Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-23 Thread William T. Cocke

Wynn, is this the same wynn from merlefest two years 
ago? Its william reply please.

On Fri, 22 Jan 1999 15:23:31 -0600 Wynn Harris 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 
 Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both
 obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas.
 
 Amen junior!  Only that's not the only reason to thank god for Texas.
 wynn
 
 

William Cocke
Senior Writer
HSC Development
University of Virginia
(804) 924-8432



RE: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Diana Quinn

The reason musicians hate line-dancing (and I love to dance) is because,
with a few exceptions, those who go out specifically to line-dance will
dance only to those songs they know. 
Sure, we get line-dancers occasionally dancing to Ray Price or Buck
Owens songs, but they are a rarity. Most of these folks want to do one
thing, and they have little tolerance for what they don't know or
understand.



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Tom Smith

Diana Quinn wrote:
 
 The reason musicians hate line-dancing (and I love to dance) is because,
 with a few exceptions, those who go out specifically to line-dance will
 dance only to those songs they know. . .  Most of these folks want to do one
 thing, and they have little tolerance for what they don't know or
 understand.

I haven't had the misfortune to play for a strictly 
line-dancing crowd, but friends who have done so 
extensively would agree.  They don't care about the music, 
don't acknowledge bands with applause, and get pissed off 
if a song is not played precisely the way it's heard on the 
radio.  Furthermore, they don't drink much, which has led to 
the scene being half the size it was 5 years ago (clubowners 
are going to put up with that low profit margin for only so 
long). A steel player I work with occasionally calls them 
"dance nazis."
Tom Smith



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Lianne McNeil

At 02:43 PM 1/22/99 -0600, Bob wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 1999, Tom Smith wrote:
 radio.  Furthermore, they don't drink much, which has led to 
 the scene being half the size it was 5 years ago (clubowners 
 are going to put up with that low profit margin for only so 
 long).

This isn't just line dancers, though. Johnny D's in Boston has swing
dancing on Sunday and Monday nights (and had Cajun dancing on Monday
nights for years) and charged a pretty high cover because most of both of
those crowds drink only water.

Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.  (My observations 
have been that after 2 beers a person is a dance floor hazard.  I
think that's why most dancers seem to stick to non-alcoholic drinks.)  
So if they are offering dancing at the clubs they need to plan on 
making their profit some other way, such as cover charges or higher 
drink prices (including for water) or whatever works.

Lianne



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread fboenig

We aren't experiencing the same thing with swing. The crowd just doesn't
stay as late but they drink more than water!



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Mike Woods


I wouldn't hate line-dancing so much if it weren't for one little thing:
in joints where line-dancing is found, that's all that's found.  They take
over the entire floor, and expect to be catered to.

-- Mike Woods




Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Ph. Barnard

Lianne:
 Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.

Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both 
obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas. 


--junior



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Lianne McNeil

At 03:54 PM 1/22/99 +, you wrote:
Lianne:
 Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.

Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both 
obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas. 

--junior

And here I always thought Texans were polite, good dancers!  g

Lianne



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Jerald Corder

At 03:54 PM 1/22/99 +, you wrote:
Lianne:
 Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.

Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both 
obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas. 

Speaking from experience, we pretty much had to drink and dance at the same
time in high school because someone would steal your beer if you sat it down
somewhere.  

Jerald 



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Bob Soron

On Fri, 22 Jan 1999, Jerald Corder revealed:

 Speaking from experience, we pretty much had to drink and dance at the same
 time in high school because someone would steal your beer if you sat it down
 somewhere.  

Hey, if you're drinking that young, you're getting what you deserve, you
little hoodlum.

Bob



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Wynn Harris



Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both
obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas.

Amen junior!  Only that's not the only reason to thank god for Texas.
wynn




Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread Jamie Hoover

Hey Wynn,

Didn't know you were a P2er--I think there's a whole bunch of use who have a
Lone Star State of Mind.

Jamie--south of Durango

Wynn Harris wrote:

 
 Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both
 obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas.

 Amen junior!  Only that's not the only reason to thank god for Texas.
 wynn





Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread BARNARD




Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread BARNARD

 Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both
 obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas.
 
 Amen junior!  Only that's not the only reason to thank god for Texas.
 wynn

Well I'd be the last to suggest it's the only reason (or 2 reasons)!!

Let's see, I think the next several hundred reasons I think of are all
musicians g,
--junior

PS.  And of course there's also I-10 going through Houston



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 1/22/99 4:07:40 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.
 
 Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both 
 obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas. 
 
 --junior
 
 And here I always thought Texans were polite, good dancers!  g 


Oh, they are. I am dutifully impressed by the unorchestrated but orderly glide
around the Broken Spoke dance floor, to the point where I wanna be able to do
it. 

Slim



Re: why we hate line-dancing

1999-01-22 Thread RMould5417

In a message dated 99-01-22 16:55:21 EST, you write:

 Lianne:
  Yes -- drinking and dancing don't mix very well.
 
 Ummm, except in Texas, where drinking and dancing are both 
 obligatory, preferably at the same timeg.  Thank god for Texas. 
 
 
 --junior
  

Why the hell would you dance, if you weren't drinking?


Joe X. (dancing impaired - that's right, I even get to use the special parking
place)