Thanks Delia - that sounds magical. I had a similar experience at a house dance 
one night. We were dancing to CDs, and the power went out. Half the dancers had 
instruments in their cars, and we soon had acoustic music going, somebody else 
had a camping lantern, and we boiled the billy on the gas. It was a memorable 
evening.
 The piano - 88 little mistakes waiting to happen; Peter Barnes 



----- Original Message ----
From: Delia Clark <[email protected]>
To: Caller's discussion list <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, 5 August, 2010 1:40:05 AM
Subject: Re: [Callers] Sung contras

Merging the last two topics of sung contras and calling without a band, I'll 
just relay a WONDERFUL experience I had last summer that I have thought about 
repeating intentionally.  The band had set up, sound system was tested, the 
teens I was calling for flooded into the barn post-dinner, when Crack! Smash! 
the power went out.  While the band quickly moved onto the floor near an old 
piano and preparing to play unamplified, I taught a dance, calling as loudly as 
I could through an improvised bullhorn made of cardboard.  We got through the 
first dance, then as I was teaching the second dance, Crackle!  the power came 
back on.  The band was having a hard time with the beater old piano and 
couldn't 
hear each other so they very much wanted to go back up on stage and use the 
sound system and I knew my voice wouldn't hold out so I supported that, despite 
how magical it all felt with the acoustic music and hurricane lanterns hanging 
about.  To avoid having everyone having to stand around any more, I asked if 
there were any songs that the kids all knew.  They quickly burst into song and 
I 
just started calling to their singing and it worked beautifully!!  We did a 
whole dance that way and it was a blast for all of us.  It was a repetitive 
song, native american I think, not a lot of verses, but with a solid rhythm, 
and 
I think they loved the DIY nature of it.  This was a group of kids who were 
travelling together for a whole year by canoe, skis and hiking, so they knew a 
lot of songs.  I'm not sure it would work for just anyone, but something fun to 
keep in mind!  Kind of like Alabama Gal or other play dances, I guess, but more 
adult and open ended...


On Aug 4, 2010, at 11:12 AM, Jeff Kaufman wrote:

> Jeanette Mill wrote:
>> 
>> I have a vague recollection of hearing about sung contras one time,
>> and was wondering if indeed there are any, and any resources
>> available for learning them (from here in Australia). Just hearing
>> Ralph Sweet on the CDSS website doing The Auctioneer reminded me.
>> 
> 
> The closest I can think of are:
> 
> 1. The rock contras I've seen at the flurry and falcon ridge.  I think
>    it's kathryn wedderburn calling and the eclectic dance orchestra
>    playing.  They take rock songs and adapt them to contras in the
>    style of singing squares.
> 
> 2. Bands singing.  Some contra dance bands, such as "blue moose and
>    the unbuttoned zippers" and "the forks of nature", both from the
>    boston area, mic vocalists and will sing once the caller drops out.
>    The singing isn't to communicate the calls, it's just part of the
>    music.
> 
> Both of these are difficult to do well, primarily because of phrasing.
> 
> Jeff
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<>:<>:<>:<>:<>:<>:<>:<>:<>

Delia Clark
PO Box 45
Taftsville, VT 05073
802-457-2075
[email protected]




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