Tom Hinds wrote:
There are many reasons some contra dancers don't
like squares. One
is that they take a long time to teach.
_Some_ squares take a long time to teach with any group, because they're complex even
by square dance standards. Other squares take longer to teach to contra dancers than to
people used to squares. I try to avoid both types if I'm doing one or two squares in
an evening of contras.
There are squares that can be taught to contra dancers in roughly the same amount of time
as, say, a contra with good flow but a high piece count.
For some squares it's a good idea to walk through
the figure for both the heads and sides.
True, because the two parts are so different. I avoid squares like that with contra groups
unless I'm very sure of my audience.
Depending on the caller and dancers a full length
break may be taught as well.
I've seen this done way too often. I firmly believe that this practice is a major
reason some contra dancers don't like squares.
Full-length square dance breaks belong in square dance workshops (e.g. at dance weeks or
weekends where people are open to different material). A modern contra dance evening is no
place for them. People already think squares take a long time to teach, even though
that's not necessarily true. Why double the teaching time when you don't have to?
If you're not comfortable ad-libbing your breaks (a major reason callers give for
teaching the break), memorize two or three simple breaks that contra dancers can do
without a walkthrough.
I also highly recommend squares written by Tony
Parkes. He's written
many that are accessible and at the same time interesting.
That's always my goal when I write material. (Thanks for the plug, Tom.) If anyone is
interested, I have two collections (Shadrack's Delight and Son of Shadrack), available
at
hands4.com, that each contain about 20 squares. In addition, I'm about to give away
the farm by publishing the bulk of my personal square dance repertoire. (Well, maybe not
give it away... but sell it way too cheap.) Watch for my new square-calling text and
accompanying CDs with calls.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.