Good morning,
Its been my experience that dancers routinely applaud after each set.. I do
so as well even when calling..turning to the band and acknowledging them. I
go one step further and ask for additional acknowledgment/applause not just
for the band, I ask for a hand for the hall. Paying respect for the hall,
reaches out to the community at large and acknowledges the contribution
from those whom preceded us making the dance possible.
-don primrose
Nelson, NH
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 11:24 AM, Linda Leslie via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
This is a great topic! Thanks for bringing it up,
Erik.
A few thoughts:
**I introduce the band before the first dance. "Let's give a warm welcome
to....." I like to gently set up expectations.
**If the dancers don't remember to applaud, I remind them, even if it
means doing this more than once in an evening.
**Especially during the waltz, I will get off the stage, and mix among the
dancers, and then applaud like crazy when they end. I've also been known to
hoot. Nothing like a role model!
**I, too, have stopped calling for a few series because of not getting
anything back. I'ld rather spend my time and energy calling for a group
that has decided that it is just as important to take care of me and the
band, as it is for me and the band to take care of them., even for a lot
less money.
**And for this last reason, I respectfully disagree with Barb, who said "you
were rocking - but i just needed the community tonight. don't be offended
:-D" I don't think these two things are mutually exclusive: dancers can
get their needs met, and still help the band/caller have their needs met.
Linda Leslie
On Apr 23, 2015, at 8:57 AM, Perry Shafran via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Erik (and all),
You certainly hit on one of the issues for me. I remember calling in one
community with a pretty well-known popular band, and I gave the band their
props, as I usually do, but I could not get the dancers to applaud the
band. Maybe a bit more at the end of the night, but not much during the
dance. OK, I might not be the most well-known popular callers but the band
is and travelled a long way for not a lot of money and some appreciation
would be nice.
OTOH, I was in another community, with a local band, and I and the band
got TONS of applause that night. It really made me special and as a result
put that community in a special place in my heart. I was grateful. The
other community kind of gave me that "eh" feeling. Maybe I called better
dances in the place I got applause, or maybe I explained things better, I
don't know.
I know that when I'm dancing I always give applause to all bands and
callers. Even if they had off nights. They are all part of our community,
too, and communities support bands and callers.
Perry
Hi All,
There are several places where almost no applause occurs after a dance.
In some communities, when I've been subjected to that experience, I've
asked, "were we off tonight?" The reply usually is something like, "no,
the dance was fine (or even great), we just head for our next
partner..." I know sometimes it's just the night. Sometimes, though,
it's the community's habit. I spoke with a renowned musician the other
day, who will no longer play for a certain series. One of the reasons:
lack of applause -- lack of that palpable sense of appreciation.
I think dancers don't often know that applause really makes the band and
caller feel better. If they feel better they play better. And, as a
dancer, applause usually makes me feel better, too. Any ideas on how to
encourage applause? Or, if you're in one of those communities where
applause is minimal, does it bother you?
~erik hoffman
oakland, ca
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Don Primrose
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Hundred Nights Inc. Cold Weather Shelter and Open Doors Resource Center