Hi Joseph,
Here in Seattle there have been a few different regular sessions for folks
who want to learn to play for contras. The Monday Night Jam went for many
years and spawned several bands. There's currently a jam, being led by a
fiddler, for beginners. There's another that's a large band run by another
fiddler. They've grown to be good enough to play occasional gigs, and are a
very large band. There's safety in numbers.
So, if you know just one person willing to start something like this it can
develop into really good stuff over time. If there's someone in your
community who can host a house dance for practicing with dancers and a
caller that may help, too. Less pressure than a "real" gig. That could even
be a place for folks who want to learn to call to practice, too.
I wish you success and happy dancing at home!
-Amy Wimmer
Seattle
On Wed, Feb 19, 2025, 9:04 PM Woody Lane via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Hi Joseph,
 Many different types of bands and groups of musicians can work for this.
 I've done dances with old-time bands, Irish session musicians, bluegrass
 bands, klezmer musicians, even once a band that specialized in northern
 Italy tunes. Basically, I explain that we would like 32-bar tunes played at
 112-120 bpm. I describe my hand signals for stopping and for speeding up or
 slowing down. I explain how I would like them to end the set — that I would
 give them a signal near the end of the B-part just before a full two more
 times through the tune, if they would like that (not all musicians do). I
 ask for and describe the four potatoes for starting the dance.
 If possible, I would go to a practice so we can learn to work together.
 And if 32-bar tunes are an issue with these musicians, I would have a few
 dances in my back pocket that don't require that structure — like
 southern-style running sets or southern or western squares or even made-up
 mixers. Whatever works. Ultimately, we are in service to the dancers. And
 as a caller, you can fly with it and make it all work.
 But perhaps, for me, most importantly — I tell the band to have a good
 time. To play tunes that they enjoy. And to play with a driving beat
 because this is a dance and the dancers respond to the driving beats. Most
 of all, I want the musicians to play what they know and have a good time,
 because then I know that they will sound their best.
 Good luck,
 Woody
 *Woody Lane*
 Caller, percussive dancer
 Roseburg, OR 97471
 c: 541-556-0054
 woody(a)woodylane.com
 ------------------------------
 *From:* Joseph Erhard-Hudson via Contra Callers <
 contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
 *Sent:* Tuesday, February 18, 2025 11:45 PM
 *To:* Shared Weight Contra Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
 *Subject:* [Callers] working with inexperienced bands
 Hi all,
 I live in a relatively isolated community in the contra dance world. To
 the extent we have a house caller it's me. We are trying to foster and
 develop new callers, but you gotta have bands too. So,
 I'd welcome your thoughts on working with new bands.
 My motive for asking is, a couple of times in the last year we have had
 new bands come play for our monthly dance. One was a blue-grassey country
 band. Another was a family group playing predominantly Irish tunes. Their
 musical skills were fine and their repertoire was serviceable, and they did
 okay, but there were definitely some rough spots.
 New musical talent is a valuable commodity for us, and I want to set them
 up for success. So, how would you approach this? I'd especially love to
 hear from folks who have done this sort of thing before, but all thoughts
 are welcome.
 Joseph Erhard-Hudson
 Moscow, Idaho, USA
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