Agrarius Regency Ball
Saturday February 16, 2008 7:30 - 11:00pm
Farmington Hills, MI
Music by Childgrove
Oakland Hills Community Church, in collaboration with AACTMAD, invites you to an exquisite evening of English country dancing in the spirit of the Regency period. Luscious music will be provided by Ann Arbor-based Childgrove and skilled dance leaders will prompt all dances. The evening will also include: scrumptious refreshments, a retiring room, card tables, and period games for you to enjoy when not dancing.
Dance program:
The ball program will be drawn from the following list:
A Double Duet
Alice
Apley House
Ashford Anniversary
Braes of Dornoch
Chocolate Round-0
Corelli's Maggot
Dover Pier
Draper's Gardens
Elverton Grove
Faithless Nancy Dawson
Freeford Gardens
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Greenwich Park
Honeysuckle Cottage
Jack's Health
Lilliburlero
Mendocino Redwood
Mount Hills
Muriel's Measure
Never Love Thee More
The Homecoming
True Kit
Waltham Abbey
Well Hall
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Staff:
Childgrove features Debbie Jackson on piano, Anne Ogren on fiddle, viola, and an occasional kazoo, and Martha Stokely on oboe, pennywhistle, recorder, and kazoo. The three bring their fluid, eclectic approach to the elegant and compelling melodies of English country dance, drawing on their backgrounds including classical, Celtic, jazz, Klezmer, and other intricate styles featuring complex rhythms and unusual harmonies. The effect is always spirited and completely danceable. Hearing this music makes you want to learn the dances that go with it.
Rehearsal workshops will also feature music by master musicians Susie Lorand (fiddle and recorder) and Steve Schneider (pretty much anything).
Dances will be taught and prompted by Arlene Kindel, Bronwen Gates, Ray Bantle, and Shirley Harden all of whom are experienced anchor callers of the Ann Arbor Tuesday night English country dance series.
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Lansing Regency Ball - June 2007
On Monday, 24 December 1798, in a letter to her sister Cassandra, Jane Austen described the exuberance she had experienced at a recent ball:
"There were twenty dances, and I danced them all, and without any fatigue. I was glad to find myself capable of dancing so much, and with so much satisfaction as I did . . . in cold weather and with a few couples I fancy I could just as well dance for a week together as for half an hour."
Jane Austen Movie (dancing scene)
Lansing Ball Rehearsal - June 2007
Come join us any Tuesday, year-round.
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