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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.
Dave Brown
Dave has played traditional music since 1968. His band, Wild Thyme,
recorded 20 English Dance collections between 1975-1999. More
recently, Dave's new bands, ConTradition and Skylark, are known
for their energy, creativity in styles from English to Contra.
Dave's improvisational and rhythmic style being at the heart
of this music. Dave has been a regular visitor to Berea and he
has appeared at most English festivals playing for Dance and
teaching Advanced Dance Band and Folk Orchestra classes. Dave's
workshops are not to missed!
Mary Colmer
Mary Elizabeth Colmer of Berea has created over 10,000 cornshuck
dolls in the last 34 years. Dedicated to preserving endangered
heritage crafts, she has taught classes in cornshuck dollmaking,
mountain dulcimer, and tatting for 21 years at her studio/workshop,
Weaver’s Bottom, located in Old Town, Berea, KY.
David Crandall
David has been an active 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.
Eric Crowden
Eric is a graduate of Berea College, a fine arts major in textiles.
His festive banners, paper cuts, and decorations grace Seabury
Center at CCDS. He has been making temari for over 13 years.
John Devine
John is a wonderful guitar player and a delightful singer of swing
and old-time songs. John plays for all styles of country dancing
from English to New England to Southern and has taught and played
at Buffalo Gap and Pinewoods Family Weeks.
Brad Foster
Brad has been dancing and teaching English country, contras and
squares, and morris and sword for over thirty five years. He
is well known for sharing the joy found in dance, and has taught
throughout the US, Canada and Europe, including at Berea, Pinewoods,
Mendocino, John C. Campbell Folk School, and Augusta. He is
Executive and Artistic Director of the Country Dance and Song
Society,
a post he has held for over 20 years.
| Classes |
- Advanced English Country Dance
- English Country Dances
From Playford to Ceilidh
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Svend and Anna Hamborg
Anna and Svend Hamborg, Denmark, have been dancing Danish, Scandinavian
and international folk dances for 35 years. Most of the time
they have been dance leaders for several groups in North West
Jutland Svend has specially studied traditional folkdances in
the local area. They have organized Danish American Folk Dance
exchanging several times. Svend was a guest teacher at Berea
Christmas Country Dance School back in 1989.
| Classes |
- Beginning Danish Folk Dance
- Int/Adv Danish Folk Dance
- Scandinavian Couple Dances
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Mary Harrell
Mary has taught English country dancing at workshops, dance camps,
elderhostels, and at Christmas Country Dance School. Her enthusiasm
for the dance is infectious, and her clarity makes learning a
pleasure. She is a graduate of Berea College, and was a performance
dancer under Frank Smith during her college years.
| Classes |
- Beginning English Country Dance
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Steve Hickman
Steve has been on staff at dance camps and family weeks from Alaska
to Florida, including John C Campbell Folk School, Lady of the
Lake, Pinewoods, and Buffalo Gap. Steve is a master of music
for Irish, Scottish, English country, contras and swing dancing,
and known for his mastery of “hamboning.”
Andrea Hoag
Andrea Hoag played in her first dance band in Berea in 1978,
and has never looked back. She has been a full-time musician
since
1984. She has played on a hiphop recording, at half-time for
the Norwegian national basketball team, and at the Kennedy
Center, but thinks there is nothing quite like CCDS.
Steve Howe
Steve Howe is program coordinator for the Country Dance and Song
Society's summer camps at Pinewoods, Buffalo Gap, and Ogontz.
He started morris and sword dancing in NYC with the Greenwich
Morris Men and currently is foreman of both the Marlboro Morris
Men and That Long Tall Sword in western Massachusetts. He also
dances with Green Mountain Mummers.
| Classes |
- Cotswold Morris
- Longsword
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Lydia Ievins
Based in Montague MA, lydia plays fiddle regularly for English,
contra, and couple dancing with her bands the Further Adventures
and Rose Tree; as a guest musician with the Greenfield Dance
Band, the Moving Violations, Yankee Ingenuity, and Pleasures
of the Town; and with many other combinations of talented folk.
Jonathan Jensen
Jonathan is an inspired pianist in a wealth of musical styles from
contra and English country to ragtime and jazz. A composer of
brilliant English country dance tunes and waltzes, Jonathan performs
at dance events and camps around the country and is a bassist
with the Baltimore Symphony.
Chris Kermiet
Chris Kermiet has been calling and teaching traditional American
squares and contras for over thirty years. He comes from an extensive
music and dance background. His mother was Pauline Ritchie of
the singing Ritchie family from Viper, Kentucky, while his father
was Paul Kermiet, one of Colorado's premier old time square dance
callers. Chris grew up with square, contra, and folk dance. His
father ran a summer camp, the Lighted Lantern, for thirty years
(1946-1976) during the time that Chris was growing up. The Lighted
Lantern camp was a mecca for square and folk dancers who came
from all over the United States and Canada to spend a week dancing
with some of the finest callers and teachers in the country.
Chris learned from all of them, and became intrigued with learning
more about the other Celtic dance traditions that influenced
American squares and contras. He learned Scottish dance from
Bruce McClure and C. Stewart Smith, Welsh from Vyts Beliajus,
and English from May Gadd and Genevieve Shimer. During the last
ten years, as well as being in demand as a caller and teacher
of traditional dance, he has created choreographies for a number
of performing groups and theater companies. Five years ago, he
received the Heritage Award/2000 Artist Fellowship from the Colorado
Council on the Arts for calling and teaching traditional American
community dance, as well as the Westword Best of Denver Award
for Best Dance Caller.
Susan Kevra
Currently residing in Nashville, TN, Susan began calling in New
England in 1991, appearing in grange halls in tiny snow-covered
villages, as well as major festivals and dance camps from coast
to coast. She spent 2000-2001 in France, traveling throughout
Western Europe teaching contras, squares and English Country
Dancing. Dancers on both sides of the Atlantic appreciate her
clear teaching and diverse repertoire of singing squares, Western
patter calls, contras and English Country dances presented with
charm, wit and respect for the traditions. The choreographer
of a number of well loved dances, she is the author of "Trip
to Phan Reel" and "The Country of Marriage." She
is also a fine clarinetist and singer and is a member of the
English Country Dance Band, "Meeting House." Her calling
and singing can be heard on the critically acclaimed CD, "Full
Swing," featuring New England's finest contra dance musicians.
It contains a lengthy and entertaining booklet written by Susan
tracing the roots of New England contra dancing and a guide for
new callers.
| Classes |
- Intermediate English Country
Dance
- Square/Contra Dance Caller’s Workshop
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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.
Peter Kruskal
Peter Kruskal grew up going to pinewoods dance camp starting at
age four. He joined Pinewoods Morris Men and Velocirapper in
1996. Peter co-founded a rapper team at Oberlin College and served
as forman from 2004 to 2005. While at Oberlin he also taught
a rapper dancing class to college students.
| Classes |
- Beginning Rapper
- Advanced Rapper
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Tom Kruskal
Tom Kruskal fell in love with the anglo concertina at the age of
13 at Christmas School, 1962. He's been playing ever since, recently
for the Pinewoods Morris Men, Orion Sword, Hop Brook Morris and
Great Meadows Morris and Sword. Every year he directs a mummer's
play with his children's team. A veteran of CDSS, Tom is looking
forward to returning to Berea after a long absence.
Lewis & Donna Lamb
This father and daughter duo began playing for the Berea College
Country Dancers in the 1960’s. They perform and teach old
time square dance music and traditional songs at festivals & workshops
throughout the region.
| Classes |
- Woodcarving
- Songs From The Past To The Present
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Glen Morningstar
Glen has been leading organized and community dances for 25 years
across Michigan and the Midwest as well as Canada, Europe and
Scandinavia. His current passion is helping Home School groups
organize contra, square and historical dance events. Glen and
his wife Judi are members of The Olde Michigan Ruffwater Stringband
circa 1978. Check out his new book, “Dance the Winter Away”!
| Classes |
- Challenging Contras and Squares
- Writing Contra Dances
- Organizing A Dance Community
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Judi Morningstar
Judi plays hammered dulcimer and piano for dances with her husband
Glen in the Ruffwater Stringband and also performs folk music
in the group Just Friends Trio. She teaches hammered dulcimer
and back-up piano, composes music and has authored five music
books including the Ruffwater Fakebook. She has presented workshops
and played for dances and dance camps across the Midwest as well
as Canada, Europe and Scandinavia.
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-fifth year
at CCDS.
Janet Northern
Janet is a self taught basket maker from Rockcastle County, KY.
She has been making baskets for eight years. This will be her
sixth 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.
Deborah Payne
From Berea, KY, Deborah has grown up playing fiddle in the dance
community. A former member of contra dance band "The Last
of the Fashion Conscious Lumberjacks," she has also played
with the "Berea College Bluegrass Ensemble," and bluegrass
band "CaneBreak". Deborah performed with the Berea
Festival Dancers and co-led a children's dance group playing
music and teaching dances to local Berea youth.
Ruth Pershing
Ruth Pershing has long been active in traditional music and dance
circles, performing with the Cane Creek Cloggers for 19 years,
and regularly calling contras, squares and family dances. She
has taught clogging and led dances at Brasstown (NC), Ashokan
(NY) Pinewoods (MA), Wannadance (WA), Mendocino (CA), Merlefest
(NC), Moosejaw (MN), and Hindman (KY). She studied buck dance
with bluesman John Dee Holeman of Durham (NC), and worked with
Mike Seeger to co-produce Talking Feet, a video-documentary on
southern step dance. She has also worked with traditional music
and dance in event production, archiving, and radio. She currently
teaches mathematics to middle school kids and parents her own
three children in Chapel Hill, NC.
| Classes |
- Beginning Appalachian Clogging
- Advanced Appalachian
Clogging
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Pat Peterson
Patricia Petersen has been intensely involved with recorder, early
music, and English country dance for more than 30 years. A Certified
Teacher of the American Recorder Society, she is currently the
Music Director of the Triangle Recorder Society in central North
Carolina, a Director Emerita of Amherst Early Music Inc., and
a popular teacher of English country dance, recorder, early music,
and Renaissance notation, both at home and at summer and weekend
workshops across the country.
| Classes |
- Beginning Recorder
- Int/Adv Recorder
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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.
Meg Ryan
Meg Ryan is a founding member and sometime leader of Guiding Star
Clog Morris, She is also an outstanding performer and teacher
of English and Anglo-American clog dance styles. A member of
The New Dancing Marleys, Meg has performed in England, Canada
and the U.S.. She has studied with masters of English clog including
Pat Tracey, Alex Woodcock and Sam Sherry as well as Connecticut's
Anna Marley.
| Classes |
- Marley Step Dance
- Northwest Clog Morris
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Brad Sayler
Brad Sayler danced and called in Philadelphia and with the Boston
Centre before moving to Charlottesville Virginia, where he leads
English dances, contras and squares, races stock cars and plays
ice hockey. In addition to the excitement he gets from calling
for established dance communities, he also enjoys sharing the
joys of dance with new dancers in church, school, and community
groups. In his calling, he strives for clarity and precision,
with a generous dose of warmth and humor. He considers it a privilege
to have been on staff at festivals and dance camps throughout
the country.
| Classes |
- Advanced English Country Dance
- Fun & Easy Contras/Squares
- English Dance Callers
Workshop
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Octavia Sexton
A native of Eastern Kentucky, Octavia grew up hearing folk tales,
Jack tales, and Cherokee legends that her family members have
told and re-told for generations. Octavia is a member of the
National Storytelling Network and the Kentucky Arts Council and
has performed widely throughout the region and at the National
Storytelling Association Festival in Jonesborough, Tenn. She
holds a bachelor’s degree in History and English Education
from Berea College and an M.S. in Health Education.
Joe Tarter
A dance leader and organizer for more than twenty-five 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 & 1991, and has served as Director
of CCDS since 2000.
Patty 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.
| Classes |
- Morningsong and Stories
- Evening
Parlor
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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 Dorshug
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