Hello,

  The following article "On Respectful Communications with Stage Talent" was 
just published in the Santa Barbara Country Dance Society, Dance Star, Spring 
2006 quarterly newsletter.  It is well written by Suzanne Duffy and Jeff Spero 
of Los Angeles, and contains some useful guidelines applicable to most dance 
communities.  Some may wish to print it and make it available at dances.

  Enjoy,

  Karen Fontana
  California
  ***************************

  The pdf version is available for download at:
  http://www.sbcds.org/download/


  Santa Barbara Country Dance Society 
  DANCE STAR

Issue Number 67, Spring 2006 • News, Articles & Calendar of Events 

  On Respectful Communications with Stage Talent 

  Over the many years of dancing, calling, and playing music at contra dances, 
we have noticed a dominant thread about our fellow dancers – they can be quite 
opinionated about their callers, musicians and sound engineers. We appreciate 
the 
passion; however, in recent months there have been incidents in the way these 
opinions have been expressed in Santa Barbara that have been unhelpful, even 
hurtful and for some, decrease our desire to take the Carrillo Ballroom stage. 
So we 
offer four guidelines that will aid in communicating with onstage talent: 

  • Please hold your comments to the caller or musicians to the break or the 
end 
of the evening. The talent is concentrating hard during the dance to provide 
the best 
experience for the dancers. Comments while the dance is in progress are a major
distraction and almost always degrade the quality of the calling, music or both.

  • Keep in mind that it is impossible to always please everyone. While we are 
very happy to listen your point of view, please consider that we often get very 
contradicting suggestions from different dancers. For example, one dancer may 
believe the band is playing too fast while another may think the band is 
playing 
too slow (and the caller may think we are playing juuuussst right!). 

  • If you have difficulty hearing the caller, or the volume is uncomfortable 
to 
you, please don’t tell the band. They can’t do anything about it. Kindly let 
the sound 
engineer (or the caller when he/she is not calling/teaching) know your 
observations. 

  • Remember that while the callers, musicians and sound engineers try our 
hardest to make the dance special, for the most part we are not professionals. 
Just like you, this is what we do for fun. We show up early, leave late, and 
set up 
lots of equipment. And though we do get paid, the amount we get barely
compensates us for our time and expenses. Our real compensation is the
appreciation we get from the dancers (so don’t be afraid to whoop and holler 
– we love it!). And we are trying to reach for the stars – to create a fresh, 
exciting
experience for the dancers. Occasionally, what we try might not work. But often 
it
does work, and when it does the dance benefits accordingly (more whooping and 
hollering!). 

  The success of a dance, most would agree, is the effective interaction 
between 
the caller, musicians, and the dancers themselves. (Certainly others also play 
key roles – sound engineer, volunteers, dance producers…but the core is these 
three elements.) This is not a performance the talent provides for the dancers,
rather a cooperative effort to provide an exhilarating experience for everyone. 
The dancers feed off the energy of the caller and musicians, and that energy 
then
gets sent back to the caller and musicians who feed off the dancers. The more 
the
talent feels the respect and appreciation of the dancers, the more they will 
give
back in return.  And that’s what we are all after, isn’t it? 


  Suzanne Duffy, Jeffrey Spero 
  Los Angeles, California




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  Karen Fontana 
www.karenscontracorner.com 
[email protected] 
(H) 650-691-9663

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