Yes, everything from New England Dancing Masters is excellent, including video and DVD.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jul 14, 2015, at 11:24 PM, James Saxe via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> Note that New England Dancing Masters have also produced
> a video to go with the _Chimes of Dunkirk_ book and CD.
> The description here
>
> http://www.dancingmasters.com/store/books-cds-dvds/chimes-of-dunkirk-video
>
> says that it includes teaching of the dances.
>
> Disclaimer: I don't own this video and haven't watched it.
> But the quality of the NEDM books and CDs makes me guess
> it would be similarly well produced. Perhaps there's
> someone on this list who could give a first-hand review.
>
> --Jim
>
> On Jul 14, 2015, at 8:46 PM, Delia Clark via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote
> (re the inquiry from Sr. Mary Joseph forwarded by Cary Ravitz):
>>
>> If she has any budget at all, I really recommend the New England Dancing Masters books: http://www.amidonmusic.com/books-cds-store/new-england-dancing-masters which I learned about from David Millstone.
>> I especially like Chimes of Dunkirk and Sashay the Donut. They’re FULL of the kinds of dances she’s looking for!
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
The Childgrove website has lots of videos. The chestnuts may be good for her and maybe she can pick up some of the contras as well. Because the video is there with the choreography as well she may be able to start picking up the written terminology that she reads as well. You could also point out that some of your dances have youtube links, but they may be more than what she is looking for.
Janet
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Cary Ravitz via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Date: 07/14/2015 6:34 PM (GMT-05:00)
To: Shared_Weight_Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Subject: [Callers] Help for a caller
I received this note a couple of days ago. I am not qualified to answer it, but I know there are many people here who could help. I gave her a limited response and offered to help her out with SharedWeight - she asked me to post here for her. You can email her directly or I will forward any posted responses. Thanks, Cary Ravitz
"
My name is Sr. Mary Joseph and I am Catholic Sister who is very new at
calling dances. I'm not sure if the dances I do know are even contras
technically. I am pretty much working with the families who come here
to Mass and am looking to add to the ten or so dances that they already
know. Here are a few of our dances.
-The Virginia Reel
- The Bridge of Athlone
- Heel & Toe Polka
- Oh Suzanna
I have had success learning dances off a few YouTube videos especially
the set from Mark Geslison and Geoff Groberg. I have a very hard time
deciphering dances that are simply written out on some web sites. If I
knew the jargon a little better, I'm sure that would be a huge
resourse. Right now, I think I need to see it.
Because you have a much better idea about the world of contra dancing/
folk dancing than I do, I was hoping you could point me in the right
direction. Do you know of any websites that have lots of videos of the
dances? I could probably invest in a set of DVD's if I new it was going
to be helpful. Is there someone I could call with my questions?
I unfortunately do not have much time to dedicate to developing this
skill, but I figure a little improvement would be better than none.
Thank you for your time. May God bless you.
"
Sister Mary Joseph <smjmicm2004(a)gmail.com>
--
Cary Ravitz
ravitz(a)ravitz.us
Hi callers, have you any dances for evenings when only a few folks show up,
say 10 or 12 or under, other than squares.
Rickey Holt with the summertime low attendance blues
holt.e(a)comcast.net
Lindsey,
I was looking for a fun but easy to call contra and found this one for your nautical theme. From Rich Goss' collection of dance cards. http://www.quiteapair.us/calling/
claire takemori
Dancing Sailors - Ed Shaw Proper
Reels
A1: Actives down the outside below two couples
Return up the center, cast off
A2: Actives turn contra corners
B1: Actives with their second corners
Hey-for-4 on the diag (actives start pass right sh)
B2: Actives swing in the middle (end facing up)
Um, yes, difference is in the B1, of course.
~erik hoffman
On 7/12/2015 1:30 PM, Amy Carroll wrote:
>
> Hi Erik -
>
>
> I'm thinking you mean the difference between your dance and Tony's is
> in the B1, not the B2? Am I right?
>
>
> Amy Carroll
>
> Seattle
>
>> On July 12, 2015 at 1:41 PM Erik Hoffman via Callers
>> <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>
>> On Writing Dances that have been Written:
>>
>> Years ago our we danced Bill Cochran's:
>> /Third Friday/
>> A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
>> A2 Down Hall 4 in Line, Turn as Couple, Return, Fold Line
>> B1 Women Chan -- over & back
>> B2 Partner Balance, Square Thru Two, Partner Balance, Square Thru
>> Two to next Neighbor
>>
>> I loved the B2 move, but wanted a partner swing in the dance, so I
>> made the:
>> /Second Third Friday/
>> Improper
>> Erik Hoffman
>> A1 Neighbor Balance & Swing
>> A2 Men Allemande Left 1½; Partner Swing
>> B1 Right & Left Thru Across the set; Women chain back
>> B2 Partner Balance, Square Thru Two, Partner Balance, Square Thru
>> Two to next Neighbor.
>>
>> And, I published it in my first book, Contra Comments.
>>
>> Turns out Tony Parkes had the same idea, and he wrote:
>> /Friday Night Fever/
>> with the only difference being the B2, where Tony's dance goes:
>> B2 Partner Promenade; Women Chain
>> -- Which I now like better. And, Tony wrote his dance prior to me
>> Tony published it in one of his books (don't recall which)
>>
>> Turns out Myrtle Wilhite also wrote and published this dance, the
>> same as my version, and called it /Balanced Out #2/
>>
>> In looking at composition dates, Tony's came first, mine second, and
>> Ms. Wilhite's third -- all in the late 80s or early 90s.
>>
>> I'm pretty sure we all came out with this dance independently. Both
>> Tony and I attribute Bill Cochran for the basic Idea. Myrtle doesn't,
>> so, perhaps she came up with the dance independently.
>>
>> But the point of this is, we choreographers are all bound to put
>> together some dance that someone else has also come up with. At this
>> point, it's great to have this list to check that a sequence is
>> original. It goes a long way to checking this.
>>
>> ~erik hoffman
>> oakland, ca
>>
Hi everyone. I'm teaching a summer string intensive near Asheville NC this
week and my host has emergent family medical issues that need evening
attention.
I'm in a charming B&B in Weaverville and get done with teaching at 5:00...
I would DEARLY love to find a carpool to the local dances, I'd be HAPPY to
recompense gas/mileage.
If anyone has any suggestions re: who to contact, which Facebook page to
post on, I'd love to hear them. My phone's 802-222-7598.
IN RETURN, may I offer you the chance to call dances in FABULOUS Pierce's
Hall, East Putney, VT, longtime home of callers Fred Breunig and Rich
Blazej?
Possessor of one of the best two-holer outhouses on the contra scene? Last
Saturday of every month, and if you want a TRULY scintillating time, come
on the months the All-Comers band is playing with its phalanx of fiddlers,
masses of mandoliners, fleets of flautists, grand line of guitarists, and
also a few dogs? We pay a PRINCELY sum.
Actually, if you want to call Putney and know nothing about Asheville, you
can still email me.
Cheers,
Amy
Hello all,
I recently had the pleasure and honor of calling at a weekend with Lisa
Greenleaf. I had just called one of my own dances, and then went to call
one of Lisa's. After walking it through and announcing it as such, Lisa
told me that she didn't write the dance. (She was very gracious about it,
and we had a good laugh.)
I had it in my box as Gypsy Moon by Lisa Greenleaf. I'm not sure if it's
same title, but different author and I conflated them, or if it's another
name entirely. But if anyone recognizes it, I'd like to give credit where
it's due.
NOT Gypsy Moon
unknown
Type: Contra
Formation: Duple-Improper
A1 -----------
(8) Neighbor Balance Right, pull by, pull by Ptr across set
(8) Neighbor swing
A2 -----------
(8) Long lines, forward and back
(8) Women allemande Right 1-1/2
B1 -----------
(16) Partner balance and swing
B2 -----------
(8) Women's Chain across
(4) Right to Your Partner, balance Right
(4) pull by Right with Ptr, and left with Neighbor on to the next
Thanks Alan! Sounds like a lot to learn. I'm really grateful that there are so many callers willing to mentor new callers and help with these things.
When I called at camp last week, I was listening for the 3rd song and even my experienced caller helper was not sure on the transition....... but knew when to ask.
Must be an amazing thing when really good callers like George Marshall can get out on the floor and dance for a bit, or Nils Fredland can join the band......
Thanks for all the help!
claire
Message: 3
Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2015 00:31:54 -0700
From: Alan Winston via Callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
To: <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Thanks
Message-ID: <559F74EA.4010603(a)slac.stanford.edu>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"; format=flowed
On 7/9/15 11:58 PM, Claire Takemori via Callers wrote:
>
> I'm still looking for good instructions on when to cue the band for the ending? Is it simply when a couple is out at the top that you signal during B1 that there are 3 more times left?
Basically, mostly.
And you have to stay with them because sometimes they'll catch the 3,
know it's happening, and then look to you for confirmation of the last
one and if you're thinking about the next dance or glazing over and
can't confirm it, confusion may ensue. So it doesn't hurt to be ready
to show them 1 finger (not that one) before the last time. Usually a
full 3-2-1 is more than they need and actually unhelpful because your
coming over with the "2" makes them think this is new information and
they need to process it.
Complications: Some dances have a couple out at the top in B1 who are
going to be brought back in B2, so you have to know the end effects of
the dance.
Talk to the band.
Rarely (in the Bay Area, anyway) you get an old-timey band that's just
going to pound one tune all the way through, and they just want to know
when to go out.
I've mostly been used to bands that are playing three-tune medleys.
They're going to play like 6-6-7 or 6-6-5. The last tune is probably
climactic so you don't want to cut it short. You ideally will keep
track of which tune they're on (which can be surprisingly hard to do
from the stage with your attention on the floor and no monitors pointing
at you and the tune sounding different every time they play it because
of variations and dynamics - you might not realize they've changed) and
know when they're in the third tune and give them the 3-more at B1 of
tune 2 or 4. If you give 'em 3 when they're about to change tunes
they might wave you off and play 5.
But the band might want to play a two-tune medley, and then they want to
know when you're (about) halfway through the dance so they know when to
switch, and for that you have to decide how many times you want to run
the dance, keep count of how many times it's been run by the time you
said it was halfway, and count down to your "3", remembering to do it
when there's a couple out at the top, if that's possible.
"If that's possible" because sometimes you're trying to manage all this
and some couple drops out of one set or tries and fails to trade or some
other damn thing and the sets get out of synch. (For some reason that's
happened to me most often calling Lake City.) Then it's not possible to
finish after a couple has come in at the top in all sets.
People who care about that care about that, most won't notice, and a
lot of dancers will just say "huh" and move on if they do notice it.
>
>
> What I was mostly curious is if someone had written out ways to teach the various steps. I guess this is one of those things that is still passed down the old-fashioned way. I have to find a great caller, listen to them call and write down what they say..... I was hoping I would not have to miss out on dancing to learn this.
You can set up a voice recorder and transcribe later. (Polite to ask if
it's okay first.) If you're friends with the sound man you might the
caller mic feed ...
-- Alan
Thank you for all the great advice!
I do plan to call a simple contra that is still interesting to the experienced dancers. I have no ideas of calling hard figures until I've got experience and am ready.
I'm still looking for good instructions on when to cue the band for the ending? Is it simply when a couple is out at the top that you signal during B1 that there are 3 more times left?
What I was mostly curious is if someone had written out ways to teach the various steps. I guess this is one of those things that is still passed down the old-fashioned way. I have to find a great caller, listen to them call and write down what they say..... I was hoping I would not have to miss out on dancing to learn this.
Thanks for the help.
claire takemori