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Berea College CCDS
CPO 2159
859-985-3431
Contact:

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Laurie Andres
Laurie Andres has
played accordion and piano for music and dance festivals, concerts,
and dances all over the US, Canada, and
Europe. He has been a featured performer at Carrefour Mondial
de L'Accordeon Montmagny in Quebec and the Festival of American
Fiddle Tunes in Port Townsend, WA. His whimsical and infectiously
rhythmic performance style is well known in English country
dance, old-time New England contra and square dance communities.
Intermediate English Country Dance, Advanced Dance Band
Jennifer Beer
Jenny teaches English
Country Dance in Philadelphia and at Swarthmore College. When
she can tear herself away from the dance floor,
she enjoys playing piano and recorder for English and Scottish.
Over the years she has danced with with groups in Earlham College,
Vermont, Japan, and Berkeley, CA.
Advanced English Country Dance, Callers
Workshop, Open Mic & Band
Session
John Bealle
John attended his
first Sacred Harp singing more than thirty years ago in Alabama
at the suggestion of Bicky McLain. He
has since published a book and several articles on the subject
and has been a steadfast supporter of this music in the Midwest.
His most recent work is an annotated CD recording of the National
Sacred Harp Singing Convention. John currently resides in Cincinnati.
Sacred Harp Singing
Adian Broadbridge
Aidan began
playing for dancing at the age of twelve, and has played for
the annual Assembly Ball in Scotland every year
since. After leaving school he spent two years in Sweden, where
he continued violin and piano studies, returning to Britain
to take a degree course at Trinity College of Music (London).
His teachers have included Douglas Lawrence, Angus Ramsay,
Hu Kun and John Crawford. Despite his classical training, he
is noted for his driving fiddle style of playing for dancing
and an exceptional ability to extemporize.
Renée
Camus
Renée
grew up in the folk dance tradition, attending Pinewoods camp
since age 8. She now teaches and performs many styles of
dance, from Appalachian clogging and Irish and English step
dancing, to Latin, swing, and ballroom dances, to Renaissance,
Baroque
and 19th and early 20th century social dances, to tap and jazz.
A former cast member of Footworks Percussive Dance Ensemble
and the show Dancing on Common Ground, she currently performs
with
Tappening, a rhythm tap ensemble; and PedAntics, a clogging
group, in the DC/MD area. She has also performed with the Culkin
School
of Traditional Irish Dance, and with various musical groups
such as Connemara, Moonfire, and Clandestine. She recently
founded
her own company for historical social dance called Centuries
Historical Dance. She is very excited to be a part of the CCDS
staff. For more information access Renee's website.
Beginning Appalachian Clogging, Advanced Percussive Dance, English
Clogging
David Crandall
David has been
active as a dance musician for over 30 years in Kentucky and
around the eastern seaboard, performing for many
Christmas Schools and as a member of the Capital Quicksteps,
Evening Star, and most recently, Microchasm. He currently resides
in Baltimore, MD, where he works as an artist, commercial designer,
teacher, and writer.
Liz Donaldson
From Bethesda, MD,
Liz is a full-time musician, plays piano and accordion and has
been playing for dancing for many years.
She is known for her innovative back-up style incorporating
exciting rhythms, textures, and harmony lines in her music.
In addition to playing for Scottish, English and American contra
and square dances, Liz teaches all these styles, and dances,
too!
She is a member of Terpsichore, Dance du Jour, and Waverley Station! In addition
to her latest recording Waverley Station: First Stop!, a recording of Scottish
Dance tunes with fiddler David Knight and bassist Ralph Gordon, Liz has a CD,
Terpsichore, Scottish Dance Music with fiddler, Elke Baker, and another of
American Contra Dance tunes with Alexander Mitchell, SummerTunes. She's also
Artistic Director and pianist on two hot live Scottish Country Dance recordings
Memories of Scottish Weekend ('98) and More Memories of Scottish Weekend ('02).
She has also published Rain in the Desert: a collection of her own compositions,
and Scottish Dance Class Tunes.
Liz has taught and played at numerous dance weekends and music workshops including
Scottish Weekend at Ramblewood (MD), Pinewoods (MA), and Asilomar (CA). Her
travels have taken her to Berea (KY), Atlanta (GA), Chicago (IL), Ames (IA),
Tucson (AZ), Mendocino (CA), Seattle (WA), San Antonio (TX) as well as to Great
Britain, Canada and Japan. Liz was invited, as a traditional pianist, to lead
Performance Tours for the Smithsonian Institution's Piano 300 exhibition. She
also performed with Terpsichore at the Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage in
2003.
Liz also teaches BandAid a regular ensemble-playing workshop, and enjoys
composing tunes, especially waltzes. For more information access Liz's
website.
Playing for Dancing
Brad Foster
Brad has been dancing
and teaching English country, contras and squares, and morris
and sword for over thirty years. He is
known for sharing the joy found in dance, and has taught throughout
the US, Canada and Europe, including at Berea, Pinewoods, Mendocino,
Brasstown, and Augusta. He has been Executive and Artistic
Director of CDSS for almost 20 years.
Advanced English Country Dance, Playford, Ceilidh and More
Kristin Graham
From St. Louis,
Mo., Kristen plays piano in a variety of country dance ensembles.
As part of the English country trio, the Tu'Penny
Uprights, she plays for Dance Discovery, an English Country
performance troupe led by John Ramsay. She plays with Martha
Edwards (fiddle) in a New England style duo, Reel Women, and
in an old time trio with Ted Vasquez (fiddle) and Mike Brown
(bass), the Nightcrawlers, for contra dances around the St.
Louis area. By herself, she enjoys performing traditional music
from Ireland, England and America on the autoharp.
Mary Harrell
Mary was a performance
dancer under Frank Smith, Berea College. She taught English dancing
at Pinewoods, CCDS and in the Baltimore/DC
area.
Beginning English Country Dance
Atossa Kramer
Atossa has been
a dance musician and teacher in the area for 40 years. In addition
to playing for dance workshops, she plays
for the Berea College Country Dancers. She is a member of the
music faculty at Berea College.
Open Band Session
Donna & Lewis Lamb
Donna and
Lewis began playing for the Country Dancers in the 1960’s.
They perform and teach old time square dance music and
traditional songs at festivals and workshops throughout
the region.
Tully Larew
Tully of Greenville,
WV is a Berea College graduate, a Berea College Country Dancer
alumnus, retired Ag Ed teacher, current
farmer, and a Ruritan. He has taught woodcarving at Buffalo
Gap Family Week since it has started in 1990. He is a great
craftsman and the nicest, most encouraging teacher with a pocketknife.
Woodcarving
Liz Lewis
Liz Lewis loves harmony
singing, which she credits to years of singing alto (and playing
bass clarinet in junior high school).
Her taste in music is eclectic, ranging from international
folk songs to barbershop to Gilbert and Sullivan. She sings
with Constellations, a women's sextet, as well as the church
choir, and was a founding member of Lingua Franca and DreamCatcher.
Harmony Singing
John Mayberry
A Morris dancer
for more than 20 years, John is the "fool" of
the Toronto Morris Men. John's experience in the theatre includes
juggling, clowning, medieval and folk drama, and scenery and
props production. He is also a traditional singer, sometimes
performing with his partner, Jamie Beaton, as the Irish Music
Hall duo, "The Bullero Brothers". He is a professor
in the Department of Theatre, York University, in Toronto, Ontario,
Canada.
Beginning Morris, Mummers’ Play
Rick Mohr
Rick has been enthusiastically
leading and choreographing dances for 15 years in both the Contra
and Morris worlds, as well
as making and leading music vocally and instrumentally. Known
for clear and well-paced teaching, good humor, and fresh tradition-based
choreography, Rick keeps an active schedule calling contra
dances and serves as foreman of Boston's Commonwealth Morris
Men.
Fun & Easy Contras, Advanced
Morris, Harmony Singing
Jim Morrison
Jim, foreman of Albermarle
Morris and Old Swan Tavern Border Morris in Charlottesville,
VA, has been teaching morris and
sword dancing, calling dances, and playing fiddle and guitar
steadily for over 25 years. He is a former director of CDSS.
Appalachian Square Dance, Advanced Rapper, Longsword
Owen Morrison
Owen, a talented
up-and-coming guitarist, has grown up in the thick of the
music and dance community. He’s currently
a member of The Morrison Brothers contra dance band and
has traveled with them throughout the southeast.
Dr. Patrick E. Napier
Pat is an
Appalachian square dance caller, author of Kentucky Mountain
Square Dancing, storyteller, and Presbyterian minister.
He is also on the CCDS policy committee. This is his fifty-third
year at CCDS.
Kentucky Set Running, Storytelling for All
Janet Northern
Janet is a self
taught basket maker from Rockcastle County, KY. She has been
making baskets for eight years and teaching basketry
for six years. This will be her fourth year with CCDS. She
enjoys working with materials native to her region and truly
loves to share the joy and knowledge of basketry with other
interested individuals.
Small Honeysuckle Wall Basket, Bread Basket
Charlie Pilzer
Charlie plays piano,
bass, and button accordion (and occasionally tuba) in a number
of dance bands and plays accordion for the
Foggy Bottom Morris Men. He tours with Spaelimenninir, a Scandinavian
band. He works as a mastering engineer and does historic audio
restoration. Charlie produced and played piano for the the
Berea Cast Offs first CD. Charlie and his wife Cecily have
been program directors for Pinewoods Family Week and were instrumental
in the founding of the CDSS programs at Buffalo Gap and were
Camp Directors for a number of years.
Bruce Rosen
Bruce has been part
of Boston's contra and English country dance community since
the mid-70s as a dancer and musician. He plays
contradance piano in the Boston-based band, Phantom Power,
with New York's The Fish Family, and with lots of other great
New England-style fiddlers. Bruce is seen most years conducting
the NEFFA Festival Orchestra. In the early 90s, he took up
the button accordion, playing for Ha'Penny Morris for many
years; Bruce is now musician for the Commonwealth Morris Men.
Sue Rosen
Sue Rosen, an accomplished
caller and choreographer from the Boston area, will treat you
to the best contra and square dances
from around the country. She's been dancing all her life and
has written dances that have travelled the world. Dancers of
all levels will enjoy Sue's clear teaching and spirited calling.
Challenging Contras, Squares for All, Callers Workshop
Chris Rua
Chris Rua is a versatile
musician who has performed a wide spectrum of music, from Medieval
to Jazz, on instruments and voice.
She has performed in New England and abroad with her own
ensembles Jadis, Dove’s Figary and Promised Land as well
as with Ex Umbris, Piffaro, New York's Ensemble for Early Music,
Voice
of the Turtle, Boston's Emmanuel Music and the Boston Early
Music Festival. She plays frequently for English Country
dancing throughout New England, was on staff at English American
Week
at Buffalo Gap in 2001 and will be this year for English
American Week at Pinewoods in Plymouth MA. Chris has been on
staff at
Pinewoods Early Music Week for over 15 years and was program
director from 1998 - 2000.
Beginning Recorder, Intermediate/Advanced Recorder
Lissa Schneckenburger
Lissa grew
up in Maine as an active member of the contradance community,
where she cut her teeth both as a musician and a
dancer at a very young age. She has now played and taught
all over the world as a fiddler and vocalist, including appearances
in Russia, Holland, Belgium, Denmark, Canada, and of course,
the United States. Lissa has opened for artists such as Alasdair
Fraser, Skyedance, and Judy Collins. She received a BM in
performance
from the New England Conservatory of Music in 2001.
Susan Spalding
Susan Spalding
has taught dance to children and teachers in school, recreation,
and community settings for more than 20 years.
She has served on state and national task forces working on
dance content standards and programs of study. She directs
the Berea College Country Dancers, who really know how to make
dance fun for children and adults wherever they go.
Dancing in School
Maureen Spencer
Maureen Spencer
is a member of the Angleterre Morris Dancers of Louisville which
has performed Morris, Rapper, and English
Clog Dancing for the past 15 years. Her other dancing interests
include ritual and step dancing from England, Scotland and
Ireland.
Beginning Rapper
Joe Tarter
A dance leader and
organizer for more than twenty years, Joe has been Program Director
of CDSS Family Week at Buffalo Gap
and is Squire of Foothills Morris Men in Berea. He was the
interim Director of CCDS in 1990 and 1991, and has served as
Director of CCDS since 2000.
Paty Tarter
Patty is a member
of the Ritchie Family of Eastern Kentucky with a repertoire of
traditional Appalachian songs and singing games.
She plays dulcimer and sings for Elderhostel groups in and
around Berea.
Will coordinate Morningsong and Stories, and Evening Parlor
Katy Tarter-German
Katy is a Berea
native and former member of the Berea Festival Dancers. She has
taught Appalachian songs, dances, and games
at a variety of dance camps, including Pinewoods, Buffalo Gap,
Cumberland Camp, and Lady of the Lake. Katy is also a member
of the CDSS Board of Directors.
Playparty and Singing Games, Molly Dancing
Al White
Al teaches Appalachian
music for string instruments at Berea College and is best known
for his mandolin, fiddle, guitar,
and banjo playing, teaching any and all of these when asked.
Al plays fiddle in the Berea Cast-Offs dance band and has been
an artist-in-residence for the Kentucky Arts Council in storytelling,
folk music and dance. He also has been a staff member at Pinewoods,
Buffalo Gap, KY Summer Dance School, and other dance weeks.
Alice White
Alice grew up singing
and playing traditional, bluegrass and gospel music with her
family in the McLain Family Band. She
is an early elementary school teacher and plays bass in the
Berea Cast-Offs.
Sound by Doug Dorschug
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