Dancing the skeleton vs dancing the muscle

SwingWaltz

New Member
I don't really understand what it means when people say that one should dance with their skeleton rather than dance with their muscles. Apparently I dance with my muscles and it's not a good thing. Anyone care to explain plesase?
 
If you have too much tension in your muscles (they are contracted), even the ones that are needed at the time, then your movement will be restricted. An easy movement from a toned yet relaxed body is desired. The problem often stems from forcing movement instead of allowing the natural forces of gravity and inertia to allow the body to swing.

The skeleton, when minimally supported by surrounding muscles, is very adept at countering gravity and supporting the weight of the body. Tensing muscles and trying to hold up the body with too much muscle usage does not allow the skeleton, whose separate parts are quite strong, to bear the brunt of the work of opposing gravity, and tires the muscles while at the same time restricting otherwise free-swinging movement, as stated above.

Think of a natural walking motion. If you walked with tense muscles even a short distance, your legs and back and everything involved would be worn out, and your walking motion would not be natural, but appear forced, as if you were consciously placing each step. Instead, the natural and efficient way is for the impetus of movement to come from a perspective of moving the body (skeleton), and allowing the legs to fall/swing under it.
 
The muscles move the skeleton, but people don't think of their spine enough...me thinks
 
Thank you! Great explaination!

If I have not misunderstood, I should move my spine and let my legs catch my weight rather than using my legs to move my weight.
 
josh...I am so relieved to say that I finally understand that...thanks for such a great explanation of it...and wow, what a difference it makes!
 
In my experience, there are two types of movement: muscle movement and bony movement. Bony movement only uses as much energy as needed to move the bones(previous explanation is good). this kind of movement is fast and quick. muscly is slow stationary movement. think about those slow beautiful movements.
 
In my experience, there are two types of movement: muscle movement and bony movement. Bony movement only uses as much energy as needed to move the bones(previous explanation is good). this kind of movement is fast and quick. muscly is slow stationary movement. think about those slow beautiful movements.
dunno...muscle movement can be way too quick;)
 
Thank you! Great explaination!

If I have not misunderstood, I should move my spine and let my legs catch my weight rather than using my legs to move my weight.

I think you have the right idea, but you should of course get your coach to help implement this. We sometimes have a tendency to over-correct and you need some eyes on you to work with you throughout the process. For example, letting your legs catch your weight doesn't imply that your legs are always "lagging behind" in every figure in every dance! I certainly have lots to work on in this particular aspect of my dancing, and it's simply something you can't do without outside help. I hope others will post their take on this, as mine is just one perspective on it!
 
Just recall Luca Barricchi kept emphasizing the usage of "joint" in his teaching video, guess it's his way to emphasizing "dancing the skeleton" and relax the muscles.
 
Just recall Luca Barricchi kept emphasizing the usage of "joint" in his teaching video, guess it's his way to emphasizing "dancing the skeleton" and relax the muscles.

exactly, since the joints are the load-bearing connectors of the skeletal frame.
 
If you have too much tension in your muscles (they are contracted), even the ones that are needed at the time, then your movement will be restricted. An easy movement from a toned yet relaxed body is desired. The problem often stems from forcing movement instead of allowing the natural forces of gravity and inertia to allow the body to swing.

Wow. Great explanation!

Difficulty for me is "toned yet relaxed." I tend to get "stiff" when I try to have a toned body. :rolleyes:
 

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