Come Dance, October 14th, in Williamstown!

The North Berkshire Contra Dance will hold its monthly community contra dance on Saturday, October 14th, with live fiddle music by “Three Potatoes Four” and all dances taught by caller Quena Crain.
three pictures of dancers, the first college age dancers circling left, the second two waltzing couples ranging in age from about five to about seventy, the third, a long set of mixed ages all wearing masks
Quena Crain, who calls all over New England (and far beyond), brings an infectious joy to the dance hall. This comes through in her fun calling and easy teaching style which is beloved by all age groups, from elementary school, through college, and well past retirement.  Music will be provided by the band Three Potatoes Four, the lively harmonic fiddle duo Rebecca Weiss and Gianna Marzilli Ericson supported by Becky Hollingsworth on piano.  All three musicians played for many years with the beloved late David Kaynor of Montague, Massachusetts, and you’ll hear his influence in both harmony and foot-lifting rhythm.
Quena, in a polka dotted dress, grins with a microphone in her hand;  The three musicians of "Three Potatoes Four" pose with their instruments, smiling at the camera
The dance will run 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. in the Community Hall of the First Congregational Church, 906 Main St., Williamstown. Admission is pay-as-you-can, $12 – $20 suggested, and barter (like help with cleanup) is also welcome.  Visit www.NorthBerkshireDance.org for more information.
Covid Policy: NBCD encourages masks, but no longer requires them. Be aware that contradance isn’t made to social distance, as whoever your partner, you’ll wind up dancing with everyone in the room. You may wish to bring a spare mask to change into for comfort throughout the evening.

First Dance in the of Fall 2023

Please come to our first dance of the fall season, on Saturday, September 16th. We’ll haveh a lively community contra dance taught by caller Jeff Walker, and energetic, New England-style fiddle music.

As a community dance in a small college town, we like to welcome everyone into the ever-changing tradition of New England contra dances. Some of the dances are hundreds of years old, some are recently composed. This month, Jeff’s hallmark clear instructions and infectious enthusiasm will combine with the band’s high-energy music to create an unforgettable evening of dancing just right for the level of experience of the crowd. Everyone is welcome. New dancers and families with children are encouraged to arrive at 7:30 for an introductory lesson. Come with or without a partner; most people change partners for each dance throughout the evening.

Kathy and Jeff Walker have been playing New England-style dance music for over 40 years. Kathy plays fiddle and Jeff accompanies her on guitar and calls. Their repertoire spans the Celtic world drawing tunes from Ireland, Scotland, Galicia, French Canada, Cape Breton, and Appalachia, and includes many kinds of dance music from fast, energetic jigs and reels to slow, beautiful waltzes.

Kathy and Jeff Walker

The dance will run 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. in the Community Hall of the First Congregational Church, 906 Main St., Williamstown. Admission is pay-as-you-can, $12 – $20 suggested, and barter (especially help with cleanup) is also welcome.

Covid Policy: NBCD encourages masks, though they are no longer required. Be aware that contradance isn’t made to social distance, as whoever your partner, you’ll wind up dancing with everyone in the room. Bring a spare mask to change into, for comfort throughout the evening.

Role Terms: at our September 16th dance, Jeff will refer to “the person dancing the lady’s role” and the person dancing the gentleman’s role”, making it clear that these are roles taken within the dance, not social identities.

Dance Schedule, Fall 2023

Hi, everyone,

We’re taking a little vacation in August, so I hope you already have plans for this Saturday evening (staying home to relax is a perfectly good plan).

Here’s our schedule for the remainder of 2023:
September 16th (a *third* Saturday) Jeff Walker will call and play guitar, and Kathy Walker play fiddle. They are coming all the way from Poughkeepsie, NY to lead our dance. They specialize in welcoming dancers all experience levels community dances like ours, and say Chorus Jig is one of their favorite dances.

October 14th: Quena Crain will call to music byThree Potatoes Four (Gianna Marzilli Ericson, Rebecca Weiss, and Rebecca Hollingsworth). Quena is a teacher in southern Vermont, and if we’re lucky, she’ll invite her students and their families to join us all at this event.

November 11th: Andy Davis will call, and likely play the accordion. You(!) are welcome to join the open band which will be led by Becky Hollingsworth and Rebecca Weiss. You’re also welcome to dance, watch, or split your time between dance floor and stage in whatever proportions you please.

December 9th: Caller Tony Parkes will come out from Boston to lead our dance; music will be supplied by master musicians Andy Davis, George Wilson, and Selma Kaplan. This is something of a reunion for these four (magnificent) performers, who have enjoyed working together as occaision permits for at least three decades (do I have that right?). Their pleasure in the event will almost certainly give us, the dancers, all a little extra joyous bounce. We know we’ll dance Chorus Jig, and if we’re lucky, we might get some additional old chestnuts beyond that, too. (Monymusk? Hull’s Victory? Lady Walpole’s? They’re all good.)

I hope we’ll see you there!

A few background reminders about our dance: as a community dance in a small college town, we try to be welcoming to and fun for a wide range of dancers. Novices and families with children are encouraged to arrive by 7:30 to participate in the introductory lesson. More experienced dancers can certainly enjoy the first half (simpler dances make socializing easier and more relaxed) , but some may prefer the second half ot the evening when we often shake out somewhat more complex or vigorous dances.
Role Terms: we’re making a slow transition from traditional to gender-neutral role terms, with a preference for gender-neutral. This year we are “caller’s choice”. Most of our callers have chosen to use Larks and Robins when they need to specify roles. Jeff Walker plans to say “the person dancing the gentleman’s [or lady’s] role” or similar, making it clear that these are roles, not identities.

Chorus Jig continues to be our dance of the year for 2023. It’s an “old chestnut” that has been taught and danced since 1820, at least. It has a different flavor from more contemporary contra dances, but is popular at least partly because it’s a very forgiving structure, with plenty of room for mistakes and/or silliness.

We’ve updated our Covid policy as described here (In summary, masks optional, no vaccine requirement, starting in September 2023.)

Location: in the Community Hall of the First Congregational Church, on Main Street, in Williamstown, MA. We hold dances on the second Saturday monthly (most months), and start promptly at 7:30 pm with an introduction for newcomers. From there, the dance runs ’til 10 (or 10:30 on a lively night).

Did I miss anything? If you have questions, please email using the form at the bottom of this page, and let us know!

I hope to see you on the dance floor soon!

-Doone

Covid Policy Update: Masks Optional Starting in September

Hello dancers. We (the North Berkshire Community Dance organizing committee) met this week and decided that, beginning with our September 16th dance, we will not require dancers to wear masks. 

We do continue to require that if you have any symptoms or have been exposed to someone with Covid, that you stay home, recover, and come back next month!

Combined with our earlier decision to stop requiring proof of vaccination or any kind of registration, this eliminates most of our official covid policy for our dances – for now. As always, we are prepared to reevaluate our policy as public health circumstances evolve.

Discussion:

We made this choice recognizing that Covid is not over, neither objectively nor subjectively. Far from it! 

Objectively, the rate of covid infection is as high as it’s ever been. However the rate of hospitalizations (and death) are at their lowest since tracking began, and continue to decline. Because of this decline, we feel that it’s not necessary for us to continue to act in the role of public health authority or turn away dancers who are unwilling to wear masks.

At the same time, we cannot ignore how people feel about their own safety, on the one hand, and their eagerness to (for lack of a better term) “move on”. A beautiful thing about social dancing, and contradancing in particular, has been its willingness to change itself, devising codes of safe conduct and language and practices designed to ensure that every one of us feels safe, seen, and included. It hasn’t always been easy(!), and much work remains, but still, it’s genuinely wonderful to see all that we have done. It is in this spirit of social enlightenment that we ask that you have compassion for those among us for whom joining a line of unmasked dancers is still a little frightening. Personally, I plan to continue to mask, and I hope that you will too if you are even just a tiny bit more comfortable doing so, or just to show solidarity! At the same time, I want every dancer to know that I want them here exactly as who they are – with or without a mask, with or without a vaccine card. Dancing is about the magic of trust and even love among friends and strangers. It’s magic that we all create together. Let’s always remember that!

Pat Dunlavey, president North Berkshire Community Dance, on behalf of the rest of the organizing committee: Doone MacKay, Eric Buddington, Kate Abbot, Nick Adams.

Come Dance on July 8th

The North Berkshire Community Contra Dance will hold its monthly dance on Saturday, July 8, with friendly high-energy dancing to caller Peter Stix and live music from Berkshire musicians Tony Pisano, Eric Buddington, Butch DeGiorgis, Seamus Connor and Doone MacKay.

Contra dancing is the contemporary face of a living tradition. Both the dance and its music can be traced to roots in 17th century England, France, and Scotland, but have been vigorously mixed and remixed in New England and nearby regions since. The music is live, the dances are taught, and anyone is welcome, with or without a partner — people change partners fluidly for each dance.

Peter Stix will call (teach) all dances, starting the evening with easy dances friendly to newcomers and families with children. The caller teaches new moves and skills as needed, and everyone is welcome. Come alone or with friends.

Many of the band have played together at dances and jams around the county for a generation — locals may recognize them from the dance floor and informal Saturday morning music at Mass MoCA. Tony Pisano on accordion joins Eric Buddington and Doone MacKay on fiddle, Butch DeGiorgis on mandolin and penny whistle and Seamus Connor on guitar.

The dance will run 7:30 to 10 p.m. in the Community Hall of the First Congregational Church. 906 Main St., Williamstown. Admission is pay-as-you-can, $12 – $20 suggested, and barter (especially help with cleanup) is also welcome.

Covid Policy: NBCD continues to require masking for this July 8 dance — because contra dance isn’t made to social distance. No matter your partner, you’ll wind up dancing with everyone in the room. (Having a spare mask to change into can help with comfort when dancing in warm weather.)

Covid Policy Update – June 28, 2023

A big thank you to everyone who took the time to answer our survey about Covid policy preferences! Responses showed roughly equal support for each of the three policy options we outlined, namely 1. continue to require both proof of vaccination and masking, 2. move to mask requirement only, 3. drop all covid precautions. After thoughtful discussion, we decided:

Starting with our July 8th dance we, will no longer require proof of vaccination to attend our dances. Masking, for now, is still required.

As the Covid public health situation changes, and dance community attitudes about personal and community safety evolve, we occasionally reassess our Covid policies. We have noted that the majority of dances in the Northeast no longer require proof of vaccination. Many dances no longer require covid protections of any kind. For us the decision to relax our Covid policies is driven not only by what our community wants, though obviously that is very important, but also by what our own consciences are comfortable with.

Hospitalizations and deaths due to Covid are at their lowest levels since the CDC began collecting statistics, and continue to decline. This fact is largely attributable to the degree of covid resistance in our population as we approach 100% of Americans having antibodies to the virus that causes Covid 19, acquired either through vaccination or exposure to the virus. However, Covid has definitely not gone away, and it remains a frightening health risk to a significant minority of our population. The mechanics of Covid transmission and re-transmission have not changed, nor has the risk that an infection poses to a significant minority of our population. Mask wearing while indoors with more than a few people, using a N95 or equivalent mask that fits tightly to the face, continues to be the most effective protection against both acquiring an infection and transmitting one, short of abstaining from dancing entirely.

These facts lead us to the policy that we have selected. We recognize that reasonable people draw different conclusions, and are grateful that our community is large and diverse enough to accommodate these different viewpoints. We hope that at some point in the not distant future we will feel comfortable expressing our masking policy as “masking wholeheartedly endorsed and supported, but no longer required”, so that we can continue to include those wonderful members of our community for whom masking makes dancing possible. For now though, we look forward to seeing your smiling eyes on the dance floor.

North Berkshire Community Dance: Pat, Doone, Eric, Kate and Nick.

June 10th – Delightful Dance

Join us this Saturday, June 10th, for a delightful community contra dance!  Maggie McRae will call (teach), starting the evening with easy dances accessible to novices and families with children.  The hall will fill with lively, energetic dancers, new skills will be taught as needed, and by the end, we’ll have danced the old chestnut, “Chorus Jig”, to the traditional reel of the same name.  (Trust us, Chorus Jig is fun! That’s why people have been dancing it since 1820, at least.)  Come alone, or with friends.
Music will be provided by two masters of New England’s traditional dance music:  Laurie Indenbaum on fiddle, and Mary Cay Brass on keyboard.  Mary Cay has been a foundational performer and teacher in the traditional dance and music community for many years. In addition to teaching choral singing, she has supplied a vital pulse in various beloved dance bands, including “The Greenfield Dance Band” with David Kaynor, and “Airdance” with Rodney Miller.  Laurie Indenbaum has been fiddling for dances in Vermont and surrounding states since 1976, with many fine callers and bands, including “Applejack” and “The Full Catastrophe”.

Location: the Community Hall of the First Congregational Church. 906 Main Street, Williamstown, MA  
Time: 7:30 – 10 PM
Admission: pay-as-you-can.  $12 – $20 suggested.  Barter (especially help with cleanup) also welcome.
Covid Policy: we continue to require proof of vaccination and masking for this June 10th dance.  Please be prepared to show proof of vaccination at the door, if you have not previously registered at our dance.  (Pre-registration form here:  https://tinyurl.com/NorthBerkshireDancePreReg)  Having a spare mask to change into can be really helpful – just like shirts, masks get a bit dampish from dancing in warm weather, and changing into a fresh, dry one is a pleasure.

Speaking of Covid policies, ours is potentially up for revision.  Would you contribute your thoughts, please, in this survey?  https://tinyurl.com/NBCDCovidSurvey2023  We had planned to launch this survey last month, but then one of our key organizers came down with Covid (he’s recovered now), and we had a bit of a scramble to put on the May dance without him.  He reports that Covid is distinctly unpleasant, even with Paxlovid.  Since he stayed home (model comportment) we didn’t have to worry he would spread Covid at the dance — but it was a good reminder that,  A. we miss people when they’re away and, B. Covid’s not gone and we do still need to think about how we want to manage it.

We hope to see you at this dance, and many more!  

Community Dance and Open Band: May 13th, 2023

Remember how much fun we were having in early 2020? (Link to video on Facebook.)

Join us for the sequel on May 13th, 2023! We’re having another open band dance. As before, we’ll have calling by Andy Davis, and the band led Becky Hollingsworth and (this time) Susan Conger on fiddle.

The dancing will, as usual, feature a gentle opening suitable for beginners and children at 7:30 PM, then progress into somewhat zestier dances after 8:30, including the old chestnut Chorus Jig.

Admission: pay-what-you-can, $12 – $20 suggested

Location: 906 Main Street, Williamstown, MA 01267, in the community hall of the First Congregational Church

Time: 7:30 – 10:30 PM, Saturday, May 13th

Covid Precautions: Masks and proof of vaccination required. If you’re pre-registered, you won’t have to show your card at the door. Here’s a link to the pre-registration form:  https://tinyurl.com/NorthBerkshireDancePreReg  Performers may go unmasked *if* they’ve had a negative rapid test that day — this includes open band members while in the band area, but masks are required while dancing and elsewhere in the hall.

Anyone with an acoustic instrument is welcome to join the band. Here’s a list of the tunes we’ll play: https://northberkshiredance.org/tune-list-for-open-band-may-13-2023/ Chorus Jig is a little tricky — sheet music available in the “New England Fiddler’s Repertoire” or the “Fiddler’s Fakebook”. Note the ABCB form of Chorus Jig differs from the standard AABB of most contra dance repertoire.

April 8th Dance — Beginner Special!

Worried your dance skills are rusty? Have a friend or family member who is scared to dance? Come to our April 8th community contra dance in Williamstown, bringing your hesitant friends, and your enthusiastic friends, too!

Our caller this month will be Paul Rosenberg, who specializes in leading dance events welcoming to complete novices, families with children, and people who are really worried about the whole idea. The evening will feature lots of simple dances appropriate for novices and families, gradually building the dancers’ skill levels and confidence while having fun.

Caller: Paul Rosenberg

Musicians: Tony Pisano, Eric Buddington, Patrician Kernan (Two fabulous locals, and one spcialist in the caller’s repertoire.)

Location: the community hall of the First Congregational Church, at 906 Main Street, Williamstown, MA

Time: 7:30 – 10PM, Saturday April 8th

Admission: pay what you can; $10 – $20 suggested

Covid Precautions: Masks and proof of vaccination required