20 Jan

Finally!

So I put up a square dance wiki a few months ago, but didn’t announce it…I just added a link in the left-hand menu bar and waited to see if anyone noticed. And today, for the first time, someone besides me modified it. Yay!

In other news, back in April, I wrote something on Square Dance Marketing. Today, the person who organized the meeting that I reported, Michael Hanrahan, added a comment, indicating that he’d like to talk with people interested in square dance marketing. Check it out.

I’m sitting here at the Los Angeles Airport surfing away and IM’ing with my sweetie. I almost didn’t sign up for the 2-day Boingo HotSpot pass because the website, in a somewhat obscure location (i.e., I had to dig for it), said something about the special Boingo software being required, and it’s only available for Windows machines. But the sign-up stuff didn’t check or give any caveats about it only being usable for Windows. So I decided to take a risk and try it out…it was only a $8 risk. And, sure enough, I can surf and get email and post to my blog and IM without any special Boingo software.

19 Jan

FolkMADS Dance

I called my first full contra dance last night. For some reason, a whole bunch of new people showed up, making it challenging and very exciting. Needless to say, the organizers (FolkMADS) were happy, the dancers seemed happy, and I got a lot of positive feedback, so I was happy.

As part of my preparation, I read a lot about programming contra dances. Henry Morgenstein says:

Great callers have many variables that they juggle as they call an evening’s worth of dances. I focus primarily on which are “new” or “difficult” moves within a dance. They focus on much else: promoting certain behavior between dancers, the band & its strengths, the size of the hall, the number of dancers, the time of the evening, the vigorousness of a dance & the vigorousness of the dance that preceded this dance.

Jenny Beers says:

The caller needs to pay attention to several different “curves” throughout the dance session.
1. Energy curve — where do you want excitement and aerobic action? Where do you want mellow or elegant dances? Usually callers try to peak before the break, with a secondary peak late in the second half. You can build up a buzz in the hall and then go out with a bang, or drift down to something quiet to send people gently out the door.
2. Brain cell curve — Beginners can usually concentrate for 4 or 5 dances. Experienced dancers will generally be most able to absorb new material or complex dances at about the 4th-6th dance of the session. A series of familiar or non-brain-taxing dances can create a satisfied feeling at the end of the dance.
3. Musicians’ performance curve(s)–these vary. Ask them when they are at their most fluid and warmed up, when they’d prefer to relax with something familiar or undemanding.
4. Warm-ups: remember that both dancers and musicians need warm-up times for mind, body, and fingers at the start and after breaks.

Cary Ravitz discusses programming by focusing on the moves in the dances. A sample:

Let’s start with swings – I would suggest that half of the dances in an evening have a sixteen count neighbor swing, balance and swing, or gypsy and swing, and all of these have an eight count partner swing. The other half of the dances should have a sixteen count partner swing, balance and swing, or gypsy and swing, and half of these have an eight count neighbor swing. The exact numbers are not critical, but it is easy to get far off of them if you are not careful.

I decided on a few things:

  • If I was going to err, it was going to be on the side of “too easy”. I’m an inexperienced contra caller, and there was no point in trying to wow them with amazing dances if I couldn’t do a good job of presenting them. Also, it’s a common tendency for new square dance callers to present incredibly complicated choreography because they don’t yet know what’s easy and hard. I figured that I would probably have the same tendencies in contra, so I’d be better off trying to be easy. As it turned out, it was a good thing because we had such a large number of new dancers.
  • I don’t know enough to judge the emotional quality of a dance. I don’t know which dances are exciting and which are sedate and why.
  • I would provide variety by doing at least one square; even though the types of squares called at contra dances aren’t MWSD squares, I know I can improvise the breaks, and call with that “square dance caller” sound. I would also do a 4 facing 4 dance to provide some variety without too much complexity.

So here are the dances I chose and why I chose them:

  1. Appetizer, by Scott Higgs: I found this dance in Jenny Beer’s caller notes. I liked that it had a neighbor swing; even if the new dancers partner up with each other, they’ll get a chance to swing a lot of different people and get a feel for swinging. In retrospect, the dosado 1-1/2 to progress was a little hard for the very new dancers.
  2. Ramapo Romp, by Melanie Axel Lute: It seems fairly traditional at this dance to do a mixer as the second dance. Since it was my first time out, I didn’t want to mess with tradition (especially since I planned to do so big time during the break). This seemed very easy, and I liked the “wheelbarrel” move and the single file promenades for adding just a little interest. Also, the single file promenades provided a chance to interact with other people.
  3. Al’s Safeway Produce, by Robert Cromartie (you can find the dance about halfway down this site: TRADITIONAL COMMUNITY DANCE, including a link to an mp3 of someone calling it): I planned to do a MWSD singing call during the break (yeah, recorded music and all), and I planned to do a figure involving going from a right hand star with some people into a left hand star with others. So I picked this dance because it had a star progression which has a similar feel.
  4. Sweet Music, by Amy Kahn: I knew I needed to do heys, and I was nervous about teaching the figure. I looked for a dance that had a pretty vanilla hey leading into a partner swing, because I figured that even if the new dancers had a hard time, at least they could get re-oriented quickly with the partner swing. The music that the band picked for this dance turned out to be a little slow; I should have gotten them to pick it up a little. But the hey seemed to go successfully for most.
  5. Dandelion Express, by Gene Hubert (I can’t find this online, but it’s in American Country Dances On Line, which, unfortunately, tends to be off line a lot). This is a square that features, in MWSD terms, a double swing thru. In contra dance terms, it’s (no balances!!!) allemande right 1/2, gents allemande left 1/2, all allemande right 1/2, ladies allemande left 1/2. It went pretty well, although I could see them trying to balance after every allemande.
  6. Halliehurst, by Gene Hubert: I’ve called this before, and I knew it was a satisfyingly smooth dance. It seemed to be a good dance before the break. It was also the first becket-style dance of the evening, but it doesn’t have difficult end-effects.
  7. BREAK: I asked the organizers if I could call a MWSD singing call during the break and they agreed. People seemed to like the novelty, but dancers had an incredibly hard time with Star Thru. I didn’t want to take a lot of time on the dance, so I walked it through to quickly. My mistake. I did this figure: Heads promenade 1/2, down the middle and star thru, pass thru, right hand star with the sides, heads left hand star in the middle, back to the corner and swing and promenade. I did the song “Shamey Shame”–there’s a RealAudio sample here: Rockin’ M Records
  8. Ben’s Brilliance by Tony Parkes: I got this dance from Seth Tepfer’s PDF, Fun Contra Dances for a Mixed Crowd, which he describes as “accessible for novices, but still interesting for experienced dancers.” It seemed like a nice, easy dance to start with after the break. And it was.
  9. 24th of October, by Don Lennartson. I’ve called this before and really like it. It’s probably the hardest dance I called, with the three (in MWSD terms) box circulates. But it seems to build energy.
  10. Fast Living, by David Kirchner: This was the 4-facing-4 dance. Despite my telling the dancers to remember which way they were facing, so they’d know which way to face after the final partner swing, there was still some confusion. But it ironed out after a couple of sequences.
  11. Another Nice Combination, by Tom Hinds: All of a sudden, it was time to call the last dance! Where did the time go? This was another dance from Seth’s list of fun contra dances for a mixed crowd. It had a neighbor swing and a partner swing (requisite for a final dance, from what I’ve heard).

Here’s a planning chart that I made (based on a chart Linda Leslie presented at the 2003 Ralph Page Memorial Weekend; it’s in this PDF):

This shows that there are several serious lacks: no gypsy, no balance the ring (a move I like), and no down-the-hall. Well, maybe there’ll be a next time…

16 Jan

No. 1 Songs

  • 1952: Slow Poke – Pee Wee King
  • 1957: Banana Boat Song (Day-O) – Harry Belafonte
  • 1962: The Lion Sleeps Tonight – The Tokens
  • 1965: Love Potion No. 9 – The Searchers
  • 1970: Venus – Shocking Blue

Relevant Records

  • The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Chicago Country 38)
  • Venus (Chaparral 807)
  • Love Potion #9 (Aussie Tempos 1008)
  • Dayo (Banana Boat Song) (Red Boot 3087)
  • Slow Poke (ESP 1059)
16 Jan

Prohibition Began

Prohibition, the so-called “Noble Experiment,” took effect on January 16, 1920.

One could do alcohol songs: Mountain Dew, Sloop John B. (the first mate he got drunk…”), Scotch and Soda, Watermelon Crawl (“if you drink don’t drive”), Beer Barrel Polka, Jose Cuervo, Joy to the World (“I never understood a single word he said, but he always had some mighty fine wine”), Me and Millie, Show Me the Way to Go Home, and Two More Bottles of Wine are a few that I have. I’m sure there are many more.

Relevant Records

  • Scotch and Soda (Rhythm 233)
  • Me and Millie (Chinook 102)
  • Jose Cuervo (4-Bar-B 6058)
  • Show Me the Way To Go Home (Rawhide 107)
  • Sloop John B (La Bandito 201)
  • Watermelon Crawl (ESP 196)
  • Joy to the World (Chaparral 515)
  • Beer Barrel Polka (Blue Star 2298)
16 Jan

National Nothing Day

This un-event was created by newspaperman Harold Pullman Coffin and was first observed in 1973. The goal of National Nothing Day is “to provide Americans with one national day when they can just sit without celebrating, observing, or honoring anything.”

One could:

  • Focus on the heads/sides or boys/girls and tell the others to celebrate by doing nothing
  • Use songs with “nothing” in the title (there are quite a few listed at Hanhurst; I wish I could give you a better URL to take you directly to the results page, but although Hanhurst clutters up other URLs with extraneous info like session-ids, doesn’t give the search parameters in the URL for the search results…unlike Google, where one can easily post URLs for specific searches). It’s too bad I don’t have any.
15 Jan

Many irons on the fire

Lots of stuff going on.

I’m calling for Duke City tomorrow night, and then doing my first full-scale contra dance on Saturday for FolkMADS. I’m also doing the beginners’ workshop, so I’ve been reading various opinions on how to do them. Here are a couple of links:

The ASDC board is also getting ready to have a booth at a health fair. We plan to use an LCD projector with videos and a PowerPoint presentation on the health benefits of square dancing. We’re giving away magnets, along with flyers (including the CALLERLAB New Song and Dance Routine brochure and some homegrown flyers). Our biggest goal is to collect names and contact information for people who would be interested in giving square dancing a try.

The ASDC is also sponsoring advertisements on a local radio station (KJOY-AM, no web presence yet). It plays easy-listening pop music from the 30’s thru 70’s, and the demographics fit the current square dance demographics pretty well. If you’d like to hear the ad (it’s me, pretending to be Larada), it’s here (MP3 file, 532 KB). Oh, and the great thing? One of KJOY’s main DJs wants to take square dance lessons; she’ll be starting in February.

On another multi-media front, if you’d like to see a video of some square dancing to “Fisherman’s Luck”, it’s here (QuickTime, 2.7 MB). The dancers are in traditional (full-petticoat) attire, but they’re having a great time and it shows!

03 Jan

Brits and Yanks

Cross-cultural comparisons are interesting. While MWSD is pretty standardized as a dance form, there are still cultural differences between different groups (compare gay square dance groups with straight groups, for example, or European groups with American groups. The terminology is the same, but the fluff and the between squares interaction is different.

Here are a few cross cultural comparisons of English and American “contra” (although they wouldn’t necessarily call them contra dances in England) dances.