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Tapestry Folkdance Center creates opportunities for participation in the joys of dance and music from around the world.

Creating opportunities for particpating in the joys of dance and music from around the world.

Creating opportunities for particpating in the joys of dance and music from around the world.

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This activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund.

Upcoming Contra Events

  • Contra-Entwyned with Ken Gall
    May 25, 2013 (7:30 pm - 11:00 pm)
    (Contra)

    Saturday Contra Dances

    Time: 7:30-11pm

    Beginner walk-through lesson 7:30-8pm. Live music from 8-11pm!

    Admission: $10, $8 members, $7 students, free admission to kids 13 and under

    In a contra dance, the dance figures are similar to those of Old-time...

  • Contra-Pig's Eye Landing with David Kirchner
    June 01, 2013 (7:30 pm - 11:00 pm)
    (Contra)

    Saturday Contra Dances

    Time: 7:30-11pm

    Beginner walk-through lesson 7:30-8pm. Live music from 8-11pm!

    Admission: $10, $8 members, $7 students, free admission to kids 13 and under

    In a contra dance, the dance figures are similar to those of Old-time...

  • Contra-Danebodium with Beau Farmer
    June 08, 2013 (7:30 pm - 11:00 pm)
    (Contra)

    Saturday Contra Dances

    Time: 7:30-11pm

    Beginner walk-through lesson 7:30-8pm. Live music from 8-11pm!

    Admission: $10, $8 members, $7 students, free admission to kids 13 and under

    In a contra dance, the dance figures are similar to those of Old-time...

  • Contra-Light of the Moon with Tom Van Deusen
    June 15, 2013 (7:30 pm - 11:00 pm)
    (Contra)

    Saturday Contra Dances

    Time: 7:30-11pm

    Beginner walk-through lesson 7:30-8pm. Live music from 8-11pm!

    Admission: $10, $8 members, $7 students, free admission to kids 13 and under

    In a contra dance, the dance figures are similar to those of Old-time...

  • Contra-Possum Landing with Robin Nelson
    June 22, 2013 (7:30 pm - 11:00 pm)
    (Contra)

    Saturday Contra Dances

    Time: 7:30-11pm

    Beginner walk-through lesson 7:30-8pm. Live music from 8-11pm!

    Admission: $10, $8 members, $7 students, free admission to kids 13 and under

    In a contra dance, the dance figures are similar to those of Old-time...

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Contra
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Saturday Contra Dances

Time: 7:30 - 11:00 pm
  7:30 - 8:00 Dance Basics Lesson
  8:00 -11:00 Live Music
Cost: $10 general admission /$8 for Tapestry members / $7 students / Free to ages 13 and under (must be supervised by an adult)

In a contra dance, a leader known as a caller teaches for 30 minutes before the music for the dance begins at 8pm. During this introductory “walk-through” period, participants learn the dance by walking through the steps and formations, following the caller’s instructions.

The dance figures are similar to those of Old-time square dancing except the figures are made up of lines of leaders and followers facing each other. These dances are lively social, easy to learn, and because each dance may last 5min, they can be aerobic. Although you will dance with a partner, it isn't necessary to come with one. All dances are taught and are usually done in "long-way sets" (partners facing in long lines down the hall). Please check out the calendar for a listing of Contra bands and callers. Many of the regular Tapestry contra bands play Old-time music (similar to bluegrass), but the music on any given Saturday contra may reflect music traditions from New England, French Canadian, Irish, Scottish, Cape Breton and modern compositions.

May

Saturday, 5/18/13 – Tapestry: "Fabulous at 30" Anniversary Party

Come party on Saturday, May 18th from 7:00-11:00pm to celebrate 30 years of Tapestry Folkdance Center! There will be a Contra Dance featuring Pat O'Loughlin, Patrice Pakiz, and Tim Reese with caller Beau Farmer, plus International Dance. Enjoy a variety of sampler "join-in" sessions, such as Bollywood and English Country, in the small studio, showcasing various Tapestry dances.

Come and shop at the annual Bizarre Bazaar, play some board games, have some birthday cake and wish Tapestry a happy birthday!

(Admission: $10 members; $12 others. No passes)

Saturday, 5/25/13 Guest band and caller!

From Bloomington, Indiana, we welcome Ken Gall calling with Entwyned, a young band who has had great success on tour in the east and midwest, mixing traditional and new sounds for contra dancing. Entwyned is Twy Bethard on fiddle and foot percussion with John Paolillo on mandola, bouzouki and other mandolin-family instruments. They say "We've worked hard to arrange our tune sets to complement and enhance the energy of the dance." This is their second appearance at Tapestry.

Check out Tapestry's Techno Contra Night below!

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Contra Dance Roots PDF Print E-mail
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Where does contra dance come from and how did it get here? 
by Roger Schaffhausen

Looking in the dictionary 'contra' is a Latin preposition meaning "against" . So did it come from the 'Contras' in Nicaragua to show their opposition to the Sandinistas?  Or was it from lawyers who use the term 'Contra' which is used  in legal citations? Last but not least could it have been accountants where a 'Contra payment" is made in cases where a customer is also a supplier and a payment owed is offset against a payment due. Fortunately it came from none of these!

There are many theories as to how Contra dancing came about and how it got it's name. I will present only two of them.

1)  The precursor to Contra dancing was English Country Dancing which became popular in Queen Elizabeth I's  court in the late 16th century. By the end of the 17th century English country dancing had gained a certain legitimacy. What might have happened next is described by James Hutson in his article "A Capsule Chronicle of Contradancing, Part One," from the Fall 1994 issue of Contra Corners, the newsletter of the California Dance Co-operative:  The French, who thought that they invented country dancing (as well as anything else culturally significant), and who were miffed at the notion that the English should receive credit for anything, converted the name 'country dance' to French contredans (which conveniently translates as 'opposites dance'), then turned around and claimed that the English term was a corruption of the French! Later, the French term evolved in the young U.S.A. into "contra dance." 1

2) So why did the French corrupt it to "contre" or "contra"? Is it really only because that sounds like "country"? Or is it because the word means "across" and that is the formation used? ... I maintain that both theories are correct: The French corrupted "country dance" and the English reimported the word, but in the process it came to be applied only to the longways formation, and THAT was because of the meaning "across" for "contre".2  

Contra dances crossed the pond and were fashionable in the United States until the early to mid-19th century, when they were supplanted in popularity by square dances and couple dances. By the late 19th century, square dances too had fallen out of favor, except in rural areas. When squares were revived (around 1925 to 1940, depending on the region), contra dances were generally not included. In the 1930s and 1940s, contra dances appear to have been done only in small towns in widely scattered parts of northeastern North America and particularly northern New England. Ralph Page almost single-handedly maintained the New England tradition in the 30’s and the 40’s.3   Ralph started calling contras, almost by accident. He was playing fiddle in an orchestra when he had to substitute for a caller who had come down with laryngitis. That day was December 5, 1930. From that beginning, he rose to the top of his field as an Eastern contra caller, becoming one of the country's first full-time professional callers in 1938. Ralph kept contra going in the northeast until it was revitalized in the 1950’s and 1960’s  particularly by Ted Sannella and Dudley Laufman.4  Contra dancing found it's way to Minneapolis in the late 1970's with the start of Saltari in 1977. Saltri was the forerunner of Tapestry which started about 5 years later. 5

So the tradition is carried on at Tapestry on most Saturday evenings, come with or without a partner and beginners are always welcomed. For more info on contra, a good primer is put out by the Chattahoochee Country Dancers at http://contradance.org/html/new_dancer_info.php 

1 Why the name 'contra dance'?  Created and maintained by Gary Shapiro
2 Why is it Called Contra Dance? Copyright 1996-2004 Leslie Hyll_-Daniel Ludecking
3 Phantom ranch.net, folkdance, teachers
4 Contra Dancing, Wikipedia
5 Ed Stern, co-founder of Saltri

 


 
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