27 Sep

Dance Addiction

Here’s an article (The Seattle Press – Dancing Your Passion: On Love and Obsession) on zydeco dancing in particular, but on dance obsession in general. Here are some quotes:

  • …ask enough dancers about why they dance and a common theme emerges, that of an experience of transcendent joy.
  • We enthusiasts will go to great lengths, often incomprehensible to outsiders, to immerse ourselves in the dance.
  • “I’m ashamed to say this,” says [name your favorite dance addict], an avid dancer, “but I schedule visits with my own parents around [favorite dance form] dances.”
  • Yet as time goes on, nearly every dancer will relate tales of injuries arising from the repetitive stress of set patterns of movement, and hobbling around on one’s sore knees after a night of hard dancing becomes habitual and accepted.
  • Desires to linger at dinner parties, or to spend quiet evenings at home, go unrequited. Friends drift away, and activities in which one used to delight get shelved in favor of dance.
  • Put simply, our passion is in pursuit of “perfect dances” where one attains euphoria–a feeling of being in love.
24 Sep

Venus and Mars

As I mentioned, I’m in Oregon, where I called a women’s square dance weekend. A dancer requested that I teach the Venus and Mars figure, so I did, and they loved it. I used The Galaxy Song (A 1021), just because it seemed appropriate (Monty Python: The Galaxy Song).

I did a Google-search for Venus and Mars and square dancing and didn’t come up with much. Here’s a page that describes the Venus and Mars figure. And here’s a page of old calls, including Venus and Mars.

Dancers seem to like long, memorized figures–witness the popularity of things like relay the deucey and spin chain and exchange the gears. I’ve mentioned this before: Squarez: Comments: Miscellany, and it continues to hold true for all kinds of groups of dancers. Maybe square dancers would really rather be contra dancers…


My mom has just started taking square dance lessons here in Southern Oregon with Lantz’s Dantzers. She’s having a great time. While searching for a Lantz’s Dantzers site (haven’t found one), I found this article: Dancing in Southern Oregon from last year, which (a) mistakenly identifies square dancing as the national dance (don’t get me started…) and (b) talks about the decline of square dancing.

Seems to me that if we’re trying to get people interested in square dancing, the last thing we want to emphasize is square dancing’s declining numbers. No one wants to join an activity that’s on a downhill slide; most people want to feel like they’re joining something that’s popular. It’s a dilemma, fer sure.

20 Sep

Class Notes

I’ve started putting pdf versions of my class handouts on line.

I’ll put up the C1 and C2 notes after I get back from calling a women’s weekend in Oregon. The notes use a square dance font that I put together a few years ago using Fontographer. I don’t know how portable it is (works on a Mac) but if there’s interest, I can put that up also. It’s a PS Type 1 font.

19 Sep

Progress

I’ve been adding things to this site on my home server (gotta love Mac OS X, with its built-in Apache web server and PHP, and easy-to-add mysql). I’ve got a search feature working, and I’ve added some personal info. I’ll transfer it up to my webhost (Hosting Matters, if that interests you) pretty soon.


There seem to be hardly any Mac users among square dancers. If there were, it would be way cool to put square dance calendars up as subscribable iCal calendars.


I need to go back and edit the links to various rec.folk-dancing threads. In the two years that have passed since I wrote regularly, all of the usenet newsgroups archives have transferred from deja to Google Groups. There have been some interesting threads in the past few months, including this one, “What Is MWSD?”, which developed when someone couldn’t find any descriptions of MWSD for people who weren’t already in it. I particularly liked Bill Martin’s description:

MWSD stands for Men and Women who Serve the Devil. Picture standing up
orgies, revellers clad in slinky checkered gingham, string ties sinister in
their simplicity, scratchy old 45rpm records playing music that possesses
the cultists and induces them to writhe disgustingly in little groups of
eight sinners until exhaustion sends them to the lemonade cooler. This
scourge must be stopped! Are you with me?!!

Maybe this is how we should approach marketing square dancing. How about a bumper sticker: “Square Dancing: The Most Fun You Can Have in Groups of Eight!”.

18 Sep

What’s a year, yet again

Stuff is missing, but at least the databases are operational. This is a hand-rolled version of the SquareZ weblog. All the old stories are here. Plus, I’ve added and am in the continual process of adding events which might give a caller ideas for a dance on a particular date. Currently, the only navigation is through the calendar. You can also go to the list of all stories and see what was here in the past.

Comments are most welcome. I’ve added a few myself to comment on past stories, and probably will continue to do so.

Many of the web links listed no longer work..but that’s the nature of the web. As I review old stories, I’ll try to fix them, but the pages may just be gone.

We need a link, just because this is supposed to be a blog, so here we go:

Swing Your Partner and Try to Remember All Those Steps. This is from the New York Times, and it does require registration (free). It’s a good article, with an emphasis on the intellectual aspects of square dancing, as well as the fun. Lee Kopman got some good press…too bad it went to “Lee Cotman”.