Thanks for the kind words, Ridge. A minor correction: Ed Durlacher (who indeed 
influenced recreational square dancing to an astounding degree) died while I 
was still in grade school. It was his son Don, who inherited his Jones Beach 
summer series, that I danced to around 1970. I learned more about crowd 
psychology and working with first-timers from Don than from any other single 
caller, through a few one-on-one conversations but mostly through watching him 
teach and call.

There have been many excellent suggestions in this thread. I’ll add one: Learn 
from as many different sources as you can. Squares are much more dependent on 
the caller’s personality than contras are, and every caller has a unique style 
and favorite wordings. If you listen mainly to one caller, you’ll find yourself 
copying him or her, at least for a while. If you listen to several, you’ll 
absorb what you like about each of them. (“If you copy from one source, it’s 
plagiarism; if you copy from three or more, it’s research.”)

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


From: Ridge Kennedy via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, March 19, 2023 12:51 PM
To: Maia McCormick <[email protected]>
Cc: Shared Weight Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Subject: [Callers] Re: Starting to call squares at contra dances

Maia McCormick said:

On Sat, Mar 18, 2023 at 12:21 PM Maia McCormick via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
After dancing to some of Lisa's Greenleaf's 🔥 squares at Beantown Stomp last 
weekend, I'm feeling inspired to add some to my repertoire. (To be clear, I'm 
looking for squares-for-contra-dancers, not MWSD squares.)

  1.  Any resources to recommend for someone learning to call squares?
You've received many excellent recommendations. Add to them Tony Parkes' dance 
collection books --- Shadrack's Delight and (I think) Son of Shadrack. They 
include squares that are highly contra dancer accessible. And since Tony can't 
toot his own horn, do get his book on square calling and do attend any dances 
he calls if possible. He danced on Long Island to  Ed Durlacher's calls --- 
author of Honor Your 
Partner<https://www.abebooks.com/HONOR-PARTNER-Durlacher-Bonanza-Books-New/22592205866/bd>
 and one of the leading lights of the huge post WWII square dance explosion. 
This was a pre-television era when square dances were staged in Central Park 
and thousands of people participated. He's your finest living link in this 
great tradition. (Pete met Toshi Seeger at the square dance in NYC).

Ted Sannella, in addition to starting the Ralph Page Legacy weekend, included 
the idea of publishing a syllabus with all the dances included. These syllabi, 
maintained over the years by David Smukler, are an extraordinary resource and 
include lots and lots of great square dance material/info. All are available 
online via the University of New Hampshire Library. (google search will find 
them)

Organize Dare to be Square: NYC and build your own caller education track into 
it.


  1.  Any advice to share, techniques to look into, things you wish you'd known 
when starting out / wish contra callers knew about squares?
"Laugh when you make a mistake," John Krumm circa 1995. Have fun and share your 
joy with your dancers. If anything goes wrong, roll it in a tight little ball 
and tuck it away in a pocket somewhere to think about later. Emotions are 
contagious. You want to spread happiness.

When you call squares, you're part of the band. This is super true with 
singers, but also when calling any square. You're the lead instrument. Your 
sound people should know to dial back the band and keep you in front in the mix.

No cards, phones, tablets, or other distractions allowed while you're calling a 
square. Know your material cold. Keep your attention reserved for your dancers 
and your musicians.

When calling for contra dancers, call to the music--not the dancers. If a 
square falls apart, don't watch it -- you can't fix it on the fly. If things go 
crazy all over the floor, laugh, square 'em up, and start up again.

  1.  Suggestions for callers to look up on YouTube (besides Lisa ofc) / fave 
videos?
On the dance history project site, do watch Tony calling the Merry Go Round.

  1.  Favorite dances that I should add to my box?

Many of Ted's dances can be tricky for contra dancers and tricky to teach. But 
Joyeux Quadrille is not.  You can dance it to the name tune per Ted's 
suggestion (a jig, btw), but done to southern reels with energy, it can bring 
down the house. Tony does a neat change-up that's easy to accomplish with the 
long lines to corner swing transition, alternating between ladies and gents 
with the allemandes (and you can throw other stuff in there--an opportunity for 
fun).

Tony's dances -- for starters, Star Breakdown, Left-Hand Star Breakdown, and 
Duck Through and Swing

Contra dancers like keepers -- where you end each time through the figure with 
your original partner.

Tom Hinds: Shooting Stars

Gene Hubert: Kimmswick Express (32-bar version) and Early Autumn Express 
(32-bar version)

Bob Isaacs is making up come contra dancer accessible squares these days. And 
he has some grid squares that are quite manageable when you have dancers who 
can handle all the basics. (And a shout-out to Kathy Anderson who was calling 
grid square at the Ralph Page Legacy Weekend back in the late '90s.)

For graduate studies, explore The Teakettle, created by Ron Buchanan.

Get comfortable with doing Appalachian-style squares where you do a visiting 
couples figure like Rights Hands Across or Duck for the Oyster. Do the figure, 
then it's "circle up four, find another couple and circle some more." These are 
dances you can call for dance parties, contra dancers, and anywhere in between. 
You can start one up and people can join at any time. Visiting couples figures 
can be boring in a four-couple square and a lot more fun in a big circle.

And laugh when you make a mistake. Have fun.

R

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