Sorry to chip in so late, but I do have a couple of suggestions.
Your first 2 dances progress from a left hand star to a new neighbor.
For experienced dancers, this is no big deal. For novices it can be
problematic. The issue arises because as the star makes a full
rotation, the men are facing away from the direction of progression
and their new neighbor is actually behind them. I usually make a
comment to the men "If you don't know where your new neighbor is, just
look behind you" That usually is enough to get them through it.
The other potential problem is in the dance Trip to Lambertville (one
of my favorites). During the walk through, point out to the men that
the Allemande in the B1 is with the same Gent from the A2 Allemande.
The first time I called the dance, I negleted to point that out, and
the dancers really struggled.
Best of luck to you!
I have my first dance this Saturday so I thought I
would post my draft
program to see what some of you think. [Apologies for the VERY long email!]
-If you have any suggestions on teaching tips, that would be lovely. I'm
working on those today (along with figuring out how I want to teach my first
beginners lesson ? yikes!!!).
-I love it when callers provide neat little facts (e.g., where the name of
the dance came from; when it was written; etc.). If you have ideas here,
please let me know! I also have four dances without authors and two dances
without names.
-And, of course, feel free to critique dance selection and order!
A bit about the dance community -------------------
-The dance is in Maberly Ontario, out in the countryside 1.5hrs from Ottawa.
The dance has been happening four times a year (Maberly Quarterly!) for
two years.
-Sheesham and Lotus always play the dance and Martha Cooper is usually the
caller. As context, S&L have lots of experience playing contras (both were
in Flapjack and one was in the Groovemongers). They play oldtime with
fiddle and banjo for the whole evening so it's driven' music with not as
much variety in sound as you would get with some bands.
-The local dance community is novice and while some Ottawa dancers come out,
dances need to be kept relatively simple.
-The hall is quite small and can get quite full.
-There is always a beginners lesson before the dance begins
-Timing of the dance 730 lesson, 8pm dance, break around 915/930, finishes
at 11pm
-Martha has traditionally called a mix of contras and squares with (I
think), more contras in the mix.
A bit about my draft program---------------------
-I'm aiming for fun, variety, and discovery/learning.
-I'm aiming for one walk through but will do two if needed ? I want to see
if I can help tweak the ear of local dancers to be picking up information on
the first time around as well as keeping that feeling of momentum.
-I haven't put any 'down the hall in a line of 4' within the programming. I
would try them another time in Maberly but it seems to be a challenging move
for that community. One reason is that the hall isn't very big so it's hard
to get a good feeling in that move. The other is that there are so many
beginners that it seems from previous dances that leaving their circle and
space could maybe cause confusion. I'm going to test whether keeping them
more within their home space on the dance floor will keep the beginners a
bit more grounded.
-I have also left out heys. I do like them but I have a lot of variety
coming in from other aspects of the program and I want to focus on other
aspects of dancing this evening.
-I'm trying to cater to both a large number of beginners locally as well as
those experienced dancers coming from Ottawa. The experienced folks from
Ottawa aren't the super aerobic dancers who want huge challenges so I think
they'll be ok as long as variety is there and there are fun surprises here
and there.
-Working with the driven' 4/4 old time sounds and thinking about what dances
would fit with that.
-I would have loved to have tried a square or chesnut but with it being my
first full dance, I want to focus on an overall successful evening. :)
-I'm aiming for 7 dances in the first half, 4-5 in the second + I have some
back up dances if needed.
Draft program with comments -----------------
1. Swallowtail's First (DI) - ???unknown author to me
-Put first because of the neighbour swing so folks can practice swinging
with various people. No partner swing in this dance, the only one of the
evening without PSw.
-Getting dancers solid (hopefully) on LChain, Stars, and Circling
-staying within circle
2. Baby Rose (DI) - David Kaynor
-Introducing the balance (twice!)
-similar progression as previous ? nice for the very start
-staying within circle
3. New Fall Reel (Becket) - Susan Kevra
-Introduce a different formation
-beginners second chance to head towards a solid balance and swing
-long lines appear! Wooohooo! Good timing here (hopefully) + feel the
room/community
-Sequences of alemands gets a few quicker 'thinking' moments on people's
radar
-different progression, easy enough and feels great/different
-staying within circle
4. Mad Scatter (scatter mixer) - Rick Mohr
-I want to get the dancers mixing through dance and this is such a fun
mixer. Want the feeling of a bit of chaos but fun/controlled.
-Put this dance forth as I wanted to have the moves solidified above first
-First promenade of the night (just realized!)... that should be ok though ?
I'll cover it in the beginners lesson and revisit here.
5. Family Contra (DI) ? Sherry Nevins
-I know this dance can be used for the first of the evening but I thought
would save until a bit later.
-Bal the ring & couple DSD for progression are neat features that will make
this dance feel different from others at this point in the evening.
6. Lexington's Loss (DI) ? Carol Ormand
-R&Ls make this dance feel different
-This is my sacrificial dance of the first half (i.e., if I'm running low on
time, I'll cut this one)
7. ???Unknown name ? HELP!!! (DI) ? Author???
-Wanted something simple and lively to end the first half. Also something
that would connect the community before the break (long lines :)).
-starts and finishes the same as Lexington's Loss. Not great in many ways
but maybe ok as people tired heading into the break?
QUICK WALTZ
----BREAK-----
8. Snowball waltz
-What do folks think? This is very much a community contra dance and so I
thought by having a short waltz to end the first half, we could have a
second waltz at the start of the second half to bring the community back
together.
-Snowball waltz would accomplish a few things? (1) mix dancers up again in a
fun way, (2) get inexperienced waltzers dancing with experienced folks
(doesn't happen as often with waltzes), and (3) get everyone up on the
floor to start the second half.
-If you like the idea, do you think I should either (1) announce that it's a
snowball and get a few people with birthdays in Feb to start (2) get the
band to start playing and a couple of dancers to start dancing so the
snowball is a surprise (3) other???
-I guess if it's announced, could even show what the waltz step is
quickly??? ???
10. Feet in Flight (DI) --- Author?????
-many new moves: petronella, roll away (in pretty safe spot), gypsy,
California twirl
-I wanted a petronella dance and I really liked the look of this one even
though it's challenging. Open to suggestions though!)
9. Trip to Lamberville (DI) ? Steve ZA
-familiar moves except into the center to balance the wave.
-bit of standing around so if folks are tired, space to relax? maybe should
have thought of this aspect of programming for my first half.
11. Who's in the middle(DI) ? Al Olson
-new move is balance the wave
-have some fun with who ends up in the middle
12. ???unknown HELP!!! (DI) ? Unknown??
-simple, all familiar moves to finish off the dance
Final Waltz
The dances themselves -----------------
1. Swallowtails?s First - ???? - Improper
A1: (8) neighbor do si do; (8) neighbor swing
A2: (16) ladies chain over and back
B1: (8) circle left; (8) circle right
B2: (8) right hand star; (8) left hand star
2. (The) Baby Rose - David Kaynor - Improper
A1: Neighbor Balance & Swing (16)
A2: Circle Left Three Places (8) // Partner Do-si-do (16)
B1: Partner Balance & Swing (16)
B2: Ladies Chain (8) // Left Hand Star (8)
3. New Fall Reel? - Susan Kevra - Beckett
A1: circle left 3 places (1/2); neighbour balance and swing
A2: long lines (1/2); ladies chain
B1: ladies allemande (full); partner allemande 1.5; gents allemande (full)
[keep talk flowing..watch as maybe bit space before gents allemande]
B2: partner balance and swing (3/4); slide left (this kind of happens at the
start of A1)
4. Mad Scatter Rick Mohr; March, 2010 ?. Mixer, Scattered circles of two or
more couples
Level: Easy/Intermediate
A1: Circle left (8) //// Dosido neighbor (8)
A2: Allemande right with partner 1 1/2 (8) //// Women star (or allemande)
left while men orbit clockwise (8)
B1: Balance and swing new partner (16)
B2: Promenade anywhere with new partner (16) (Find another group to circle
with)
In this mixer dancers form scattered groups with any number of couples. That
makes for fun chaos, less transition panic (compared with 2-couple scatter
mixers), and more flavors to enjoy as circle sizes vary.
The A2 allemande ends with women in the center facing counterclockwise and
men on the outside facing clockwise. If there are two women they allemande
left for 8 beats; if there are more than two they star left for 8 beats.
Either way, the men orbit clockwise around the women. Then all balance and
swing a new partner and promenade to a new group.
I tell the dancers it's a zero-stress dance. "If a couple wants to join your
circle, let them in!" And no problem if you happen to keep the same partner
now and then.
5. Family Contra (Sherry Nevins) duple minor-- don't worry about gender,
proper or improper
A1 Balance ring 2x, circle left 1x ("Go IN... and OUT... and IN... and
OUT)
A2 Balance ring 2x, circle right 1x
B1 DSD with neighbor, DSD with partner
B2 Facing other couple and with inside hands joined with partner, DSD 1.5
as a couple to progress
6. Lexington?s Loss - Carol Ormand - Improper
A1: Neighbour B&W
A2: R&L over // R&L back
B1: CL ? // Partner swing
B2: LLFB // CL ? and pass through up or down
7. ?????????????? Improper ???????
A1: neighbour balance & swing
A2: long lines; ladies allemande left 1?
B1: partner balance and swing
B2: gents do-si-do (1/2 about); circle left ?; pass through (to new
neighbour)
8. Snowball waltz
9. Feet in Flight -???- Improper
A1: Ring balance; women roll neigbor gent away with a half sashay ///
Ladies chain
A2: Women gypsy /// Swing P
B1: Circle L x3/4 /// Ring balance, Petronella twirl
B2: Ring balance, Petronella twirl /// Ring balance, California twirl
? ? Not original version but ok
10. Trip To Lamberville - Steve Zakon-Anderson
A1: [8] Ladies into the center to a wave and balance /// [8] Gents into the
center to a wave and balance
A2: [8] Gents allemende left 3/4 to a wave across and balance //// [8]
Neighbors swing
B1: [8] Gents allemende left 1 ? //// [8] Partners swing
B2: [8] Right and left through ///// [8] Ladies chain
11. Who?s in the Middle? - Al Olson - DI
A1- Circle left /// Allemande right your neighbor until someone is in the
center where they join left hands to form an ?ocean wave?
A2- Balance the wave, those in the middle allemande left once around ///
Swing neighbor
B1- Promenade across; right and left back
B2- Ladies chain, over and back
Notes from Syracuse callers gathering: This is a beginner dance, and fun.
It?s a game to play with the speed of your allemande. Eye contact can convey
whose turn it is to be in the middle. It can be reassuring to a beginner
that it doesn?t matter how fast one goes on the allemande right. The B-parts
also introduce a bunch of basic figures (also helpful for newcomers). The
caller should probably keep calling in the B-parts (especially for
beginners) because you are crossing back and forth. We talked about
replacing the chain with a hey-for-4, to move the B-parts a bit away from
solid ?glossary? figures. Call it, ?Who?s in the Hey?? This brought to mind
a dance by Gene Hubert, that has a hey and a similar game about taking turns
with who starts it:
12. ?? Improper ????
A1: neighbour balance and wswing
A2: forwards and back // L 1.5 gyspy
B2: Partner balance and swing
B1: ladies half chain // Star L to next couple
--
Donna Calhoun
Knoxville Country Dancers
Knoxville, Tennessee