Don't know if anyone else caught the review in the New York Times on "Burn the Floor?"
According to the critic, the show featring many of ballroom's top dancers, "with a canny understanding of each category of the genre, [takes] most of the dance out of these dances."
and . . .
"It is therefore time to say that ballroom today (at exhibition and competitive levels) proposes behavior from both sexes that looks not much like courtship and seduction but something alarmingly close to rape and whorishness. It does degrade women, and it makes its men look crassly manipulative. (All five “Ballroom’s Best” men simply look like creeps.)
Still, my chief objection to these visions of ballroom is not moral. (These people choose to do it.) What makes me wretched is that all these stunts, acrobatics, point-scoring and flashy displays of sexual availability are what matter. Musicality, phrasing, intimacy and actual sensuousness are what don’t."
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/13/arts/dance/13ballroom.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hpw
Some of this reflect my own reservations with the current trends in ballroom: too many tricks, too little good ballroom dancing; and in Latin numbers, particularly, tastelessness in what is supposed to pass as sexiness or sensuality.
Would love to hear from others.
According to the critic, the show featring many of ballroom's top dancers, "with a canny understanding of each category of the genre, [takes] most of the dance out of these dances."
and . . .
"It is therefore time to say that ballroom today (at exhibition and competitive levels) proposes behavior from both sexes that looks not much like courtship and seduction but something alarmingly close to rape and whorishness. It does degrade women, and it makes its men look crassly manipulative. (All five “Ballroom’s Best” men simply look like creeps.)
Still, my chief objection to these visions of ballroom is not moral. (These people choose to do it.) What makes me wretched is that all these stunts, acrobatics, point-scoring and flashy displays of sexual availability are what matter. Musicality, phrasing, intimacy and actual sensuousness are what don’t."
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/13/arts/dance/13ballroom.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hpw
Some of this reflect my own reservations with the current trends in ballroom: too many tricks, too little good ballroom dancing; and in Latin numbers, particularly, tastelessness in what is supposed to pass as sexiness or sensuality.
Would love to hear from others.