Spitfire
Well-Known Member
I've been dancing this time around for nine years now having had been away from it pretty much for a period of fourteen years, but it is only in the last two years that I have been made aware of something; that the term "ballroom" seems to hold a negative connotation in the minds of many people. (eww, ballroom!). :?
The main criticism I get is that ballroom is rigid, structured and done by a set of "rules" rather then being loose and free, that some forms are not authentic, are "invented" by the studios. With regard to the former I am baffled. When I do a Cha-Cha for instance I just don't get any sense of rigidity or strict adherence, but rather that loose and free feeling that I hear about and it's the same way with my other dances. All my dancing is strictly social; perhaps the image people get in their minds is of competitive dancing where this is the case since judges are looking for certain criteria and this image is also being placed on social dancers? :?
I was surprised and dissapointed to learn of this since I thought the dance community as a whole was pretty united by a common interest. Getting back to an earlier post I made about dancing and martial arts comparrisons; it's like the diagreements that exist between practitioners of the different styles of martial arts - another comparrison between the two.
My only "negative" about ballroom dancing is the business practices of some, but not all studios.
The main criticism I get is that ballroom is rigid, structured and done by a set of "rules" rather then being loose and free, that some forms are not authentic, are "invented" by the studios. With regard to the former I am baffled. When I do a Cha-Cha for instance I just don't get any sense of rigidity or strict adherence, but rather that loose and free feeling that I hear about and it's the same way with my other dances. All my dancing is strictly social; perhaps the image people get in their minds is of competitive dancing where this is the case since judges are looking for certain criteria and this image is also being placed on social dancers? :?
I was surprised and dissapointed to learn of this since I thought the dance community as a whole was pretty united by a common interest. Getting back to an earlier post I made about dancing and martial arts comparrisons; it's like the diagreements that exist between practitioners of the different styles of martial arts - another comparrison between the two.
My only "negative" about ballroom dancing is the business practices of some, but not all studios.