Hi folks :)
As a dancer, I remember loving the feel of waves lines that balance forward
and back. However, I don't have any dances that specifically call for
that.
Might you have suggestions of dances that specifically call for Bal F&B or
which often get modified for that feel of a balance?
Thank you!
:) Emily in Ottawa
Hi, everyone! As a new caller, I’m looking for apps that will help me
visualize, practice, and plan contra dances.
The pipe dream is an Oculus/Vision Pro VR app allowing callers to practice
calling while virtual dancers follow instructions. VR developers - let's
talk!
More realistically, it would be amazing to have something similar to the
Taminations app (https://www.tamtwirlers.org/taminations/), but for contra
dances instead of squares. The idea is that you could input a sequence of
moves and watch the 2D figures perform them.
http://dancekaleidoscope.org.au/dance.html is the closest option I’ve found
to this, but it offers only specific full dances and doesn’t let you input
individual figures to see them combined. There’s a note on the bottom of
that page which says you can download an HTML/Javascript program to animate
your own dances, but it seems overly complex to set up (I can’t figure it
out on my Mac), and unfriendly for mobile devices.
One last thing – I’m hunting for an iOS app that’s a database of dances.
Like “The Caller’s Box” (https://www.ibiblio.org/contradance/thecallersbox/)
but for iPhone-sized screens and with offline support.
Perhaps some of these things don’t yet exist, but I think they would go a
long way toward helping new callers. Maybe there are some callers or
contra-lovers out there who double as software developers or know someone
with skills who could help us and we can create new applications together
to boost the next generation of callers.
Any feedback, ideas, or help would be great!
Thank you,
Harrison
Hi Ken, Bill, Colin and Robert,
Thanks for chiming in on my end effects questions. The point about
encouraging people to be ready for whatever and go where needed is a great
one. I really appreciate the specific tips too. :)
I think this query comes from my wanting to make sure that things go as
smoothly as possible while I'm trying something new to me!
Thank you for helping to encourage me along with advice!
:) Emily in Ottawa
Thanks so much for this review Lisa! I love this dance (shout out to Susan Michaels who wrote Kaboom!) and call it whenever I have mostly new dancers.
For the Teen Music camp I called at last week, I added in the B2, Left hand star AND Right hand star, 3,2,1 boom!
I got feedback from some non-dancers (who found contra dances too hard), who said that when they show up without friends or a date to a public dance, that they usually feel awkward about asking someone to dance who they don’t know. So the next time I called our local community barn dance, I started with more mixers to get folks easily mingling. This worked like a charm.
I even made longways sets by having folks line up in 2 long lines (no partners) then pairing them with someone across for a partner. I heard no groans or complaints. The single friends said they loved having more mixers to start, then most seemed comfortable asking someone after I showed them how it’s done (no dive bombs from the rear, eye contact, ask if they want to dance, and the answer can be yes or no)
I also tried to write a longways where folks were not paired with a partner, and make it a mixer…. Still In the testing phase. I know Luke Donforth wrote a longways line mixer !
Claire Takemori
(Asheville NC)
Message: 1
Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2023 09:20:51 -0400
From: Lisa Sieverts <lisa(a)lisasieverts.com <mailto:lisa@lisasieverts.com>>
Subject: [Callers] Good dance for teens/familly dance
To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net <mailto:callers@sharedweight.net>>
Message-ID: <DDDCFBF3-D576-446E-9C1C-BF58A26E02C4(a)lisasieverts.com <mailto:DDDCFBF3-D576-446E-9C1C-BF58A26E02C4@lisasieverts.com>>
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I used this dance recently (I was an emergency substitute) and was very pleased with how well it went. Not only is it a no-partner dance, it doesn’t even matter how big the circles are (though I did have them start out in circles of 4). So no one gets left out even if the scatter to make new circles is chaotic. It’s also easy to get them into one big circle for the last time through and that’s a very nice way to end.
I think I got it here on Shared Weight, thanks Claire!
Beaumont Boom!
By Claire Takemori (8/26/19)
*Any number in scattered circles
A1 Bal ring 2x, CL
A2 Bal ring 2x, CR
B1. LHS (pile of LH in the middle, keep walking same direction after CR) countdown 3-2-1
B2 Boom! Throw hands up and all twirl out of the star and make new circles.
Can end with one big circle
Claire says: I wrote a dance with no Partners that I love for family or parties where you start with a few and folks keep dropping in, but it also works for a large group.
Lisa Sieverts
603-762-0235
lisa(a)lisasieverts.com <mailto:lisa@lisasieverts.com>
> On Jun 21, 2023, at 1:00 AM, contracallers-request(a)lists.sharedweight.net wrote:
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> 1. Good dance for teens/familly dance (Lisa Sieverts)
> 2. Re: Good dance for teens/familly dance (Jimmy Akin)
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> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2023 09:20:51 -0400
> From: Lisa Sieverts <lisa(a)lisasieverts.com>
> Subject: [Callers] Good dance for teens/familly dance
> To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
> Message-ID: <DDDCFBF3-D576-446E-9C1C-BF58A26E02C4(a)lisasieverts.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; markup=markdown
>
> I used this dance recently (I was an emergency substitute) and was very pleased with how well it went. Not only is it a no-partner dance, it doesn’t even matter how big the circles are (though I did have them start out in circles of 4). So no one gets left out even if the scatter to make new circles is chaotic. It’s also easy to get them into one big circle for the last time through and that’s a very nice way to end.
>
> I think I got it here on Shared Weight, thanks Claire!
>
> Beaumont Boom!
> By Claire Takemori (8/26/19)
> *Any number in scattered circles
> A1 Bal ring 2x, CL
> A2 Bal ring 2x, CR
>
> B1. LHS (pile of LH in the middle, keep walking same direction after CR) countdown 3-2-1
> B2 Boom! Throw hands up and all twirl out of the star and make new circles.
>
> Can end with one big circle
>
> Claire says: I wrote a dance with no Partners that I love for family or parties where you start with a few and folks keep dropping in, but it also works for a large group.
>
>
> Lisa Sieverts
> 603-762-0235
> lisa(a)lisasieverts.com
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2023 07:58:56 -0700
> From: Jimmy Akin <jimmyakin01(a)gmail.com>
> Subject: [Callers] Re: Good dance for teens/familly dance
> To: Lisa Sieverts <lisa(a)lisasieverts.com>
> Cc: Caller's discussion list <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
> Message-ID:
> <CAEXFEH0KY1aPEVFkYQjso4DLf7n4ozgnHNzH_CJn4iwTV28-TQ(a)mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
> boundary="00000000000099da0405fe90e4ac"
>
> Interesting! I'll give it a try!
>
> (I'm always looking for simple, no partner circle dances.)
>
> Jimmy Akin
>
> On Tue, Jun 20, 2023 at 6:21 AM Lisa Sieverts via Contra Callers <
> contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
>> I used this dance recently (I was an emergency substitute) and was very
>> pleased with how well it went. Not only is it a no-partner dance, it
>> doesn’t even matter how big the circles are (though I did have them start
>> out in circles of 4). So no one gets left out even if the scatter to make
>> new circles is chaotic. It’s also easy to get them into one big circle for
>> the last time through and that’s a very nice way to end.
>>
>> I think I got it here on Shared Weight, thanks Claire!
>>
>> Beaumont Boom!
>> By Claire Takemori (8/26/19)
>> *Any number in scattered circles
>> A1 Bal ring 2x, CL
>> A2 Bal ring 2x, CR
>>
>> B1. LHS (pile of LH in the middle, keep walking same direction after CR)
>> countdown 3-2-1
>> B2 Boom! Throw hands up and all twirl out of the star and make new
>> circles.
>>
>> Can end with one big circle
>>
>> Claire says: I wrote a dance with no Partners that I love for family or
>> parties where you start with a few and folks keep dropping in, but it also
>> works for a large group.
>>
>>
>> Lisa Sieverts
>> 603-762-0235
>> lisa(a)lisasieverts.com
>> _______________________________________________
>> Contra Callers mailing list -- contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>> To unsubscribe send an email to contracallers-leave(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>>
>
I used this dance recently (I was an emergency substitute) and was very pleased with how well it went. Not only is it a no-partner dance, it doesn’t even matter how big the circles are (though I did have them start out in circles of 4). So no one gets left out even if the scatter to make new circles is chaotic. It’s also easy to get them into one big circle for the last time through and that’s a very nice way to end.
I think I got it here on Shared Weight, thanks Claire!
Beaumont Boom!
By Claire Takemori (8/26/19)
*Any number in scattered circles
A1 Bal ring 2x, CL
A2 Bal ring 2x, CR
B1. LHS (pile of LH in the middle, keep walking same direction after CR) countdown 3-2-1
B2 Boom! Throw hands up and all twirl out of the star and make new circles.
Can end with one big circle
Claire says: I wrote a dance with no Partners that I love for family or parties where you start with a few and folks keep dropping in, but it also works for a large group.
Lisa Sieverts
603-762-0235
lisa(a)lisasieverts.com
Hi Em,
Beneficial Tradition is great fun, but I'd suggest is best left for a crowd
that has successfully dealt with end effects with minimal guidance. I'm not
sure the end effects are, in any event, much more difficult than navigating
the B2 crosses(?). That, to my mind, is a question of familiarity with
unusual orientations, which comes from contra experience and/or an a priori
natural spatial awareness and a firm sense of right and left!‹
ADPD, as I recall, is pretty easy and, as you say, needs the warning -- as
with any multi-progression, or extra-minor set daliance, dance -- that you
need to be aware at the ends and, at its simplest, go where you're needed!
Often forgotten, as well, is to provide guidance to the non "out" dancers
to self-recover when the "out" dancer is not there when/where needed! :)
Bonne chance!
Greg Frock in a Jun 9 thread, 'Dance Modules,' suggested " the 'mandatory swing requirements' these days, more and more choreographic sequences are just coming up with new ways to interestingly connect the swings"
I disagree. A mandatory partner swing requirement seems to exist, but no neighbor swing requirement.
Instead of a neighbor swing, either (a) substantial non-swing interaction with either or both neighbors (stars, allemandes, shoulder rounds, dosidos, chains or heys), or (b) distinctive choreography, can result in a great dances.
(1) Last time I danced an evening to Darlene Underwood's calling, she called 4 excellent dances without a neighbor swing. (As a dance composer I notice such dances.)
(2) The May Heydays festival held in England, just posted on this list (thread 'May the Serpent Be With you') the winners of its annual dance competition. The second place winner, Cherry Season, (3) The Callers' Box has 3525 duple minor dances without a neighbor swing including 9 by me. Clearer descriptions of some of mine may found at my web page