Rich,

You've pretty much summed up my approach (and that of other callers I know) to calling 
medleys at a regular contra dance -- i.e., not at a festival.  A medley is a fun surprise 
for the dancers, there is no need to "warn" them about it.  Straightforward 
dances are used, so it is arguably less challenging to beginners than doing a dance with 
contra corners or having a shadow.

That being said, I do occasionally encounter a hallful of dancers where I feel, 
on balance, a medley would not be a good idea.  But that is the exception 
rather than the rule.

Mark Widmer

On Tue, 1 Feb 2011 19:27:31 +0000 (UTC),[email protected]  wrote:

 Hi,

 My two cent regarding medleys.

 Most all medleys I've ever encountered were not extra length, usually lasting
 at most six times through per unique dance.? Medleys by nature must be easy
 dances with progressions that fit together nicely.?

 I frequently call a medley as the last dance of the evening.? None of the moves
 are ones that have not been used somewhere else in the evening.

 Usually I will ask the band to play three tunes, 4-4-5, and I will?signal
 the tune changes myself.? The dance changes when the
 tune does, but you know that part well.

 I really don't see medleys as being any more challenging than any other contra
 dance.? Every dance should be just fun, and the?switch is what makes it so. ?
 Each dance in the medley should be totally accessible to all skill levels at
 that point in the evening. ? If there is a bit of fumbling about at the switch,
 I think that just adds to the fun.? I just make sure I make my calls a bit
 earlier and very clearly, with a "Listen UP, Listen UP" thrown in at the dance 
switch.

 Perhaps we're talking about a different sort of medley.

 Hope all you northeasterners are braving the latest storm okay.? Looks
 nasty.??Nice sunny day here in the Pacific NW.

 Rich

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