Yes! Calling squares, especially straight-ahead old-timey squares, is 
definitely a right-brain experience. Beth says that when she really got the 
hang of calling that kind of square, it carried over into her contra calling.

I grew up with both squares and contras and learned to appreciate the merits of 
both. For me, calling a contra is something like following a recipe and 
measuring every ingredient, whereas calling a square is like tossing in the 
things I have on hand and tasting as I go. I often get into what feels like an 
altered state of consciousness while calling a square, whether during a 
memorized figure or an improvised break.

Tony Parkes
Billerica, Mass.
www.hands4.com
New book! Square Dance Calling: An Old Art for a New Century
(available soon)

Sent from my phone.

________________________________
From: Susan English via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, August 1, 2021 9:00:51 AM
To: Woody Lane <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [Callers] Re: Paperless Calling

Woody's mention of jazz brought up a deep memory for me.  I was patter-calling 
a square in Ann Arbor, and the fiddle player walked over to stand very close to 
me.  He started playing a shuffle in harmony to my patter.  I got into the 
dance such that all my thought processes disappeared. It was just me, the 
music, and the dancers.  It was a life-changing experience for me.  I say my 
calling shifted from left brain to right brain that evening.  I wonder if this 
is what other callers experience when they call without cards.  I still refer 
to my cards for contras, especially at the beginning and end of a dance, but 
the calling comes from deep inside me.  Susan

On Sat, Jul 31, 2021 at 9:36 PM Woody Lane via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
This has been a fascinating thread, with a huge amount of valuable information, 
perspectives, and technical options.

I am impressed by those callers who can call from memory. Since for contras I 
don't have a good one. (Squares seem to come naturally to my memory; contras 
not so much). I still use cards. And my backup is a potpourri of photocopies of 
the cards and a pile of pdf versions of them. Although with all the ideas 
expressed in this thread for digital notes and backups, I am considering 
expanding and trying some.

But I was thinking that, memorizing or not, using virtual or not, using cards 
or not -- this is a bit like playing jazz. There's no single best way to play 
jazz. Likewise, I think there are lots of ways of creating a good evening with 
calling. Some rules -- like watching the dancers and reacting to the them and 
the musicians -- are universal, but every caller plays the way that works for 
them. All these techniques should not make a caller feel bad or inadequate. On 
the contrary, they illuminate the wide array of tools that we have access to, 
each in our own way to make the best of all that jazz.

Woody
--
Woody Lane
Caller, Percussive Dancer
Roseburg, Oregon
________________________________

On 7/28/2021 9:45 AM, Susan English via Contra Callers wrote:
As I begin to travel again, I want to leave my dance cards home and access all 
my material virtually.  I have 2 questions:

1. Which virtual method (or app) do you prefer for accessing your dance 
instructions and notes?
2. What is your back-up plan at a dance if you can't get on the internet?

Susan  [🎶]  [☺]
330-347-8155
woosterdance.com<http://woosterdance.com>





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--
Susan  [🎶]  [☺]
330-347-8155
woosterdance.com<http://woosterdance.com>


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