I started dancing square dances in upstate New York as a kid. Every Saturday evening in
the summer local musicians and callers would run the dance. It was an easy way to have
contact with the girls for a shy guy. In college in the 50s was the beginning of the club
dance movement. I went to a local square dance one Saturday a month. They were still
with a live band. I thought I was a good dancer, but here were all sorts of figures I had
never heard of. I asked the best women dancers I saw and quickly picked up the various
figures which were mostly new combinations of what I had already done. I danced a few
contras off and on at various places, but really got into it when my wife and I moved to
the Boston area in the mid 60s. There we could dance 3-5 nights a week with both contras
and English. It was our recreation and exercise. I loved the contra community. There
were family dances, pot lucks before some of the dances, adult dances. I didn’t like
English to begin with because it wasn’t called, just talked through and one was expected
to know it. One Monday after NEFFA few years later George Fogg ran an English dance where
he called the dances for a while just like in contras. That was when I fell in love with
English with its lovely music. Since then I have loved both as well as Scandi and Balkan
dancing. To me, dancing of most any kind is great and I do it as much as I can. Most
everywhere in the country I have danced the community has been so welcoming and friendly.
Bob
Michigan
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