Hi all, 

Interesting discussion.  I've excerpted some of these emails (stripping names 
and email addresses) and sent the question on to the organizers list.


I could understand feeling frustrated with a desire to have more gigs than one 
is getting.  But I also can see
the point of the organizers, whose first responsibility is not
necessarily to cultivate growth in the caller/musician community but is
rather to run a series that meets the expectations of the dancers and
the organizers themselves.


I am a caller who also is a founding co-organizer of our local series.  We have 
a certain mission and standards for skill/expertise/style of performers.  Ours 
is one of those with only 12 slots per year, and I generally call about half of 
those.  This leaves 6 caller slots and 12 band slots.  And frankly, that's not 
a lot of room for "giving someone a chance" (given the aforementioned 
responsibility to dancers/organizers over caller/musician cultivation.)

That said, our committee does support caller/musician growth in other ways.  

We have an open, all-comers band for our community dance (modeled on bands I'd 
witnessed with David Kaynor's All-Comers Band dances in western Massachusetts 
and The Lamprey River Band's open stage policy in Dover, NH)  We also do some 
homework, asking around about bands who come to us wanting to be booked 
(checking with trusted organizer colleagues or other dancers, listening to demo 
recordings, going with our gut feelings, etc.) and have sometimes booked bands 
that were new to us.

We have run additional dances in our hall (on off nights) including one for a 
group of developing callers in Maine, in conjunction with a short 
workshop/discussion the next day.  As a caller I have occasionally offered a 
slot in my program to developing callers who I think have particular promise.  
(Which is to say, they seem like they might be becoming a caller I could stand 
behind - a subjective analysis to be sure.)

So, back to your question, as a new caller I benefited from open mic and 
multi-caller nights as well as dance camps.  In my experience it was most 
important to develop trusted relationships with mentors and colleagues.  As has 
been said, they should be people who are willing to give you honest feedback on 
your calling (and from whom you are willing to receive such honest feedback) 
and given this, they will be more likely to refer you for gigs that they can't 
do, or to vouch for you as references, etc.  I've played both roles, as 
mentee/colleague and mentor/critic.  Good for all concerned.

And I agree completely with Seth's pithy comment.  Excruciating to listen to 
recordings or to watch video, but enlightening and invaluable.

And finally, I'd say that as I've grown more as a caller, I've found myself 
having just as much fun calling for family/community/school/small dances with 
clueless clientele as I do calling for the hot urban-style dances with highly 
skilled clientele.  I'd caution anyone against dismissing the delights and 
satisfactions of the former in favor of the glory of the latter.

Chrissy Fowler

Belfast, ME
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