In the context of UK clubs which dance a mix of Playford & American, I try to call
both familiar and less familiar dances. After a challenging dance, one that dancers can
relax and dance well because they know it. If I meet a dance that I like and want to call
I might call it twice in a row (my turn on the rota might be every 6 weeks) to 'bed it
in' for me and the dancers.
Trouble is, 'well loved favourites' for some dancers can be 'stale old
chestnuts' for others. Personally I like to dance some I know, some fresh, some
challenge, some float on the music.
Mo Waddington
----- Original Message -----
From: Richard Hart RichHart49(a)gmail.com [trad-dance-callers]
To: trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, November 24, 2017 3:18 AM
Subject: Re: [trad-dance-callers] Repeating Dances
I agree with your dancer friend. It's always good to have a few new and different
dances to call, but repeating old favorites is good as well.
I call regularly at the Nelson, NH dance. It happens every week on Monday night. There
are probably a half dozen or more dances that are repeated all the time in Nelson. 3 or 4
of that group will be called every single Monday night. In that group are Chorus Jig
(always called every Monday night, for at least 20 years), Lady Walpole's, Al's
Safeway Produce, Scout House Reel, Money Musk, Petronella's Pin, Dog Branch Reel, and
a few others. Callers will add other dances to try to keep things interesting, but it it
very possible that the same dance will be called by the same caller with the same
musicians 2, or more, weeks in a row. On a typical night there will be 3 or 4 callers, the
musicians will switch 3 or 4 times, as well. But the chances are good (1 in 3, maybe) that
the first or second dance of the night will be Lady Walpole's Reel with the same
caller and musicians. Chorus Jig is mostly likely the 5th dance of the evening, with the
same musicians each week, but the caller may vary. And there will probably be a new dance
for the dancers, as well, perhaps one recently written by one of the callers. And dancers
keep coming back, even with (or especially because of) the repetition! I've had more
than one younger dancer tell me that Chorus Jig is their favorite dance!
Variations in the music can make the same dance moves feel much different, especially
when dancing with a different partner. Rather than calling all different dances, I like to
find ways to vary the energy level, from a high energy dance and music, to a slower and
smoother flowing dance. Also switching from a dance that requires a lot of mental
attention, to one that can be danced while almost asleep.is an appreciated variation.
In sum, I guess i used to think that always having a new and different dance to call was
the right thing to do. Now, I don't think so. Repeating some old favorites can be just
as much fun.
Rich Hart,
Amherst, NH
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 6:42 PM, Rich Sbardella richsbardella(a)gmail.com
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
I was programming a contra evening earlier today, taking into consideration the
abilities of the dancers in that particular dance community. When I finished, I looked
back at two previous programs for the same venue. The dance evenings were about six
months apart.
It turns out that more than half the dances I chose today were repeats from the
previous evenings, and I subsequently reprogrammed the evening. (I usually look backwards
before programming, and this was an experiment.)
I tend not to repeat dances at evenings that are close in time and/or location, but I
must acknowledge that occasionally the best choice for a particular slot may be a repeated
dance.
The question I have is what is a tolerable level of repeating dances from one evening
to another.
When I began calling contras, this was a bigger concern to me. I had four dances in
CT in four weeks, and a dancer challenged me to avoid duplicate dances. I accepted the
challenge and mostly succeeded. Anyway the dancer, who was at all four dances, latter
told me that he was only joking. He went on to say that each evening had a different
band, and that he danced with a different partner for each dance, and that in reality they
would have felt very different to him even if I had repeated them.
Any thoughts?
Rich Sbardella
Stafford, CT