I would add repertoire and music (dots and sources for recordings) to
Alan's list. R
On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 3:32 PM, Alan Winston winston(a)slac.stanford.edu
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Paul --
What would it look like for CDSS to adopt family dancing as a peer to
Contra and English?
I see your suggestion that there should be multiple regular columns in the
CDSS News. Are you thinking more of a how-to, reports on what people are
doing around the country, or what?
CDSS camps support training for contra and English callers, and I can
imagine their doing that for barn dance and family dance callers. I'm
having a lot of trouble thinking they could fill a camp where the main
dance activity is barn dance. [This may be my own blinkered view, but it
seems to me that CDSS knows how to support dance hobbyists and callers, and
that the point of community barn dances is that they're accessible to
people who aren't dance hobbyists and never will be. They support
communities, whether that's the people gathered together for a wedding or a
PTA meeting. CDSS doesn't have any reach there.]
Summarizing: Columns in CDSS News. Support for caller training in leading
community dance. Distributing or producing and distributing instructional
materials and dance-length recorded music through the bookstore. What else
can you see CDSS doing to support this effort?
-- Alan
On 3/15/18 10:39 AM, Paul Rosenberg paul(a)homespun.biz
[trad-dance-callers] wrote:
Hi folks
Over the years I have written to to the trad-dance-callers list about
sending a letter to CDSS to give "community barn dancing" equal status to
contra, English, song and Morris; both to have a regular feature in CDSS
News (quarterly "newsletter/magazine”) and also to reach out to and support
groups and individuals who organize or lead/play at these dances. I
finally ended my procrastination and sent this out on Sunday to the CDSS
Executive Director Katy German and the CDSS News editor Lynn Nichols, as
well as CDSS outgoing president David Millstone
Hi Lynn, Katy and David,
In my very little spare time, after procrastinating for years (I first
broached the subject of CDSS supporting community barn dancing with Brad
Foster quite a number of years ago), I am quickly going to try to get the
ball rolling.
In this letter, I am choosing to call this type of dancing “community barn
dancing”, since contra and other dancing that CDSS has supported for
generations is also in the category of ”community dancing"
Because my life is so busy (family dance series this afternoon, community
dance series this Friday, etc, etc), I am going to give you a VERY BRIEF
synopsis of what I hope will become a future of support by CDSS to
community barn and family dancing.
(Just for a bit of background about me, my contra calling career included
many nights of challenging dances, and I loved that repertoire. I also
created and was director of the Dance Flurry Festival from 1988 to 2005.
But I also have always loved to call family and community dances since the
beginning of my calling career in 1986. A few memories as a dancer during
the early years of “zesty contras” in the mid-1980s included being VERY
UPSET on certain dance evenings when, for example, one caller ended a fun
contra evening with the Virginia Reel, not a zesty contra; and also, one
night when Dudley Laufman came to call at our local zesty contra series,
and I found his dances to be too easy! And boy did I complain to my dancing
friends!!! Now, I am in Dudley’s “camp”. Several years ago, as I found
the contra community did not want to do circle dance mixers, squares, or
easy contras anytime during a dance evening, I decided to retire as a
contra caller and call only community barn and family dances. However,
just so you know, I still occasionally show up at a contra series dance and
usually have a great time dancing.)
I do realize that CDSS is showing more support than ever before to
community barn dancing, and has supported family dancing for a long time..
THANK YOU! I would like to now take this to the next level.
In the contra and English dance community, community barn dancing is often
perceived as one of two ideas: an entry level/gateway to the “real”
dances, or the “minor leagues” of contra and English, and of lower status.
I know, because I was one of those folks!
My goal is to convince CDSS to bring community dancing up to the same
status as contra and English.
There is a huge potential for increasing participation in dancing if CDSS
can garner the population who likes to dance, but who do not care to become
experts or to engage in the endorphin rush of the constant swirling and
twirling and fast pace of many dances now. This also could be a great way
to increase membership and support for CDSS.
One idea I had, based on a recent Eblast tidbit from Lynn asking for ideas
for CDSS News articles, is to have one or two regular columns focusing on
Community barn dancing, and also Family Dancing. At this point, I think
the most important column to add is about community barn dancing. Many of
my colleagues and friends tend to think of community barn dancing as family
dancing. The differentiation that I and my colleagues see, however, is
that family dancing is geared to families with young children,
and community barn dancing is open to all ages, including
children/families, but dances are not geared to youngsters. They are just
easier dances with an emphasis on community rather than an emphasis on
becoming a great dancer or getting into a zone with the newest zestiest
dances and hottest dance bands.
My experience calling community barn dances over the last 30 years reminds
me that with all the trends toward more and more complex dances in the
contra and English world, the roots of dancing of the barn dance variety
will always be there, especially in places where real communities exist,
where neighbors or common communities like to gather. These include
birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, events for food coops, outing clubs,
churches, environmental groups, synagogues, office picnics, etc..
Dances like Spiral, Galopede, Virginia Reel, Circassian Circle, Heel and
Toe Polka, Bridge of Athlone, Buffalo Gals, Duck for the Oyster, Listen to
the Mockingbird, and many many others like this have been popular for 75 to
300 years for community barn dancing. With these types of dances, we are
connecting to the same passion as our ancestors many generations back.
Along with the dance repertoire, there is also a great repertoire of music
which is no longer being played. Bands that love to play the old classics
like Rose Tree, Golden Slippers, St Annes Reel, Soldiers Joy, Devils Dream,
Road to Boston, Over the Waterfall, Angeline the Baker, etc, are rarely
seen at most contra evenings. But they still play at, you guessed it, the
Community Barn dance!
Anyway, I could go on and on, but need to get ready for today’s dance!
Gosh, even the briefest of letters has gotten out of hand.. Sorry!
This is just to get the conversation rolling, hopefully the start of a new
era for CDSS!
Swinging away
Paul Rosenberg
Albany, NY
518-482-9255 <(518)%20482-9255>
www.homespun.biz