There's a dance instructor here who's planning to start a weekly
Argentine Tango class. Any advice about insurance? The studio he wants
to rent from requires him to have his own liability insurance.
Thanks,
Amy Larkin
Thanks, Jacob. Some of my leads are starting to come together today. I
hope to have the full story by the end of the week and will certainly
update you.
Best,
Joyce
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 12:00 PM, <callers-request(a)sharedweight.net> wrote:
> Send Callers mailing list submissions to
> callers(a)sharedweight.net
>
> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
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> than "Re: Contents of Callers digest..."
>
>
> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. Rich Castner (Jacob & Nancy Bloom)
> 2. Re: Looking for Rich Castner -- can you help? (John C. McIntire)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2012 20:57:41 -0400
> From: Jacob & Nancy Bloom <bloom(a)gis.net>
> To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
> Subject: [Callers] Rich Castner
> Message-ID: <133938771401(a)mx04.gis.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
>
> Hi Joyce,
>
> Here's what I could find as contact info for Richer. He was
> advertising himself five years ago as being available for calling,
> and as far as I can tell without calling it, the 832-0888 number
> seems to still be valid.
>
> Phone numbers: 207-832-0888
> 207-832-0889
> Email: richercastner(a)netscape.net
>
> Jacob Bloom
>
> At 12:00 PM 6/10/2012, you wrote:
>
>
> >Date: Sat, 9 Jun 2012 14:46:27 -0400
> >From: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
> >To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
> >Cc: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
> >Subject: [Callers] Looking for Rich Castner -- can you help?
> >Message-ID:
> > <
> CALr5BzkgG0nLHxmTZvNn2J8ZF_ZV0gHFX777jqDeCvn3ohFbBg(a)mail.gmail.com>
> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
> >
> >Dear friends in the traditional dance community,
> >
> >I am looking for information that can help me locate Richard Castner,
> >former head of the dance department at the State University of New York at
> >Brockport, and accomplished square and contra dance caller. Rich authored
> >some contra dances that are classics today, including ?The Road to
> Boston,?
> >and ?All the Way to Galway.?
> >
> >I am a musician (hammered dulcimer and percussion) who was often hired by
> >Rich for dances in Rochester, NY, and it was through his mentoring that I
> >attended my first Ralph Page dance camp at East Hill Farm and my first
> >local contra dance in Nelson, NH. I moved to the Boston area in 1976
> >because this kind of music and dance was a living tradition in the
> >northeast and I wanted to be part of it.
> >
> >I?ve been living in Concord lately and playing snare drum with a local
> fife
> >and drum company. I?m struck, as Rich must have been a long time ago, by
> >the common ground in repertoire between the fiddle and fife in the
> >18thcentury, and I finally bonded with ?The Downfall of Paris,? a tune
> >Rich had
> >asked me to play for him and that I never liked. The very first drum part
> >I memorized was ?The Road to Boston,? so of course Rich was on my mind.
> It
> >would be wonderful to sit down with him and talk about old times, and to
> >tell him about the ways in which my musical and personal life evolved as a
> >result of his influence.
> >
> >I heard that he?d moved to Maine and was last seen at a festival in 2005.
> The
> >last information I got is that he was living in Waldoboro and had restored
> >the old family homestead to its 18th century appearance. Unfortunately,
> >the contact information is out of date and all my leads so far have been
> >dead ends.
> >
> >I would be most grateful for any information anyone could provide about
> >Rich recently or in the form of a story from the past. There are other
> >friends here in Boston who would like to be in touch with him, too. We
> >agree that even sad news would at least bring closure.
> >
> >With thanks,
> >
> >Joyce Desmarais Isen, Concord, MA
> >
> >978-369-2671
> >
> >joyceisen(a)gmail.com
> >
> >
> >------------------------------
> >
> >_______________________________________________
> >Callers mailing list
> >Callers(a)sharedweight.net
> >http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
> >
> >
> >End of Callers Digest, Vol 94, Issue 2
> >**************************************
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2012 11:30:11 -0400
> From: "John C. McIntire" <circleleft(a)uninets.net>
> To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
> Cc: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [Callers] Looking for Rich Castner -- can you help?
> Message-ID: <4FD5D6C3.13076.6CA440D5(a)circleleft.uninets.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> Hi Joyce & all,
>
> A quick phone call to the Waldoboro Town office revealed that his tax
> bills are
> being sent to his wife in Rochester NY at the following address:
>
> Janis Rickerman
> 25 Lida Lane
> Rochester NY 14616
>
> The town office did not think he had passed on but the last time I spoke
> with
> him, several years ago, his health was not good. The phone # provided by
> Jacob is out of service.
>
> best of luck,
>
> John, Unity ME
> Date sent: Sat, 9 Jun 2012 14:46:27 -0400
> From: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
> To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
> Copies to: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
> Subject: [Callers] Looking for Rich Castner -- can you
> help?
> Send reply to: Caller's discussion list <callers(a)sharedweight.net
> >
> <mailto:callers-
> request(a)sharedweight.net?subject=unsubscribe>
> <mailto:callers-
> request(a)sharedweight.net?subject=subscribe>
>
> [ Double-click this line for list subscription options ]
>
> Dear friends in the traditional dance community,
>
> I am looking for information that can help me locate Richard Castner,
> former head of the dance department at the State University of New York at
> Brockport, and accomplished square and contra dance caller. Rich authored
> some contra dances that are classics today, including "The Road to Boston,"
> and "All the Way to Galway."
>
> I am a musician (hammered dulcimer and percussion) who was often hired by
> Rich for dances in Rochester, NY, and it was through his mentoring that I
> attended my first Ralph Page dance camp at East Hill Farm and my first
> local contra dance in Nelson, NH. I moved to the Boston area in 1976
> because this kind of music and dance was a living tradition in the
> northeast and I wanted to be part of it.
>
> I?ve been living in Concord lately and playing snare drum with a local fife
> and drum company. I?m struck, as Rich must have been a long time ago, by
> the common ground in repertoire between the fiddle and fife in the
> 18thcentury, and I finally bonded with "The Downfall of Paris," a tune
> Rich had
> asked me to play for him and that I never liked. The very first drum part
> I memorized was "The Road to Boston," so of course Rich was on my mind. It
> would be wonderful to sit down with him and talk about old times, and to
> tell him about the ways in which my musical and personal life evolved as a
> result of his influence.
>
> I heard that he?d moved to Maine and was last seen at a festival in 2005.
> The
> last information I got is that he was living in Waldoboro and had restored
> the old family homestead to its 18th century appearance. Unfortunately,
> the contact information is out of date and all my leads so far have been
> dead ends.
>
> I would be most grateful for any information anyone could provide about
> Rich recently or in the form of a story from the past. There are other
> friends here in Boston who would like to be in touch with him, too. We
> agree that even sad news would at least bring closure.
>
> With thanks,
>
> Joyce Desmarais Isen, Concord, MA
>
> 978-369-2671
>
> joyceisen(a)gmail.com
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)sharedweight.net
> http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)sharedweight.net
> http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
>
>
> End of Callers Digest, Vol 94, Issue 3
> **************************************
>
Dear friends in the traditional dance community,
I am looking for information that can help me locate Richard Castner,
former head of the dance department at the State University of New York at
Brockport, and accomplished square and contra dance caller. Rich authored
some contra dances that are classics today, including “The Road to Boston,”
and “All the Way to Galway.”
I am a musician (hammered dulcimer and percussion) who was often hired by
Rich for dances in Rochester, NY, and it was through his mentoring that I
attended my first Ralph Page dance camp at East Hill Farm and my first
local contra dance in Nelson, NH. I moved to the Boston area in 1976
because this kind of music and dance was a living tradition in the
northeast and I wanted to be part of it.
I’ve been living in Concord lately and playing snare drum with a local fife
and drum company. I’m struck, as Rich must have been a long time ago, by
the common ground in repertoire between the fiddle and fife in the
18thcentury, and I finally bonded with “The Downfall of Paris,” a tune
Rich had
asked me to play for him and that I never liked. The very first drum part
I memorized was “The Road to Boston,” so of course Rich was on my mind. It
would be wonderful to sit down with him and talk about old times, and to
tell him about the ways in which my musical and personal life evolved as a
result of his influence.
I heard that he’d moved to Maine and was last seen at a festival in 2005. The
last information I got is that he was living in Waldoboro and had restored
the old family homestead to its 18th century appearance. Unfortunately,
the contact information is out of date and all my leads so far have been
dead ends.
I would be most grateful for any information anyone could provide about
Rich recently or in the form of a story from the past. There are other
friends here in Boston who would like to be in touch with him, too. We
agree that even sad news would at least bring closure.
With thanks,
Joyce Desmarais Isen, Concord, MA
978-369-2671
joyceisen(a)gmail.com
Hi Joyce,
Here's what I could find as contact info for Richer. He was
advertising himself five years ago as being available for calling,
and as far as I can tell without calling it, the 832-0888 number
seems to still be valid.
Phone numbers: 207-832-0888
207-832-0889
Email: richercastner(a)netscape.net
Jacob Bloom
At 12:00 PM 6/10/2012, you wrote:
>Date: Sat, 9 Jun 2012 14:46:27 -0400
>From: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
>To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
>Cc: Joyce Isen <joyceisen(a)gmail.com>
>Subject: [Callers] Looking for Rich Castner -- can you help?
>Message-ID:
> <CALr5BzkgG0nLHxmTZvNn2J8ZF_ZV0gHFX777jqDeCvn3ohFbBg(a)mail.gmail.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
>
>Dear friends in the traditional dance community,
>
>I am looking for information that can help me locate Richard Castner,
>former head of the dance department at the State University of New York at
>Brockport, and accomplished square and contra dance caller. Rich authored
>some contra dances that are classics today, including ?The Road to Boston,?
>and ?All the Way to Galway.?
>
>I am a musician (hammered dulcimer and percussion) who was often hired by
>Rich for dances in Rochester, NY, and it was through his mentoring that I
>attended my first Ralph Page dance camp at East Hill Farm and my first
>local contra dance in Nelson, NH. I moved to the Boston area in 1976
>because this kind of music and dance was a living tradition in the
>northeast and I wanted to be part of it.
>
>I?ve been living in Concord lately and playing snare drum with a local fife
>and drum company. I?m struck, as Rich must have been a long time ago, by
>the common ground in repertoire between the fiddle and fife in the
>18thcentury, and I finally bonded with ?The Downfall of Paris,? a tune
>Rich had
>asked me to play for him and that I never liked. The very first drum part
>I memorized was ?The Road to Boston,? so of course Rich was on my mind. It
>would be wonderful to sit down with him and talk about old times, and to
>tell him about the ways in which my musical and personal life evolved as a
>result of his influence.
>
>I heard that he?d moved to Maine and was last seen at a festival in 2005. The
>last information I got is that he was living in Waldoboro and had restored
>the old family homestead to its 18th century appearance. Unfortunately,
>the contact information is out of date and all my leads so far have been
>dead ends.
>
>I would be most grateful for any information anyone could provide about
>Rich recently or in the form of a story from the past. There are other
>friends here in Boston who would like to be in touch with him, too. We
>agree that even sad news would at least bring closure.
>
>With thanks,
>
>Joyce Desmarais Isen, Concord, MA
>
>978-369-2671
>
>joyceisen(a)gmail.com
>
>
>------------------------------
>
>_______________________________________________
>Callers mailing list
>Callers(a)sharedweight.net
>http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
>
>
>End of Callers Digest, Vol 94, Issue 2
>**************************************
Hey all,
Anyone have some interesting easy to intermediate triplets they'd be
willing to share?
I've got Ted's Triplets #3, #4, #6, Linda Leslie's Corner Triplet,
and David Smuckler's David's Triplet #5.
Thanks,
Paul W.
Prov. RI
On knowing what's been called on previous nights: in my previous post
I mentioned not calling a dance too frequently, but I also believe
there's value in repetition, as well as variety.
Dancers should have the opportunity to have the thrill (or comfort, at
least!) of recognizing a dance, and to develop favorites. The caller's
preparation job is to make sure it doesn't get to the point of "oh no,
not THAT one again!" :-)
~ Becky
in Tucson, Ariz. & Long Beach, Calif.
Becky's comments about keeping records of what dances are called are interesting. My experiences that this is often done at longer events with multiple callers in the same day, but I've never heard of it done at a community dance series. I do agree that it would be easy to do and potentially beneficial to many.
Brian Hamshar
Virginia
Becky Nankivell <becky4dance(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>Andy Shore (Tue, 29 May 2012 14:05:31) wrote:
>
>"How did the previous caller fair and were there any pitfalls or
>problems in that session that I can learn from or avoid? What dances
>have been called thus-far and should I avoid ones that are too similar
>(e.g., there were LOTS of dances with "balance the ring, california
>twirl" progressions called this weekend.)"
>
>Once upon a time when I was starting calling and also involved with
>organizing the multiple-caller contra dance in Tucson, Arizona, we
>maintained a notebook where each caller (or an organizer) recorded the
>dances that had been called in an evening, and a few other notes on
>the evening. The idea was that this would be a resource that a caller
>could use in planning the next dance.
>
>I don't know that any of the callers except for me actually ever used
>this (and I know I didn't use it frequently), and after a few years
>the practice was dropped.
>
>This still seems like a good idea to me for venues where there are
>multiple callers. I know that I keep a record myself so that I don't
>call the same dances too frequently at one venue, (and in planning an
>evening I check for the distribution of figures). If you're not a
>regular dancer at a venue (whether you're visiting, or just dancing
>less frequently), without some record it's hard to know what's been
>called.
>
>Nowadays, an electronic record would be easy to share, via web posting
>or a file. Our not using the TFTM notebook was probably because the
>dance planning happened at each caller's home, and the notebook wasn't
>handy.
>
>Are there communities that are keeping such records and making them
>available? Comments on that from organizers and/or callers?
>
>The trick is, as with any record keeping, it requires someone or some
>people to make sure it happens and to keep track of the file(s)...
>
>As an additional note, I believe the dance records are still in the
>TFTM archives, and undoubtedly show some interesting changes in the
>style of dances called. As someone with an interest in dance history,
>I think it would be great if there were more records like this out
>there.
>
>~ Becky
>_______________________________________________
>Callers mailing list
>Callers(a)sharedweight.net
>http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
> aware of it being done for contra dances at all.
>
> For English, several of the dances have email lists for people
> interested in that series and programs are posted after the fact. One
> person - Mary Luckhardt - maintains cumulative spreadsheets of dances
> called for all the series. I also collect that information from the
> posted programs and keep my own lists. This is important in English for
> a couple of reasons: There's a core set of dances that we agreed some
> years back we'd like to have done at least annually at our regular
> dances, so that we can maintain some kind of common repertoire in the
> face of the explosion of new and newly-reconstructed dances. We like to
> visit the dances that are on the Playford Ball program (different each
> year) so that people don't come to them cold, so it helps to know which
> ones have been done. And we don't like to repeat dances from week to
> week unintentionally. In English, a repeat is really a repeat - same
> figures, same tune, only one tune per dance. (And in venues like Palo
> Alto English, with a house band that's mostly the same from session to
> session, that tune is likely to sound very much the same each night it's
> played.)
For our Jamaica Plain Gender Free English dance we've kept a book to record dances for a long time. SInce 2010 I have been keeping a database up-to-date and exporting PDF files to our web page - one sorted by dance name and one sorted by evening.
http:www.lcfd.org/bgfe - links near the bottom of the page
Thank you David for these incredible resources - I just have to be careful
and allot myself certain amounts of time or I get so caught up in them that
I get nothing else done.
BTW, Someone just gave me 4 old cds of a bunch of square dances - they look
to be privately made cds with no real labels on them and just a list of the
dances on each (no authors/callers/etc). Bob Livingston is checking them
out. I found one that's to the song "The Battle of New Orleans" which I
looked/searched and found out it was recorded by Bill Castner.
Patricia Campbell
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: David.Millstone(a)valley.net (David Millstone)
> To: trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com, callers(a)sharedweight.net
> Cc:
> Date: 30 May 2012 19:46:20 -0400
> Subject: [Callers] Square Dance resources
> Dear dance colleagues,
>
> Here is information for those who are interested in square dances.
>
> 1) NEW SQUARE DANCE VIDEOS
> You probably already know about the Dare To Be Square weekend held last
> November at the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, NC. An earlier
> e-mail provided links to 100 videos from that event. I'm happy to announce
> that an additional 25 video clips are now available of edited interviews
> with the six callers who were on staff: Phil Jamison, Larry Edelman, Bob
> Dalsemer, Jim Mayo, Larry Edelman, and Bill Litchman.
>
> http://squaredancehistory.org/**omeka/exhibits/show/brasstown-**interviews<http://squaredancehistory.org/omeka/exhibits/show/brasstown-interviews>
>
> This link will take you to one part of the prototype of our new Square
> Dance History Project. The home page for the exhibit provides links to
> each caller, and that subsequent page will offer two tabs, one for the
> caller's bio and one that takes you to a page listing those interviews,
> with a summary of the contents. Click on the photograph or underlined link
> to the right of each summary to bring up the video clip itself. In all,
> there are about two hours of interview footage available for your viewing.
>
> Our web designer and others continue to fine-tune the user interface and
> the underlying database, so we're not ready for the official launch of the
> full site yet... but there seemed no reason not to share this particular
> digital exhibit now.
>
> 2) THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS!
> Funding for the videotaping was provided by a grant from Country Dance and
> Song Society. We also want to thank the other organizations that are
> providing financial support for the Square Dance History Project: the Lloyd
> Shaw Foundation, CALLERLAB, and The ARTS.
>
> 3) LINKS TO DANCE VIDEOS
> In case you've misplaced the information, you can view the original 100
> dance videos at two locations:
>
> YouTube channel
> http://www.youtube.com/user/**SquareDanceHistory/videos<http://www.youtube.com/user/SquareDanceHistory/videos>
>
> VidCaster
> http://squaredancehistory.**vidcaster.com/<http://squaredancehistory.vidcaster.com/>
>
> To date, the dance clips on these two channels have been viewed nearly
> 25,000 times in the five months since they were uploaded. Feel free to pass
> along any of these links to others who might be interested.
>
> 4) NEW SQUARE DANCE CHANNEL
> In addition to the YouTube channel listed above, we've started a new
> channel that will include some of the additional material that is being
> uploaded:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/user/**SquareDanceHistory2<http://www.youtube.com/user/SquareDanceHistory2>
>
> Among the clips are a dozen examples of French-Canadian squares, footage
> of CT caller Bob Livingston, some Super 8 footage taken 30+ years ago by
> Bob Dalsemer in West Virginia and western Pennsylvania, several
> demonstration numbers by groups showcasing the Lloyd Shaw style of dancing
> and choreography, squares from the Missouri Ozarks with lots of jigging,
> dances called by Dick Leger, Earl Johnston, Red Warrick and many more,
> examples and instruction in Kentucky set running, some precise modern
> square dancing from a Tech Squares weekend, and a talk by Herb Egender, who
> was a member of Pappy Shaw's Cheyenne Mountain Dancers on their first trip
> to Washington, DC in 1939. In all, there are nearly 60 square dance videos
> on that channel with more being added each week.
>
> 5) RINER, VA, DARE TO BE SQUARE
> Another DTBS event was held in early May in Riner, Virginia, with Phil
> Jamison, Michael Ismerio, and Bill Ohse as callers. Bill Ohse (b.1938) is a
> highly-regarded West Virginia caller of traditional squares; we now have
> video footage of his sessions and several interviews with him. Edited
> footage of these Appalachian squares will be uploaded shortly.
>
> 6) UPDATE ON THE DTBS SYLLABUS
> Finally, I've been told that the final draft of the Brasstown syllabus and
> the master CD with more than 150 mp3 audio files (including instruction as
> well as dance calls) are ready for final layout and production. CDSS is
> aiming to have the combination booklet/CD available by this summer's dance
> camp season. Stay tuned... we'll certainly let you know when this treasure
> trove is ready.
>
> In the meantime, enjoy the comments by our six well-informed callers, and
> thanks for your continued interest in our rich square dance heritage.
>
> David Millstone
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)sharedweight.net
> http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
>
>
Dear dance colleagues,
Here is information for those who are interested in square dances.
1) NEW SQUARE DANCE VIDEOS
You probably already know about the Dare To Be Square weekend held last November
at the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, NC. An earlier e-mail provided
links to 100 videos from that event. I'm happy to announce that an additional
25 video clips are now available of edited interviews with the six callers who
were on staff: Phil Jamison, Larry Edelman, Bob Dalsemer, Jim Mayo, Larry Edelman,
and Bill Litchman.
http://squaredancehistory.org/omeka/exhibits/show/brasstown-interviews
This link will take you to one part of the prototype of our new Square Dance History
Project. The home page for the exhibit provides links to each caller, and that
subsequent page will offer two tabs, one for the caller's bio and one that takes
you to a page listing those interviews, with a summary of the contents. Click
on the photograph or underlined link to the right of each summary to bring up
the video clip itself. In all, there are about two hours of interview footage
available for your viewing.
Our web designer and others continue to fine-tune the user interface and the underlying
database, so we're not ready for the official launch of the full site yet... but
there seemed no reason not to share this particular digital exhibit now.
2) THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS!
Funding for the videotaping was provided by a grant from Country Dance and Song
Society. We also want to thank the other organizations that are providing financial
support for the Square Dance History Project: the Lloyd Shaw Foundation, CALLERLAB,
and The ARTS.
3) LINKS TO DANCE VIDEOS
In case you've misplaced the information, you can view the original 100 dance
videos at two locations:
YouTube channel
http://www.youtube.com/user/SquareDanceHistory/videos
VidCaster
http://squaredancehistory.vidcaster.com/
To date, the dance clips on these two channels have been viewed nearly 25,000
times in the five months since they were uploaded. Feel free to pass along any
of these links to others who might be interested.
4) NEW SQUARE DANCE CHANNEL
In addition to the YouTube channel listed above, we've started a new channel that
will include some of the additional material that is being uploaded:
http://www.youtube.com/user/SquareDanceHistory2
Among the clips are a dozen examples of French-Canadian squares, footage of CT
caller Bob Livingston, some Super 8 footage taken 30+ years ago by Bob Dalsemer
in West Virginia and western Pennsylvania, several demonstration numbers by groups
showcasing the Lloyd Shaw style of dancing and choreography, squares from the
Missouri Ozarks with lots of jigging, dances called by Dick Leger, Earl Johnston,
Red Warrick and many more, examples and instruction in Kentucky set running, some
precise modern square dancing from a Tech Squares weekend, and a talk by Herb
Egender, who was a member of Pappy Shaw's Cheyenne Mountain Dancers on their first
trip to Washington, DC in 1939. In all, there are nearly 60 square dance videos
on that channel with more being added each week.
5) RINER, VA, DARE TO BE SQUARE
Another DTBS event was held in early May in Riner, Virginia, with Phil Jamison,
Michael Ismerio, and Bill Ohse as callers. Bill Ohse (b.1938) is a highly-regarded
West Virginia caller of traditional squares; we now have video footage of his
sessions and several interviews with him. Edited footage of these Appalachian
squares will be uploaded shortly.
6) UPDATE ON THE DTBS SYLLABUS
Finally, I've been told that the final draft of the Brasstown syllabus and the
master CD with more than 150 mp3 audio files (including instruction as well as
dance calls) are ready for final layout and production. CDSS is aiming to have
the combination booklet/CD available by this summer's dance camp season. Stay
tuned... we'll certainly let you know when this treasure trove is ready.
In the meantime, enjoy the comments by our six well-informed callers, and thanks
for your continued interest in our rich square dance heritage.
David Millstone