Traditional Western Square Dances 3b - Heads to the Center, Sides Divide
Creator: Bill Litchman (Nov. 19, 2011)
Bill Litchman taught this dance as part of his session (November 19, 2011) on Traditional Western Squares at the Dare To Be Square Weekend, John C. Campbell Folk School, Brasstown, NC. Co-sponsored by the Country Dance and Song Society (CDSS), the event brought together six experienced callers representing different styles of traditional and modern square dance with about 70 square dance enthusiasts.
Musicians for this workshop were Claudio Buchwald and Steve Hickman, fiddles; Jim Morrison, guitar; Sam Bartlett, banjo, joined by Larry Edelman, mandolin. The tune is "Bill Cheatham."
Subjects: Transitional/Western 1950s
Tags: Bill Litchman, Heads to the Center Sides Divide, traditional western
Tags: Bill Litchman, Heads to the Center Sides Divide, traditional western
Item Relations
Item: Heads to the Center walkthrough - Bill Litchman - Traditional Western Square Dances 3a | is related to | This Item |
Citation
Bill Litchman, “Traditional Western Square Dances 3b - Heads to the Center, Sides Divide,” Square Dance History Project, accessed February 23, 2025, http://squaredancehistory.org/items/show/766.
Dublin Core
Title
Traditional Western Square Dances 3b - Heads to the Center, Sides Divide
Subject
Description
Bill Litchman taught this dance as part of his session (November 19, 2011) on Traditional Western Squares at the Dare To Be Square Weekend, John C. Campbell Folk School, Brasstown, NC. Co-sponsored by the Country Dance and Song Society (CDSS), the event brought together six experienced callers representing different styles of traditional and modern square dance with about 70 square dance enthusiasts.
Musicians for this workshop were Claudio Buchwald and Steve Hickman, fiddles; Jim Morrison, guitar; Sam Bartlett, banjo, joined by Larry Edelman, mandolin. The tune is "Bill Cheatham."
Musicians for this workshop were Claudio Buchwald and Steve Hickman, fiddles; Jim Morrison, guitar; Sam Bartlett, banjo, joined by Larry Edelman, mandolin. The tune is "Bill Cheatham."
Creator
Date Created
Nov. 19, 2011
Contributor
Temporal Coverage
Moving Image Item Type Metadata
Embed code
Duration
3:36