In general, I'd say to prepare mostly the same easiness-level of dances, mostly
different dances, a repeat of whatever the most popular dance was, and have a couple
slightly more challenging ones - with progression, etc - up your sleeve but without any
emotional investment in actually using them.
Expect very little to carry over to a second dance five months later. Maybe more facility
in getting lined up, but also (if you're lucky) they'll bring friends with no
experience.
-- Alan
On 10/24/18 10:25 AM, Allison Jonjak via Callers wrote:
Hi all,
I hail from a rural area with no nearby dance communities. This June I held a free
community barn dance, featuring lots of Linda Leslie's "very easy dances".
Through the magic of newspapers I was able to connect with a string band, and we had about
25 dancers, lots of whom left their email addresses 'so you can invite us again next
time.'
I'll head home for the holidays, the band is willing and the hall is willing, so
I'm planning to host another dance. The question is: should I prepare
-the same dances
-the same easiness-level of dances, but different actual dances
-a dance or two that uses progressions?
The dancers in June learned very quickly, and aced the proto-progressions in both
Jefferson & Liberty, and Peak Bagger.
How much of that practice in June do I expect to carry forward to November? Here was the
program I wound up calling,
https://contradb.com/programs/76 , pardon that the calling
notes are mixed in with my followup notes. Here were the dances I had prepared:
https://contradb.com/programs/71
Thanks all in advance for your help!
--
Allison Jonjak, M.S., E.I.T.
allisonjonjak@gmail.com<mailto:allisonjonjak@gmail.com>
allisonjonjak.com<http://allisonjonjak.com>
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