As someone who's deeply interested in dance history, I can tell you that approximately
nobody cares, at least until they're invested in the dance form. If you want you can
spend 10 seconds mentioning that it's an American cultural hybrid with roots from
before the Revolution and has contributions from different ethnicities/races including
Black, White, and Native American. Or not. If you go historical, avoid suggesting that
it's an exclusively-White cultural product.
It might be worth mentioning that it's fun we make for ourselves, that there are
regional styles, that callers and musicians are usually community members and can be found
dancing when they're not calling or playing.
I've seen at least one pretty sexy contra video from Asheville.
-- Alan
________________________________
From: Adam Carlson via Contra Callers <contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Sent: Monday, November 16, 2020 8:52 AM
To: callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Subject: [Callers] How to talk about contra dance to the uninitiated on Zoom
Hi All,
At work, we have a Fun Friday thing where someone does a 1/2 hr presentation on something
of interest. It could be travel, a hobby, or whatever. They're asking me to do one on
contra dance. In the before times when we could do it in person, I would have taught them
a simple dance to recorded music. But I'm trying to think about what to say about
contra in 1/2 an hour that'll be fun. Someone else did latin ballroom dancing and they
tried to share their screen and play a bunch of videos, which was a total fail, but then
they shared the youtube links and people loved it. Contra isn't quite as sexy as that,
and he was doing performances rather than taking videos of salsa at the club, so it was
pretty impressive.
Thoughts? I know a little about contra history, but I'm not super passionate about it.
I can certainly play a bunch of the great music. I can show clips of large events
(Folklife), techno contra, family dances, and other variants (tractor contas, anyone).
One thing I'd love to do is to get people up and dancing, but I realize that's
probably not going to work. I regularly attend Zoom dances, but I don't think a bunch
of non-dancers will just get up and have fun having never learned any of the moves. If
anyone's got a great dance that beginners can do (no terminology) and that's
designed for singles or the occasional couple, please share. Luckily a bunch of singles
dances are being written now, but they mostly assume an experienced audience.
Cheers,
Adam