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Paul Rosenberg
538 Providence Street
Albany, NY 12208
Tel # (800) 908-4663 or (518) 482-9255
E-mail: paul@homespun.biz
Performer biographical information:
Paul
Rosenberg has been leading dances throughout the
northeastern United States since 1986. In recent years, he
has been one of the busiest callers in North America,
working over 175 dance engagements a year. He is known for
his gentle but energetic, encouraging style, concise
teaching, and offbeat sense of humor.
The
programs Paul presents consist of community dances from the
Hudson Valley, United Kingdom, Appalachia, and New England,
as well as international folk dances and African-American
singing and playparty games. Paul
loves teaching traditional dances to children (as a visiting
arts educator) in elementary schools and leading novices in
community dances at festivals, community celebrations,
weddings, family reunions, birthday parties, family dances,
Girl Scout dances, and other gatherings. He also leads
seasoned contradancers and has performed at numerous major
festivals and events around the Northeast.
Paul
gets his greatest satisfaction from enabling people who have
never danced—especially the dance phobic—to not only get
up and dance, but also to have a great time doing it and
come back for more! Someone once said of his teaching skill,
“Paul can even teach a three-legged stool to dance.” His
enthusiasm for dance and empathy with novices comes from his
avoidance-at-all-costs and terror of dancing—until he
discovered contradancing at age 30.
The
other hat he wears is as an organizer. He founded and
organizes the Dance Flurry Festival in Saratoga Springs, NY;
a monthly family dance in Albany and Saratoga; and
Fiddlers’ Tour, a weekly fiddle tune jam session in the
Albany area. He founded and serves on the Board of Directors
of Hudson-Mohawk Traditional Dances, Inc., a nonprofit
educational organization dedicated to the preservation,
study, teaching, enjoyment, and continuing evolution of
traditional dance.
Paul
has recorded a CD -- with his band “Peter, Paul &
George” -- and written a companion instruction book called
Peel the Banana, which presents a popular sequence of
dances from school residencies, family dances, and community
celebrations.
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