Lots of great stuff in the discussion already. I really want to highlight
something Alan Winston said:
*8) You have to be happy to be there, calling or not calling, leading the
dorkiest, least challenging things, enjoying figuring out the thing that
will work for the 17 people who got up to dance, and if you can't be
delighted to be there in a situation that's just the opposite of calling
dances for an experienced crowd, don't take the gig.*
Sharing that joy is vital. The difference attitude can make trumps a lot of
other stuff.
I'll also re-iterate that weddings often only have ~3 dances. I thought it
was a fluke the first few times it happened when I was calling; but it's
pretty common.
On a less meta, more technical level. I think it's really important to know
when you can call mixers, and when you should call keepers. I recently had
the pleasure of calling for a family dance with ~40 dancers; half of whom
were under 6. There was no way I'd call something that made half a dozen 3
year olds separate from their parent.
I don't think you need 20 dances memorized but having half a dozen circle
and lengthwise keepers is really useful; or note how to make your mixers
keepers (go back to the same person for the swing in La Bastringue , etc).
Lately, I've been playing around with keeper dances where you shuffle
position. At the family dance I did a circle keeper.
Circle-Keeper-Shuffle
A1
Ptr DSD
Ptr 2 hand turn
A2
All together:
Circle Left
Circle Right
B1
In to the middle and back
With Partner, promenade through the middle (B2) to another spot on the
other side of the circle (yes, it's chaos, but it works out)
For 20 couples, with many dancers still working on the walking thing, it
went fine (1 1/2 phrases seemed to be the right amount of time to get
through the middle). Nobody had to leave their partner, and you got to see
lots of people.
Another shuffle-keeper I've used lately (but not at the same dance as
above) happens in a longways set. It's described here:
http://www.madrobincallers.org/2014/02/01/new-longways-family-dance/
*Revive the High Five*
Luke Donforth
Type: Longways, proper
A1 -------
(8) Single file lines go up and down ("gents" line go up 4 steps,
"ladies"
line go down 4 steps; all turn alone, come back 4 steps)
(8) Partner allemande Left 1x
A2 -------
(8) single file lines go down and up ("gents" line go down 4 steps,
"ladies" line go up 4 steps; all turn alone, come back 4 steps)
(8) Partner allemande Right 1x
B1 -------
(8) Partner Do-si-do
(8) Partner swing
B2 -------
(16) Shuffle the set
(Promenade randomly around the room, then come back to a different place to
reform the long set)
Notes:
- During the single file lines going up and down, you can high-five your
neighbors as you walk past them.
- The caller needs to prompt reforming the line, often about halfway
through the B2 the first few times, but folks usually settle in to it.
- If you have multiple sets, you can mention to the dancers they can
jump from set to set.
That's how I'd call it at something like a wedding. For a Family Dance, or
if I don't even want to deal with proper lines, I'd have everyone take
hands in long lines and in A1 slide Right 4 steps and back, allemande
partner; and in A2 take hands in long lines and slide left four steps and
back, allemande partner. It removes the High Five part of the dance, but if
it makes it function better for that bunch of dancers, that's the most
important thing.
Take care,
Luke