some people will start to lean or pull. I don't believe that leaning or
pulling have any place in contra dancing. All that leaning and pulling do
is throw your partner off balance and tire them out.
I do actually use a lean sometimes in teaching first-timers:
"Make a circle, elbows down, hands up, now lean back very slightly. Can you
feel a little tension in your arms? OK stand up straight and never, ever
lean again! :) That little tension you felt was the kind of tension you
need in your arms to feel connected to those on either side of you."
I talk about connection rather than giving weight.
I don't want your weight!
Please don't give me any of your weigh!
You are responsible for your own balance..
On the other hand I am very happy to connect to you and create a gentle
counterbalance so that we can rotate without flying apart. I will happily
use my muscles to counteract centrifugal force and control our combined
mass. (No, I don't normally talk about mass on the dance-floor!)
This applies to swings, allemandes, two hand turns and any other form of
rotation. It is not wrestling it is dancing. Always start at zero tension
and build up to the minimum that you need to do the move.
Someone said you should press back against your partner's hand in a swing.
Please don't - all you will do is tire me out! You connect to each other
and make a gentle frame; as you speed up centrifugal force will try to pull
you apart; you just apply your muscles to maintain the frame. It may now
feel like you are pushing against the hand, but you are not - centrifugal
force is doing all the pushing - adding to it is unnecessary.
Some dancers also put their hand on your back and press to pull you towards
them - again this is completely unnecessary and can be quite uncomfortable.
If I want someone to feel the connection I do a fast, skipping, two hand
turn with them, or a zesty Galway Swing, generating enough centrifugal force
so that they connect ("give weight") automatically.
Jonathan's description was good:
"They need to move their center of gravity backwards a little. This can be
done by bending the knees and waist a very little, as if you were going to
sit down. That plus the rotation should provide enough force to provide the
tension/counterweight. So we may want the dancers to move the core of their
body back a little, but not by leaning."
When you practice that sitting motion you should always do it individually
so that you learn to keep your own balance.
Happy dancing,
John
John Sweeney, Dancer, England <mailto:john@modernjive.com>
john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 & 07802 940 574
<http://www.modernjive.com> http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive
Events & DVDs
<http://www.contrafusion.co.uk> http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Dancing
in Kent
Many thanks to Cary Ravitz for explaining why some dancers prefer contras
to squares. (You can see that explanation below.)
Tom Hinds said that, when dancers tell him they don't like squares, he
tells them, "then stay home when I call". I wouldn't be comfortable giving
that reply. While square dances might not offer dancers the "
dancer, music, motion connection", without the voice of a caller intruding,
that they might find in contra dances, the square dances offer other
benefits. I would rather come up with a way of describing those benefits,
in the hope that some of those dancers will find things to enjoy in the
squares.
How would those of you who enjoy both squares and contras describe what you
get out of dancing square dances?
Jacob
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 11:25 PM, Cary Ravitz via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 10:40 PM, Jacob Nancy Bloom via Callers
>> <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>> > Cary, some of your objections to squares seem a bit contradictory. Let
>> me
>> > re-state them, and see if I've understood you correctly.
>> >
>> > Some squares are unphrased, and those squares have less opportunity to
>> > connect your movement to the music.
>>
> Yes.
>
> > Many squares are danced for a shorter time than contradances are usually
>> > danced, and therefore take relatively longer to teach compared to the
>> > dancing time.
>>
> No, in my experience as a dancer, squares take longer to teach and this is
> compensated with shorter dance time.
>
>
>> > Many squares are mixers, and therefore have less time dancing with your
>> > original partner than in a contra.
>>
> Yes.
>
>
>> > Some squares have visiting couple dances, in which the dancers can only
>> make
>> > movements in place during some of the music.
>>
> In my experience as a dancer, visiting couple square use the interaction
> sequence 1-2, 1-3, 1-4 and 2-3, 2-3, 2-4, 2-1 and 3-4, ... so for 2/3 of
> the dance half the dancers are not included.
>
>
>> > In all square dances, the need to listen for the calls interferes with
>> the
>> > relationship you would like to have with the music.
>>
> Yes.
>
>
>> >
>> > Have I understood your points correctly? Or have I not quite
>> understood
>> > your meaning?
>>
> *For me*, this all comes down to
>
> dancer, music, motion connection. It can be wonderful in a contra. I've
> never found it in a square.
>
>
There are two square dance series near me, one in DC and one in Baltimore, who get tremendously large crowds for their dances. They are young as well and most people there are not contra dancers but there are some contra dancers who happen to be square lovers too. I always wonder how these dances get up to 200 people and some of the contra dances struggle to draw.
Perry
Sent from my Galaxy S®III
<div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Tom Hinds via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> </div><div>Date:06/27/2015 8:38 AM (GMT-06:00) </div><div>To: Jacob Nancy Bloom <jandnbloom(a)gmail.com> </div><div>Cc: Shared_Weight_Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> </div><div>Subject: Re: [Callers] How to explain the charms of square dances (was More
on Programming) </div><div>
</div>Yes you are correct, pointing out the benefits of squares is a much
better option than telling them to stay home. I included that
comment in hopes that callers might consider being less afraid of
what dancers think. I have no illusions that others would say that
to a dancer.
One aspect that makes squares attractive is the changing patterns.
For myself and others, dancing choreography that wasn't walked
through is very enjoyable. And changing the pattern doesn't have to
be challenging.
For partner changing squares there's a certain satisfaction/challenge
in performing the choreography well as a group and ending with your
partner again. Picking the correct square for this is crucial-not
too easy and not too hard.
Some people enjoy dancing squares to music where the phrasing is less
distinct. It's hard for me to describe but it's like dancing without
holding back. Or could it be described as charging ahead? Perhaps
some of you can describe this gooder than I can. This works well
with driving old time music.
Although I don't enjoy the visiting couple type square, I understand
that there are a number of groups who enjoy these types of squares
with very fast music. In central Virginia there're getting large
turnouts. I'm told that most of these dancers are young and not
contra dancers. I often hear of other groups in the country where
young dancers are discovering squares. Is this the future?
T
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I differ with Cary's generalized storyline of contra being "uniting of
partners". If I had to generalize a storyline, it would be of building
community. I may be wrong, but I think David Kaynor, in his calling
booklet, referred to your "hands four" group as your "neighborhood". I
love that terminology. I often choose new or weak dancers as partners, and
I rely on the support of these neighborhoods to make the dance enjoyable.
In a square the neighborhood changes from four dancers to eight but you
stay with them longer. In most mixer squares, if called and danced
correctly, the partner relationship is restored as the dance resolves.
As a dancer, I love squares. It is a refreshing change, thus adding
variety without difficulty, during an evening of contras. Squares often
provide a rest period as others dance. This is a plus, not a minus; as I
age, I appreciate the rest.
I have found that some callers who are quite competent with contras, are
terrible with squares, I also see callers choosing squares that are too
difficult for an open contra dance, thus causing failure on the floor.
Calling squares is a different art than calling contras. Choosing squares
carefully with an adequate walk thru is essential. If a caller gets too
much negative feedback, or no positive feedback, perhaps that caller should
not be calling squares.
Another problem is that squares are not called often enough at some
series. The concept of corners, opposites, home position, RH lady, etc,,
are foreign to many contra dancers. These are all EZ concepts but all
together in a four minute blitz, every once in a while, can be overwhelming.
Adding squares regularly to our programs would enhance and expand the
experience.
Squarely, (can I say that?)
Rich Sbardella
Stafford, CT
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 9:09 AM, Perry Shafran via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> See, this is what I mean, when I get advice from some callers that say one
> thing and advice from other callers that say the complete opposite.
>
> I figure that there are lots of different people on the floor. Some
> people LIKE squares, believe it or not. Whenever I see squares called,
> yeah, there are some people who head for the sidelines, but generally I see
> dancers on the floor having a good time. So I learned some time ago that
> for everyone who grumbles about a square being called, there are 10 others
> who love it.
>
> As for insisting that every dance has two swings AND the neighbor swing
> MUST come before the partner swing, that seems to be a personal preference
> rather than a hard and fast rule. I think that most dancers don't really
> care which one comes first. I went to a dance weekend this past weekend
> where there were more than a few dances with no neighbor swing, and it
> appeared that everyone had a great time dancing.
>
> I have long been taught that variety is the spice of life, and people do
> enjoy squares mixed in with a contra, as well as varied choreography.
> Varied choreography makes the dance interesting. Hard and fast rules limit
> the choreography that you can do and excludes many all-time great dances
> that might have a neighbor swing or a partner swing first (like Joyride and
> Ramsay Chase). And let's not even talking about throwing in an occasional
> chestnut in there - we have to get rid of all those wonderful dances
> because they are "boring" by today's standards. (Except to those folks who
> love them of course!)
>
> Perry
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* Cary Ravitz via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
> *To:* Shared_Weight_Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
> *Sent:* Wednesday, June 24, 2015 10:34 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [Callers] More on Programming
>
> Why swings in every dance - because that is a huge part of the contra
> experience, a swing with the person that you asked to dance.
>
> Why should the partner swing follow the neighbor swing - because this is
> an art form, not an exercise routine. The storyline of a contra is the
> uniting of partners, not the the breaking up of partners (that's my
> preference anyway). And in practical terms, I want to be with my partner at
> the end of a dance to thank them quickly before finding another partner.
>
> "Squares are just like contras, only you have to listen" - this is not
> correct.
>
> Some things that people to not like about squares -
>
> less movement/music connection due to lack of strict phrasing
> having to listen to the caller breaks the movement/music connection
> teaching time
> mixer squares breaks the partner connection
> visiting squares leave people "out of the dance" for long periods.
>
> I find squares and contras completely different.
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 11:47 AM, George Mercer via Callers <
> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> I may not be a good example or even that good a caller, but ... I like
> swings, I have no need to have a neighbor swing in every dance and most
> certainly don't care where in the dance the neighbor swing happens. That's
> making up rules for the sake of having rules. I like the buzz step, but to
> put it mildly there are many dancers with whom a buzz step is impossible,
> difficult or merely uncomfortable. I teach a walking swing and sometimes
> demonstrate a buzz step with a little time for practice. Far too many
> callers and beginner workshop instructors teach a buzz step in a way that
> promotes bouncing, which in turn makes swinging difficult or worse. I've
> also heard more than one caller-instructor tell dancers that to "give
> weight" (an inadequate term) they should lean back. Just kill me. As a
> dancer, I often combine a walking swing-with a buzz step -- especially if
> we have gotten out of sync with the music. I come down on to the floor when
> I think it's required. On two occasions recently while dancing, the person
> I was dancing with said, "Well, this a dance the caller has never actually
> danced before. If she or he had, she or he wouldn't have chosen it." Amen.
> I was at an dance recently where a mixer was called near the end of the
> evening. I'm not sure what that was all about. Once early in my limited
> calling career,just as the first dance got underway about 20 newcomers
> walked in. I then called several dances without swings, just to get them
> acclimated to moving in rhythm and with the music. I'll never do that
> again. I was too cautious and shouldn't have been. I honestly was afraid
> the experienced dancers were going to hurt me. And they say I can't learn.
> Perhaps my biggest peeve on the dance floor is the experienced dancers who
> insist on sharing their bad dance habits (swinging backwards, excessive and
> unexpected twirling -- I almost wrote twerking --, inappropriate dipping,
> showing how athletic and fancy they are, etc.) with new dancers rather than
> helping them learn the basic fundamentals, timing and courtesy. I love
> squares. Not everyone does, but I often explain to people in my square,
> "squares are just like contras, only you have to listen." And finally,
> callers, please stop telling people that when they reach the end of the
> line, "they're out." This seems to encourgae dancers to think, "Well now,
> I don't have to pay attention." While they are on the floor they should
> "stay in the dance." That just may be me. Thanks, George
>
>
>
>
> --
> Cary Ravitz
> caryravitz(a)gmail.com
>
>
>
>
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>
>
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