I started doing this for the Chicago Barn Dance Company, for a few months.
Historically, I have been just writing it down at the dance, or asking the caller after
the dance or by a followup email. So to date it has been more of a personal project to
help my calling.
We discussed this at the last dance, and several callers and dancers were interested in
trying to make this part of our group so we will be discussing this how we might do this
as as community.
It was initially helpful to me as I began calling more often to see others programs, and
as a board member for:
- Knowing the number of dances we are averaging per night (we want to encourage local
callers to work on teaching well and calling for appropriate time)
- Know the dance figures that are being called (to determine if there are new figures we
can work on for improving dance skills and experience)
- Know if a dance was called the week prior (for callers planning when calling the
following week)
- To consider how much our program difficulty level varies by attendance (we keep a new
dancer sign-in sheet)
I am attaching a copy of what I have been using as an initial tool…I would be interested
in seeing what others are doing as well.
Thanks ! Cheryl
Cheryl Joyal
clmjoyal(a)aol.com
clmjoyal(a)gmail.com
630-667-3284 (cell)
On Mar 6, 2018, at 7:41 PM, Kalia Kliban via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Dance logs, a cumulative record for a series of which dances have been called on any given
evening, are very common in the English dance community but vanishingly rare in the contra
community. Why is that? They're really helpful for incoming callers, and it's
probably nice for the dancers not to keep getting the same dances week after week.
I've only ever known of one contra series that kept a log, and it's probably
because I suggested it when they started out (the Queer Contra series in Oakland, CA).
Are there any contra organizers out there who maintain a dance log? Those of you who do,
how do you get the dance lists from the callers? The Oakland series had a little book on
the stage and the callers would write their programs down as they went or at the end of
the night.
Part of it comes down to record-keeping on the part of the callers. I keep a personal log
of all the dances I've called so I can avoid repeating myself when I return to a given
venue. That makes it easy for me to produce a set list after the fact if an organizer
wants to fill in a gap in the log. Fellow contra callers, do you all keep records of what
you call, and if you don't, how do you avoid repeating yourself or remember what
worked well (or not) the last time you called at a particular place?
If you work with something like Caller's Companion, do you update the program list
with what you actually danced as opposed to what you programmed?
Just curious about other people's process on this.
Kalia in Sebastopol, CA
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