But Team dancing sounds like something completely different. Surely a name that shows its
links with the past + its differences. Attract those who like it already, reassure those
who dislike an aspect of the square dance form they have come into contact. Zesty Playford
says 'this is the music you like' 'this isn't the stuffy dance you
dislike', but also says to me 'sorry, maybe you're too old'.
Accessible squares (does that sound too simple?)??? No-petticoat-squares (the club we went
to offered to sell me a full petticoat at the 2nd lesson)???? Trad-mod squares????
Evolving squares????
Mo Waddington
http://mo-dance-caller.blogspot.co.uk/p/what-i-do.html
----- Original Message -----
From: jmayo329(a)aol.com [trad-dance-callers]
To: trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2016 3:15 PM
Subject: Re: [trad-dance-callers] Re: Is there an emerging SD style? Has it a name?
Tech Squares has fun with 6 couple squares. How about Team Dancing.
Jim Mayo
In a message dated 8/11/2016 9:37:10 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com writes:
John Freeman wrote:
<< How about we just call it “square dancing” and not worry about a made up
generic name.>>
Sherri Nevins wrote:
<<… I think a fresh term could be very helpful.>>
Great! This is exactly the kind of exchange I was hoping to encourage.
My heart says we should just call it “square dancing,” whereas my head says that if
one is going to discuss something, it can help to define one’s terms. The main problem
with calling it “square dancing” is that a sizable number, perhaps a majority, of modern
“western” square dance people have appropriated that name for themselves. Over and over
again I hear them refer to themselves as “square dancers” and their activity as “square
dancing,” usually with a little extra emphasis on “square,” whereas they refer to any
other kind of SD as “traditional dance” or “heritage dance” (never with the word “square”)
or as part of “contra.” I’d ignore this if we weren’t trying to foster improved dialogue
between the camps.
(Historical note: In 1969, Bob Osgood of “Sets in Order” and some of his colleagues
attempted to create a form of SD that would appeal to many more people than the
then-current version of modern “western,” which required 30 or more lessons to learn.
After much discussion, they came up with a list of calls that essentially re-created
traditional SD – knowing full well that that was what they were doing. There were 50
calls, with a suggested class length of 10 lessons; the only non-traditional calls were
Allemande Thar, Square Thru, and Star Thru. The next step was to agree on a name.
Reportedly there was much wrangling; I’d love to know what names were proposed and
rejected. According to Osgood, the committee finally decided that the “new” program should
be referred to simply as “square dancing,” presumably with the hope that more complex
programs would then need qualifying adjectives. It didn’t work out in quite the way they
had hoped: they released it as “the Basic Program of American Square Dancing,” and
everyone since then has referred to it as “Basic.” It didn’t find its audience, either:
instead of capturing a multitude of people who wouldn’t otherwise have touched SD, it was
used only as a stepping stone to “higher” levels. Few if any clubs worldwide dance solely
the Basic program.)
If no one suggests a name that’s acceptable to everyone, I’m OK with that. But it
would be handy to have one or two words to identify this emerging style in discussion, to
distinguish it from the various traditional styles that contributed to it and from M “W”
SD.
Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.