Phwew.. OK,... a slightly different point of view from out here in the 
wilderness I guess.

Maybe 30 (35?) or so years ago, I was still pretty much a beginner caller. I 
was a dance musician as well and also did sound for the 4th Friday North 
Whitefield dance here in Maine. This was my mentor Ted Sannella's home dance 
and he called most of the evenings. Ted always used cards but it was clear he 
really didn't need to. One night when Ted was out of town, Susan Kevra was 
supposed to call but she had car issues and couldn't make it. We found out 
maybe 10 minutes before the dance was to start. I was asked to call, and of 
course didn't have any cards, but managed to piece together a program from 
memory. Not saying it was a brilliant program but I didn't have to use the same 
dance twice and everyone had fun. Since that moment I decided it would be a 
good idea not to be tied down to cards. One of my other mentors, David Kaynor, 
never used cards and he was playing fiddle at the same time! I kept thinking, 
shoot a fiddle player can play 100's of tunes from memory. How can a dance 
which typically only has 6-8 figures in the whole dance be any harder to 
remember than a tune? The trick is sort of remembering the "hook" in the dance. 
Similar to how a fiddler is fine as long as they can remember the first few 
notes of the tune. Once you have the hook, the dance becomes pretty clear, to 
me anyway. Plus you have the walk-through to maybe fumble through and make sure 
you have it all right.

Back in the day when I was calling a lot, I probably had 50-100 dances I could 
call from memory. If I wanted something different, I'd study a dance beforehand 
and memorize it, only occasionally making a few notes. Since I was often 
playing in the band at the same time, I found it very freeing not being tied 
down to looking at cards and being able to completely pay attention to the 
dancers was good both from the caller's and musician's point of view. The phone 
ain't ringing that much anymore and I'm mostly calling local dances, often with 
a LOT of beginners. So a lot of the programs look similar and my "memory cache" 
has shrunk quite a bit. Use it or lose it I guess. Still, I don't find the need 
for cards.

I'm not saying everyone should throw away their cards, but it's pretty clear 
from reading this email thread that having a few dances or maybe 10 that one 
can call from memory ain't a bad idea. Try it, you might be surprised. In fact 
just sit down and write down some dances. They are in there. Having the courage 
to be up on stage in front of 100 dancers without the card, well that's another 
story!  - just sayin'

bill in Maine

(on a couple related notes, I remember Rick Mohr showing me a business card 
sized card he had in his wallet. He developed a shorthand for the calls and in 
very small type had 100 dances, 50 on each side of one card that he kept with 
him all the time. That was before smartphones (hah maybe before cellphones) and 
"aps" which can now do the same thing, but I thought that was pretty clever. 
Also, Larry Unger always kept a bunch of dance cards in his guitar case. 
Probably still does. They were there to help out a caller in need when he was 
playing for a dance)
________________________________
From: barrie bullimore via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2025 2:06 PM
To: Jon Greene <[email protected]>
Cc: Abbie Sorg <[email protected]>; Callers Contra 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [Callers] Re: Caller nightmare

Some years ago now, I was the caller for a dance weekend.  I had sent my 
programmes for the workshops and dance sessions to the band but I forgot to 
take my dance cards with me.  To my surprise, I was able to call the whole 
programme, English, Scottish, contras and squares without my cards. I made sure 
it never happened again!

Barrie Bullimore (UK)



On Wed, Jan 22, 2025 at 12:02 PM Jon Greene via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
I always bring my cards to a dance. That ensures that the caller will show up. 
If I don’t bring them, they might not.

   - Jon
      Great Barrington, MA

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 21, 2025, at 3:14 PM, Abbie Sorg via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:


I had that exact same nightmare when I was a brand new caller, probably before 
I even called my first full evening. I nearly always bring my box of dance 
cards anytime I go to a local dance as a dancer, because of the memory of that 
nightmare. Nice to know I'm not the only one!

Abbie
Tucson, AZ

On Tue, Jan 21, 2025 at 12:48 PM Amy Wimmer via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

My spouse and I are both callers who run a weekly dance. In the 20+ years we've 
been doing this I can only think of 2 times the caller was a no-show. The first 
time it happened there were 3 callers in the hall. While I drove home to get my 
dance collection the others called dances they had memorized. Since that time 
my spouse has brought his dance collection to every dance, just in case. But 
sometimes we're not there. What a great idea to leave a collection, even a 
whole program, at the dance! Gonna do it! Thanks for the tip!

On Tue, Jan 21, 2025, 10:48 AM sdgola--- via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:
I was greeted at the door once by Organizers telling me that the scheduled 
caller was a no-show.  This was 5 minutes before the start of the dance (I was 
attending with the expectation of being a dancer).  The money box had a few 
scraps of paper with dances written on them, so we started with those.  I asked 
a couple of dancers to sit out and use their phones to look up dance figures 
while I got the dance going.  The originally booked caller had forgotten, so I 
became the caller for the full evening.

Now I carry a couple of printed programs with me.

Sue Gola
Princeton/Mt Airy

On Tuesday, January 21, 2025 at 01:21:01 PM EST, Colin Hume via Contra Callers 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:


On Tue, 21 Jan 2025 10:11:33 -0800, Gary Shapiro via Contra Callers wrote:
> I haven't been a contra caller for many years, but last night I dreamt I was 
> at a dance and the caller did not show
> up. There were no other callers in attendance. So I got up there wondering 
> what dances I knew by heart. I think I
> knew how A Nice Combination went. Then I woke up and thought about it some 
> more. I decided that every dance venue
> should keep a dance program, with instructions, somewhere.

I've been in that situation at a Festival - the caller was delayed on the 
motorway - and I realised I only knew two
contras by heart, neither of which was a good one to start with.  I actually 
had my lap-top with all my dances on it,
but it was at the other venue.  I managed to remember Bob Dalsemer's "Maggie's 
Hobby".  I now have some cards
for a few contras and squares in my shoulder bag along with the other vital 
stuff like Mars Bars and cough medicine!

And yet I can remember lots of quite complicated English dances!

Colin Hume


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