I don't have any great wisdom to impart here, but it's a general topic I'm 
extremely interested in.  I've been more concerned with these questions in the 
English dance scene, and I want to validate that these are difficult questions.

I don't understand what the goal of an advanced contra dance series / session 
is.  The very occasional attempts to have such a contra series here in the Bay 
Area have, in my view, foundered because of really unclear intent.  (The idea 
has been to have special dances with a faster pace of instruction and less 
coverage of basic figures, made more explicit by not having a beginner lesson  
- but first timers show up anyway, regulars who can't manage show up anyway, 
the caller has to accomodate them because it's no fun to make everybody try to 
do dances that are too hard for the room, and then there's no visible 
difference between a regular and a Zesty/advanced session.  (I think these 
sessions ended up getting called "Zesty" because "Advanced" sounded too 
snooty/exclusionary, but of course all contra dances should be zesty.). 

I think the point of  a NEFFA medley - there's no teaching and no walkthroughs  
- so you can't really do it if you don't know what you're doing and that 
includes being able to execute this list of figures is pretty clear.  (Although 
I see that Bill Olson disagrees that people who can't do it should be kept from 
doing it, rather that the people who can do it should help get them where they 
need to be, and that the idea of excluding people is antithetical to contra 
dancing.  Which I agree is a completely valid and coherent position, but which 
I think only has a chance of working (in the sense of medley lines not breaking 
down, etc) if most of the people who can't do it so there are enough people 
there who *can* do it to absorb the rest.). But at least medley is a fairly 
clearly definable thing: For the duration of this session, contra dance 
continuously with no pauses, no walkthroughs, and no teaching.

What is the goal of an advanced contra session?

Digression to ECD.  ECD really has a qualitative difference between 
beginner/intermediate level material and experiences and high-end experiences.  
It became really clear to me going to Lenox Assembly last year that there is a 
level of participation in the creation of beauty - exercising dance technique 
in the service of a choreographer's vision - at the high end which is still 
social because all the dancers are participating in that and you do have a 
sense of all being on the same team to do that; there's a unity of purpose in 
that production, and the people who select for this are people who are willing 
to actually work on learning the dances and doing them well, which necessitates 
working together.  (That was the last Lenox; it's followed this year by "The 
Phoenix", same venue, same time, same purpose.). This isn't exactly an 
invitational event -  anyone can apply - but to have your application accepted 
I think you have to be a known to the organizers as a good taking-it-seriously
  dancer or be able to have someone whose judgment they trust vouch for you.  
That is of course exclusionary AF (and structurally  resembles the kind of 
old-boy (legacy and recommendation) network that often silently implements 
racist and sexist exclusion) but it has to be to accomplish the goals of the 
weekend.  An amazing thing that I hardly get anywhere else was that I, as a 
dancer, could really rely on everybody else to be doing their part and keep my 
focus on doing my own part well [which certainly includes making my 
appointments, giving good weight, making eye contact].  It was worth a 
cross-country airfare and a not-cheap stay in a B&B to do it and I'd do it 
again.  It was a sublime experience I couldn't get at a regular dance or at 
most dance camps.)

At dance camps there are often sessions of advanced English dances (usually 
complicated or novel figures) and they always schedule "For All" sessions 
opposite them.  It's not really functional to do a whole session on Andrew 
Shaw's reconstructions of dances from the early 1700s if people don't have a 
fairly full understanding of common figures including contra corners, heys for 
three and four, etc - and it's pretty great to get six of those beautiful 
dances in an hour instead of spending 40 minutes on one of them, which is what 
would happen with beginners.  In those sessions, if you don't send the people 
who can't manage over to the "For All" class, la

Locally we have an experienced English dance which has devolved to "great music 
and efficient teaching and prompting of mostly dances experienced dancers have 
done before:', which is lovely.  People who can't manage are accepted and 
looked out for as much as possible.  Some things that ought, in my view,  to be 
possible (as, for example, do a no-walk-through of a dance with really standard 
figures, so you get high return on time invested because the investment is 
minimal) are not reliably possible.  The only time I tried that it turned out 
that there was someone at the experienced English dance who'd never done any 
English dancing before.  The frustration of my scheme as a caller 
notwithstanding, it's still a very nice dance to go to as an experienced 
dancer, but it's not the sublime experience of Lenox Assembly or the somewhat 
challenging experience of a dance camp session covering unfamiliar material at 
a fast clip.)

All of that is to say,  different goals call for different measures, different 
measures produce different outcomes.

Back to contra.  What is an advanced contra dancer?  (Erik Hoffman in one of 
his books has an advanced contra dancer aas someone who's reached the point of 
wanting to do what's best for the set, embrace and look out for new dancers, 
etc, etc.  Some very skilled contra dancers are primarily in it for personal 
expression - flourishes and improv hrough the dance.  Others know all the 
figures and are always on time, leave people they interact with pointing the 
right direction for their next move, etc.

What is the goal of an advanced contra dance?  (More dancing less teaching?  
Ability to do "Pinball Wizard" without confusing anybody to death?  I'm pretty 
sure it isn't "use all your skil to express the intention of the choreogtrapher 
as faithfully as possible and thereby be inside and part of a beautiful  and 
emotionally expressive work of participatory art" - which really is teh 
highest-end ECD goal.)

So that question is both because of my lack of experience with existing 
advanced dances and Socratically - what are you trying to do, and then what 
means will help you achieve it?  [And that may raise a bigger question of "what 
is the goal of contra dancing?"]

(And I've been in advanced ECD sessions at camps where the caller removed 
people who in the caller's view couldn't manage and were dragging down the 
class.  While they could just hop over to the simultaneous "for all" class, 
it's a very uncomfortable moment for everybody.  At a weekend where there may 
be only one session of the advanced class if it's going to happen it has to 
happen during that session, and however discreetly the caller tries to do it it 
risks humiliating the person to whome it is done.  At a weeklong camp you can 
evaluate doing the first session and discreetly advise the unqualified person 
afterward.  When it's done in session, as someone who isn't currently at risk 
of having that happen to him, it's simultaneously a bummer and a relief.)

I think it may be harder to turn on a dime in English than in contra because 
there are specific tunes for specific dances, musicians may practice them in 
advance, you can't make them practice enough tunes for every eventuality, so 
you have to be pretty canny when planning to accommodate likely eventualities.  
In contra, band can play the same hot tunes for easy dances and hard ones, so 
the only difference for *them* (aside from maybe starting at more merciful 
tempos) is how llong they have to pick tunes during the walkthrough.

Purely for callers dealing with the situation once it's happened already: I 
don't know if advanced contras are meant to be difficult/spatially-challenging 
etc contras.  You could in general try to accommodate.a mixed level floor by 
trading complexity for novelty.  Unusual figures equalize things for everybody 
(if nobody's used to a left-hand chain the beginners are at no disadvantage).  
You can look for dances where what partners do are absoutely symmetrical and 
socially-engineer partnerships where at least one member knows what they're 
doing and the other can keep their eye on them.  

2) As an organizer: as I keep saying here, what you can do depends on what your 
goals are.  What does "advanced" mean?  [It's obviously different from 
"experienced" becasue some people have lots of experience and still can't 
manage.  What are the set of things that callers should be able to expect of 
the dancers?  Write that down on the flyer and put up a sign at registration: 
"This is a dance for people who can confidently dance heys for four, dolphin 
heys,  and contra corners without any instruction, who don't get dizzy or 
disoriented easily, and who are able to assist partners and neighbors in doing 
their parts."  I think that's the best you can do in helping unqualified people 
to self-select, and avoid Dunning-Kruger 
don't-know-enough-to-know-you-don't-know-enough self assessments.  (But you run 
the risk of filtering out people who can manage fine but know they're not 
perfect and then decide to stay away, so you might have to reach out to invite 
those people as well even if it's 
 an open-to-all-qualified event.)

3) How do we elevate the dance level.  I sure don't have a good 100% answer.  I 
think our having collectively determined that contra and ECD sessions are 
parties rather than classes limits how much plain instruction you can do. Style 
workshops seem to exist outside the universe of regular dances (as separate 
events or at camps/festivals) so you already have to be pretty committed before 
you get to one.    So this leaves callers who want to teach basically having to 
slip in concise tips which pay off immediately in the dance you're walking 
through, perhaps programming to make that same tip pay off more than once in 
the evening in order to reenforce it, etc.  [I spent 30 seconds on arms in 
poussettes in the English dance I called yesterday and it paid off.]. And you 
can't do too many of those in one session, so progress is slow.  It may be 
possible to get a little more teaching in via pointing out the magic moment in 
the dance that can be achieved in this particular way, but it really 
 does have to have a real payoff.

I have not really explored this yet in myown but I *think* there's some 
possiblities in positional contra calling, even if role names are sometimes 
used, in getting people to better understand the whole dance.  (Thsi is 
definitely the case in English.). In the  contra-specific positional calling 
I've danced to, it more often identifies the person who has momentum forward or 
the person whose right hand is free, etc, and in well-crafted modern dances 
that shoudl get people thinking about and feeling the flow that will help them 
through the pattern, and I think getting used to that and being able to look 
for that thread of motion rather than clunking through figures, stopping, and 
then thinking about the next one is (aft er not hurting anybody, giving good 
weight, ending swings on the right side) is really the beginning of good modern 
contra style and also of putting mroe figures on autopilot and being present in 
the dance.  That opens up more brain space for unusual figures *if they fl
 ow*.  

Thanks for raising these important questions.  I hope it's clear that I don't 
think I have all the answers, but I'm glad we're talking about it.

-- Alan

________________________________________
From: Maia McCormick via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, April 16, 2023 6:49 PM
To: Shared Weight Contra Callers
Subject: [Callers] Advanced dances gone awry

I attended an advanced dance this afternoon that was intermediate at best, and 
had a few raw beginners in there, and it got me wondering:

1. As callers, what do you do when a bunch of intermediate and/or beginner 
dancers show up to an advanced session?
2. As organizers, what do you do to try and keep your advanced sessions... 
advanced? (Either in messaging or at the dance itself?) Obviously I'm not 
advocating for kicking anyone out, but if a bunch of newbies show up at an 
advanced session, both they and the dancers who came for gnarly stuff are going 
to have a less-than-ideal time.
3. As dancers (/organizers/callers), how do we elevate the dance level of our 
local communities? I'm talking about increasing familiarity with some of the 
less common moves (contracorners, left hand chains, etc.) but also about 
building awareness of the dance and recovery skills, and technical things like 
giving satisfying weight, swinging correctly, guiding linemates into the next 
figure, etc.

I welcome any thoughts and musings!

Cheers,
Maia (Brooklyn, NY)
--
Maia McCormick (she/her)
917.279.8194
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to