As a teenager, learning to dance in New Hampshire, almost all the dances
were squares. Contras were considered Very Hard. So we did one or two.
Now it is the other way around and I miss the squares.
Sylvia Miskoe, Concord NH
On Wed, Mar 9, 2016 at 9:48 AM, Tony Parkes tony(a)hands4.com
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
When I was a very young and unseasoned caller, I fell in love with contras
and tried to include them in my one-nighters. In order to get a majority of
people to understand the progression, I had to make the walkthrough longer
than the dance. It didn’t help that I was using dances like Haymakers’ Jig,
which has a ladies chain and needs a decent swing to avoid falling flat.
People were giving up and sitting down before the music stopped. After a
year or two I gave up on using contras with groups of all first-timers.
I had better luck with a twice-monthly series I co-produced in NYC for
several years. I typically did one contra per night, sometimes two. (I’ve
always tried to give people material they wouldn’t otherwise have been
exposed to: contras in those days when I was in an all-squares area,
squares more recently as contras have become the norm.)
At one-nighters these days I always do a Sicilian circle as the second
dance of the evening, usually the first figure of Ed Durlacher’s Sanita
Hill Circle: circles, do-si-dos, stars, forward & back and pass through.
(If there aren’t enough people for a Sicilian, I change B.2 to a scatter
promenade.) I tell the group (if I’m not doing the scatter version) that
they may have heard the term “contra dances” and that this is an easy
example. “In a square dance you do different things with the same people;
in a contra dance you do the same thing with different people.” In a
Sicilian you get the repetition and the progression, which together provide
most of the feel of a longways contra without requiring a lot of teaching
about the different roles and the change of roles at the end of the line.
Very often, during the initial inquiry and negotiations, the organizer
will ask for contra dances as my part of the program, or will refer to the
whole event as a contra dance. I’ve learned to ask what they’re thinking of
when they say “contra.” Usually they mean the sort of thing I normally do:
easy all-moving dances in a variety of formations. They call it “contra
dancing” because that term is now more common than “square dancing” in New
England outside the MWSD scene. Sometimes they have almost no idea what’s
involved; when I describe my typical ONS program, they say that’s just what
they want. I rarely encounter a ONS organizer who knows what duple contras
are and definitely wants one or more. When that happens, it’s usually
because a substantial percentage of the group will be regular contra
dancers. I may call something like Chorus Jig “for those who know,” or
something like Jefferson’s for everyone, making sure the first-timers are
dispersed throughout the set. Or both if time allows.
My goal is always to provide a maximum amount of moving to music with a
minimum of teaching.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.
www.hands4.com