Yeah, I agree with everything said here. If you DO decide to go the hash
calling route, definitely let the crowd know that you’re doing something
different and deviating on purpose: with a “listen up” or something like
that.
Often the dancers DO sort themselves out, and the dance can just go on. If
I screwed up a call, I like to make an extra big point of it the next time
through—either saying it louder/more deliberately, getting the hall to “say
it with me: long lines forward and back” or something—to acknowledge that
_I_ fucked up and it wasn’t the dancers’ fault.
On Sun, Sep 22, 2019 at 7:21 PM David Harding via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I agree with Jim. As a dancer, I've danced
through a fair number of
bouts of caller confusion. My two cents: What seems to me to work best
is for the caller to know at least one point in each dance that we might
call an anchor point. "Oops, I slipped up there. Find your partner and
swing on the side." Or something, preferably with their partners
because if they are lost they probably don't know who their neighbors
are at the moment. From that point, tell them to wait for the music,
then continue from there. Waiting is easier than responding to hash
calling, especially unexpected hash calling.
Dave Harding
On 9/21/2019 10:01 PM, jim saxe via Callers wrote:
Becky,
I may be off-base about this, and I'd welcome differing opinions from
other
list members, especially if they're based on actual experience, but I
expect you would find some dancers who seemed *amazingly* resistant to
dancing a hash-called recovery routine of the sort that you describe. It's
just not the sort of thing contra dancers are trained to expect.
Some of the dancers who can most easily remember how the dance was
supposed to go
(if you hadn't muffed a call and sent things of the rails)
will want to continue doing what they "know" they're supposed to do and
try
to help their partners and neighbors to do the same. Unless they think
you're going into a contra medley, they may think the calls for your
attempted recovery routine are just more mistakes.
The least skilled dancers--the ones who are most dependent on the
surrounding
dancers to get them through the pattern of a dance--may just
have their brains totally full of stuff like "Uh-oh! Something feels wrong!
I'm confused! What's going on here? It's probably my fault! Oh, dear; oh,
dear; oh dear!" and not have any attention left over for listening to your
calls. And if they do try to listen, they might expect that you are
attempting to tell them how to do the dance they've just been doing (as
opposed to the improvised thing you're actually calling) and they may be
surprised that what you say isn't putting them into a familiar place. And
if they do get to a place that seems familiar, they might next try to do
the thing they have been habituated to do when they get to that familiar
place, even if it's not what you call at that point, and even if doing that
habitual thing won't help them recover because they're at the
"familiar"
place 8 or 12 bars later than they would have been there in the original
dance. Moreover, those less skilled dancers may also have "experienced"
dancers nearby trying to "help" them do whatever those experienced dancers
"know" should come next, which, as I said earlier may not be your recovery
routine.
If the dance is fairly straightforward, with no out-of-minor-set
interactions (so
that, for example, there are no interactions with
"shadows" and you don't temporarily progress to new neighbors then revisit
previous neighbors before progressing for good) a possible recovery method
would be to admit that you goofed and then, as the end of the tune
approaches say something like "OK. Just look for your next neighbor
somehow. WAIT for the music. ... Ready ... set ... Balance and swing" (or
some other appropriate thing if the dance begins a different way).
Then you may still have to deal with couples that somehow get stranded
between two
foursomes. The usual rule in this case is that the stranded
couples should go to the bottom of their set. If they don't know to do
that on their own, you could tell them: "If you're left out, go to the
bottom" or "If you don't have another couple to dance with, go to the
bottom" or "Left-over couples, just go the end of the line." And they
might do it. Or they might react as if somebody had just turned off your
microphone and erected an inch-thick plexiglas wall in front of the stage.
There might also be some people who have found a new neighbor to start
the next
round of the dance but who are somehow in a different foursome
from their partner. If they can't sort that out on their own, I can't
think of anything the caller can say over the mic that will help, short of
bringing the dance to a stop and getting everyone to regroup.
Here's a story that comes to mind, not about a recovery routine but
about a
different attempt to get dancers to do something on the fly that I
hadn't explicitly taught during the walk-through: I was calling to a small
group of mixed-skilled (but on average not very skilled) dancers in small
city a few hours away from the nearest "hot" contra dance scene and for
some reason I had just picked a dance in which only the #1 couples go down
the hall and return. I guess I hadn't taught the role of the #2 dancers in
maintaining the position of the set, and I saw that the sets were
stretching and drifting further down the hall with each repeat. So next
time I sent the 1s down the hall, I said something like "2s move up". No
effect. Hmm. Maybe the 2s weren't used to identifying themselves as such.
So next time after sending couple 1 down the hall, I tried something like
"The rest of you, take a step up." No effect. Maybe they weren't used to
interpreting "up" in that context. So ... "Couple one go down the hall.
[Loudly and clearly:] The rest of you take a step or two toward the stage."
I might as well have been whispering into my sleeve. I'm not sure even one
person got the message. So I just let the dance run a few more times,
drifting gradually down the hall until I decided to end it. As I said:
Completely unexpected call == Mic off; plexiglas wall up.
--Jim
> On Sep 21, 2019, at 5:11 PM, Becky Liddle via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> I’m a very new caller. I do pretty well, but occasionally I’ve lost my
place
in a dance and the dancers (of course) crash.
> I won’t always be able to avoid a crash, but
would like to avoid the
complete crash and burn. That is, I’d like to be able to
recover after I
mess up, so the dancers can finish the dance. My tentative plan is below,
but I’m making it up, and would love both feedback on my plan and/or other
suggested methods of rescuing a dance that has gone off the rails:
>
> I’m pretty good at knowing where we are in the music, so if I can
maintain my
head I’m hoping I'd be able to do an extremely simple hash call
to get back to the top of the song:
>
> I’m guessing what I’d do is say “find your partner and swing on the
side” and
then hash calls that amount to going nowhere (Circle or star all
the way around, LL forward and back, neighbour do-si-do, partner allemande
once around—others?) until 8 bars before the top of the dance (if it’s
improper), then say “circle left 3 places” to get them back in the original
hands-four position. Then start calling the dance at the top. Does that
work? Is there some other approach you’d recommend instead?
>
> And if it is a Becket dance, I just do the same thing but without the
circle
left ¾ bit at the end?
>
> Are there other tips you have for recovering and/or for killing time
waiting
for the music to start over again?
>
> Any other recommendations to keep everyone in a good mood if/when I
mess up?
Good self-deprecating jokes/comments?
Thanks!
Becky
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