Some thoughts:
If there's room in the general community, or interest, or other wanna- 
be callers, or an underserved area in these days when driving is  
getting expensive, start your own dance. Three of us in San Diego did  
that years ago as we were learning to call. We had dance parties in  
our driveways, invited people in the summer to the park for dance  
parties (invited anyone who walked by to join in), usually only had  
one acoustic musician playing (a dulcimer, a fiddle, a banjo, even a  
penny whistle solo) finally found a small rec hall and some aspiring  
musicians, and shared the dance until we got good enough to call half  
each and then full dances. Start an infrequent dance if running a  
regular one seems too onerous - every fifth Friday or something like  
that, you run it, you can call at it. You have more control perhaps  
of the bands you get to call with. Also, make sure others know that  
you are available for emergencies - one never knows when a caller  
will get sick or have a flat tire and someone will ask if you brought  
your cards.  Dance communities vary - some are run by callers, some  
by dancers. And if you aren't involved in the managing of the dances,  
in volunteering to do set-up, take-down, decoration at special  
events, sitting at the door, etc. - if all you do is call, and others  
are doing all the work, then get in there and put in more than just  
dancing. Sweat equity, though it may have nothing to do with your  
ability as a caller, will make others more willing to help you  
towards your goals. Yes, it is important to encourage new callers,  
but as an organizer, now, too, I know I don't want to do that at the  
expense of confusion and dissatisfaction on the floor, especially if  
other callers are ready, willing and able. One thing we did here was  
to pair a new caller with an established one - split the evening. See  
if there is an established caller willing to let you take part of the  
evening at the mid-sized dance and if the organizer will go for it.  
Go back to square one and ask to call three dances in the first half  
- maybe the first three. When those go well, branch out and do just  
the second three so you get more experience doing harder dances. And  
if you can teach clearly to beginners, you can teach clearly to  
advanced dancers. Just faster and with fewer walkthroughs. If you  
play an instrument, play in a community band if there is one just to  
get more familiar with what tunes go with what dances. But basically,  
don't wait for (or expect) other people to make your own dreams  
happen. I don't mean that as a slam, it's just the way it is. Most of  
them are busy with their own dreams - like the caller who runs his  
own dance and likes to call at it - why shouldn't he?
Good luck to you in branching out and finding ways to call more.
Martha
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 Today's Topics:
    1. Trouble Getting Gigs   (very long) (Tina Fields)
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 Message: 1
 Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 23:25:46 -0700 (PDT)
 From: Tina Fields <tfields8(a)yahoo.com>
 Subject: [Callers] Trouble Getting Gigs   (very long)
 To: "callers@ sharedweight.net" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Message-ID: <50006.55506.qm(a)web83207.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
 Hi folks ?
 I seem to have hit an interesting wall in my newish calling
 career, and would love to know your thoughts and strategies
 about how best to deal with it.  I?ve been calling contra
 for two years, the first year learning through guest spots,
 classes, and half-dances. Since last November I?ve called
 full dances, averaging 2-3 dances/month, mostly contras
 with a few barn dances.
 My problem is this:  I?m having trouble getting a couple of
 our local programmers to book me.
 In their defense, we do have a lot of good callers around
 here vying for the few slots. And one of our local
 programmers is trying to run a consistently high-powered
 dance, booking many world-class callers and bands.  I have
 never asked her about calling that dance, and in fact
 aspire to become a caller she seeks out some day in the
 future.
 But the other dances are a different story. The one that
 prompted me to reach out to you here is a medium-sized
 hometown type dance featuring lots of different callers and
 bands.  I dance there often; it?s one of my home venues.  I
 have called one half-dance there, to great reviews from
 both the dancers and the other caller. The band said they
 enjoyed working with me too.  Unfortunately, the programmer
 was away at a camp that evening. He has only seen me call
 guest spots ? all of which he says he thoroughly enjoyed ?
 but only one full evening elsewhere, and here?s the rub:
 wit wasn?t my best evening.  It was a special 4-hour dance,
 the longest gig I?ve ever done solo. I made a few minor
 mistakes. And the band was a primarily English band ? which
 meant very nice music, but mild, not at all zesty.
 The programmer in question is a friend of mine in the
 dancing community. We?re fond of each other as both dance
 partners and people. When I realized he might not be asking
 me to call his dance because he doesn?t think I?m a good
 enough caller, it felt devastating.  But I got up the guts
 to approach him at the end of last night?s dance after the
 fiddler, notorious for his curmudgeonly pickiness, asked
 when I was calling next and announced that he and his
 girlfriend are my ?biggest fans?.  (I was quite floored,
 and grateful. An ego boost can do wonders at moments like
 that.)  So I approached the programmer.  ?Can I ask you a
 question?? I asked. ?I don?t know if I want to answer,? he
 replied, looking very nervous and obviously knowing what
 was coming. ?Well, I?m gonna ask it anyway,? I told him,
 and took his arm as we walked away from the others in the
 room.   ?If, as I now suspect, you don?t like the way I
 call, what is it about it you don?t like so I can work on
 improving that??  He looked relieved then, and was kind
 enough to respond very honestly.
 He named a number of things he hadn?t liked about the one
 full dance he?d been at. He gave the hairy eyeball to my
 inclusion of a particular mixer.  He also said at one point
 in a contra, one knot of folks was having trouble and I
 came down on the floor to help them, but that left the rest
 of them floundering awhile with no prompting. His memory
 was astounding ? I don?t remember that at all. Perhaps I
 didn?t think anything of it at the time, or perhaps I was
 even proud of myself for being able to then get back up on
 the stool and call to everyone correctly after helping like
 that. I definitely still have a LOT to learn.  I believe
 the biggest mistake he pointed out (and rightly) was that I
 didn?t seem perfectly familiar with how to teach one of the
 dances, and dancers had to ask a question to clarify. It?s
 likely true: I try to call one dance that?s new to me each
 evening, in order to expand my repertoire, and every time I
 call one I seem to learn some new nuance about how to lead
 it better.
 He said he therefore thinks I need more practice. I
 heartily agreed with that, and then pointed out that the
 way to get it is by having gigs that allow me to do more
 calling!  He then said that that?s what the tiny venues are
 for.
 But I feel troubled by this answer. I?ve been calling those
 venues, and will gladly continue to.  However, it seems to
 me that if a caller is only exposed to small halls
 half-full of beginners, s/he will learn to call to that
 level very well, but not to call dances appropriate for
 more advanced dancers. How will I ever gain that skill if
 I?m not given the chance to try it? It?s a catch-22.  These
 venues also often book very inexperienced bands, who don?t
 know what I?m talking about when I try to discuss pairing
 dances/tunes. So I have ideas of how I?d like to become a
 better caller, but these circumstances are keeping me from
 achieving that.
 I also strongly believe that it?s every dance
 organization?s responsibility to foster new talent, if they
 want the group to stay alive. My local group has acted on
 this seriously in the past, in fact giving me and others
 matching scholarships to go to CDSS camp?s calling classes.
 (In my case, perhaps they figured out I wasn?t going to go
 away, so it was in their best interest to help me learn to
 do it better. <g>)  What?s happening now, though, is that
 I?ve hit some sort of glass ceiling. I?m like in my calling
 adolescence: no longer the cute beginner but also not yet a
 rock star. If given the opportunity to call at a more
 high-powered gig, I will not be perfect at it, no. But I
 will get better and better, given the chance.
 Hearing some programmers talk about callers and bands, I
 have the sense now that a problematic gig like the one
 Chris described in his recent ?growth? post could be a
 death sentence around here. That caller might never be
 invited back.
 My experience of hitting a wall didn?t only happen that one
 time. Earlier this month, trying to be proactive, I
 inquired about potentially calling at a venue a bit more
 than one hour from my home, another medium-sized/level
 dance I?ve danced at many times in the past but not
 recently. That programmer asked the very good question,
 ?what sort of program do you do, and is it suitable for our
 dancers?? I sent him a sample program I successfully called
 at a similar venue, along with an offer to discuss his
 current community?s particular dance level and to craft my
 program accordingly. I have not heard back.  Some say that
 he likes to call most of the dances there himself, so may
 be reluctant to share.
 It feels so disheartening to be kept out, I?m now
 considering whether it?s worth it to continue trying to
 call. Really, it?s been through frequent repetition that my
 skills have improved so far. I?ve popped a new level of
 understanding in terms of how to envision the moves in
 space, how to teach geometrically and in terms of people
 the dancers will encounter, and how to really work with the
 band to create a synergistic ball o? fire.  These skills
 have recently grown exponentially. I enjoy doing it, and
 have gotten some excellent positive feedback from dancers,
 bands, and other programmers ? some of it even in writing,
 so I can prove it.  But if I have to fight to get one gig
 every few months, I never will get better.  I?ll forget the
 nuances of how to do it.  Instead of building on each
 other, every dance evening will be a singular struggle. And
 I doubt it?s worth it. I love giving to the dance community
 through calling, but also love dancing ? and that I feel
 unquestioningly welcomed to do.
 Thoughts? Strategies? Commiseration?  How to best handle
 this situation?  Is there a way to encourage programmers to
 nurture local talent?  How did you manage to wrangle
 getting gigs that allowed your skills to continually grow?
 Sorry for the length of this post and the ?woe is me? tone.
  But I figured some detail might help in this case, and I?m
 really feeling at a loss.
 Thank you, comrades, for any insight you might offer.
 Tina Fields
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