In the past, a common way of organizing dances in Maine was around a "house
band", who really were the committee, the hosts, the go-fers, what-have-you. In
short, you were throuwing a public dance party. Our monthly dance in Blue Hill (ME) still
functions this way (after 32 years - the longest-running dance in the state).
We are a band of 4 members, and with some help from various volunteers (mostly spouses
and friends), we book the hall, collect the gate, do the publicity, open, set up, pick up,
what-have-you. We book a rotating collection of callers, and an occasional visiting band
when we have other commitments, but essentially we are the house band doubling as
committee.
The model is perhaps less common now than in years past, but still occurs with several
venues in this state. On the plus side: continuity from month to month, regular sharing
of ideas (usually at rehearsals), long experience working with each other, comfort in the
routine. A few drawbacks: more work for some members if others are absent, a certain
staid comfort with the status quo that could become (but hasn't so far) a bit of
stagnation, a certain amount of exhaustion from time to time. But ...... "if it
ain't broke; don't fix it"
Best to all,
George Fowler