Dedicated to the preservation,
study, teaching, enjoyment, and continuing evolution of traditional and historical dance, music, and song.
The South
Coast Folk Society is located on Oregon's beautiful south coast.
Check out this well-done series of youtube
videos! The series, "Contra Dance Training for Beginning Dancers", demonstrates everything you need to know about
contra dancing.
Chapter 1 - an introduction
Chapter 2 - two dancers
Chapter 3 - four dancers
Chapter 4 - the contra line
Chapter 5 - come dance with us!
Chapter 6 - a dance
Chapter 7 - another dance
Chapter 8 - the origins of contra dancing
Chapter 9 - dance series credits
The Fiddler's Reply (poem)
by Joel Mabus
It's a question that I've heard before
And all that I can say to that is -- no sir!
No sir!
I
have played a tune in the dark on the porch
Of a prairie farm -- summer rain coming
Down so straight you could set your
chair right there
On the edge of the porch and keep bone dry.
Such straight regular rain, they say, is good
For
the crop. Good for tunes too, I say,
Deep in the night, listening to the corn.
And I remember a tune one winter
Afternoon
up north, fiddling after chores.
The sun staring in through a wet kitchen
Window -- all ice outside, all steam inside.
My
chair tips back; the woodstove snaps loudly,
Popping irregular time to the steppy
Tunes, flannel and coffee, bisquits
and boots.
I've played tunes on a fine spring evening
At the town hall dance where everybody shows,
Joking with
the caller, shaking off winter,
Stretching limbs, swapping partners for neighbors.
Good healthy tempos break the first
real sweat.
Long lines forward and back and -- Look! Outside!
The sun's still up on a fine green evening !
And
then there is a tune I know that plays just
Like a cold November morning. Sober.
Inside, looking out. A gray air that
wants
Chords unresolved -- turning into the mist
Like so many leaves, riven and broken,
Returning from sky to earth
after fall --
The undeniable fall -- calls them home.
I have played tunes -- not songs. Not voiceable,
Obvious
word-infested songs -- but tunes,
Each tune a puzzle, each one a box
With its own proud secret. Each its own smile
Sweetly
shown -- each tune is a lesson pondered.
Pattern -- at once familiar yet unique --
Like snow crystals -- like footprints
-- like the way
The world is right now -- that's what a tune is.
No sir.
No sir. They don't all sound the
same to me.
copyright 1997 Joel Mabus -- used by permission
Seagrass Country

Eugene Barnstormers - old time music with an altitude!
Tuned and ready at Greenacres Grange! Top row: Paul Clements (fiddle), Middle row: Ambo Daugherty
(tenor banjo), Wes Messinger (guitar), Bottom row: Shawn Lockery (fiddle).