Tell me about it.Thanks you made my day! :kissme:
Picture is from Nov. 2006 my hair's a bit grayer now.
:headwall:
I wish I had started this a long time ago. Maybe I'd be good by now.
Ask questions, meet dancers, and be part of the conversation.
Tell me about it.Thanks you made my day! :kissme:
Picture is from Nov. 2006 my hair's a bit grayer now.
The way I see it, it’s the idea of dancing to the phrases in the music—what the individual beats, notes and instruments combine to make. It’s not taking things one beat at a time, but paying attention to how they are grouped and what those groupings create.JohnEm said:Whatever this unexplained idea is.
Perhaps we will have to agree to disagree on this, or perhaps it’s just a communication problem. IMO, interpreting the music is just a way of transforming what is going on in the music into a dance. What is that, if not communicating the music? It’s communicating how one person hears it, to another person…be that an audience or a partner.The leader isn't communicating the music but his interpretation of it. Over-complicating it or listening to something your follower cannot/does not hear, can be a mite too clever.
When did this become only about beginner dancers? I’d agree that getting into this level of interpretation might not be the best thing for those still working on controlling their own movement, and learning how to lead various things (technique, not steps). Of course, if a leader is spending all his mental energy trying not to run into people on the dance floor, or not step on his partner’s toes, or figure out how to get out of a giro, then it’s not the best time to be bringing this up.Nice, but not for beginners or anyone who needs to consider lessons for musicality. For me the best way of learning musicality is to listen, absorb and move freely to the music. But first you have to have the spare mental capacity to do that, the fluidity, the connection etc etc and it takes time. Everyone progresses differently, and some never get there.
As it happens, I was talking about social dancing. I rarely ever think about professional choreography. Do most people do this? No. Most seem to get to the point of stepping on the beats (or the half-beats) and to consider that good enough. *shrug* That’s fine, I suppose, but it misses out on so much.I'm not even sure you're being realistic about social dancing either. It is social dancing we're talking about or are we (well you) talking about professional choreography?
This isn’t about dancing to anything you can’t hear. It’s about learning to hear more in the music, and making use of it. And your partner is hearing the same music as you, and she can learn to hear (or at least feel) more in the music, the same as you.Actually he says very little except to speak in mysterious terms very briefly about a whole book. What I do know is that I have to dance to what I can hear, not what I think I can hear. Then at least I know my partner is hearing the same as me, provided she's listening too.
Well, I suppose it depends on how you’re defining “the beat.” I know, I know…a beat is a beat is a beat, right? But are you including the half-beats in that definition? (AKA, double time, or dancing on 1-and-2-and-3-and-4-and.) That, to me, is not strictly dancing on the beat…it’s syncopating, in dance terms. And then there are the sixteenth notes (assuming 4/4 or 2/4 time)—1 ee and ah, 2 ee and ah, etc. Sooo many different options.And actually, no matter what you feel in the music, in the end you have to step on a beat (note: A beat, not every beat) as that's what unites the partners in time. You're implying that you may not want to necessarily do that. I think.
The only difference between us is in the concept of what we communicate. I say a leader of ability conveys his intrepretation by movement, subtle and otherwise, just not the music itself which is heard by both partners. In fact I'm not sure there's any disagreement at all, only the words.The way I see it, it’s the idea of dancing to the phrases in the music—what the individual beats, notes and instruments combine to make. It’s not taking things one beat at a time, but paying attention to how they are grouped and what those groupings create.
Perhaps we will have to agree to disagree on this, or perhaps it’s just a communication problem. IMO, interpreting the music is just a way of transforming what is going on in the music into a dance. What is that, if not communicating the music? It’s communicating how one person hears it, to another person…be that an audience or a partner.
Because this thread is about teaching musicality to dancers.When did this become only about beginner dancers? I’d agree that getting into this level of interpretation might not be the best thing for those still working on controlling their own movement, and learning how to lead various things (technique, not steps). Of course, if a leader is spending all his mental energy trying not to run into people on the dance floor, or not step on his partner’s toes, or figure out how to get out of a giro, then it’s not the best time to be bringing this up.
We diverge here but probably only in timing of teaching/learning,OTOH, there are some things where it’s never too early to start mentioning, and to start having people think about, even if they are not yet ready to make use of the information. It can’t hurt to have beginners learn to listen to the music and try to discern, at the most basic level, how there are phrases…or how there can be tension created through the music. Or how, if you try, you can walk differently to convey different emotion—how you would hold your body differently if you are angry versus if you are sad versus if you are happy…and then start thinking about what sort of emotion is conveyed through the music…and then thinking about how you would hold and move your body to convey that emotion. Do “arcs” or phrases fit into something like this…possibly.
And there’s nothing wrong with taking classes in musicality. It’s a great way to explore different ideas, and learn different ways of expression, and learning to listen to music in different ways. Just because it’s not the best for you (although I’d wager that everyone can learn something new if they try), doesn’t mean it isn’t helpful to other people.
This isn’t about dancing to anything you can’t hear. It’s about learning to hear more in the music, and making use of it. And your partner is hearing the same music as you, and she can learn to hear (or at least feel) more in the music, the same as you.
Well, I suppose it depends on how you’re defining “the beat.” I know, I know…a beat is a beat is a beat, right? But are you including the half-beats in that definition? (AKA, double time, or dancing on 1-and-2-and-3-and-4-and.) That, to me, is not strictly dancing on the beat…it’s syncopating, in dance terms. And then there are the sixteenth notes (assuming 4/4 or 2/4 time)—1 ee and ah, 2 ee and ah, etc. Sooo many different options.
I'll agree about delaying a departure, which may be possible, but not about the arrival which should neither be ahead nor behind the next most appropriate beat.As for not stepping ON the beat…well, I’m sort of implying that. Even with nice, even, normal, straight-up, non-changing beats there are ways of stretching and compressing the timing of your dancing. You can arrive on a step a shade ahead of the beat, or hold one step until the very very very last moment of one beat and have to really hustle to “make it to the next beat” on time. There can be slight differences in when you step ver us when you arrive. These are very very very slight differences in timing—much less than a sixteenth note, I’m talking about fractions of fractions of a second. Can they be seen by others? I don’t know. Can they be felt? Absolutely, when they’re done right and combined well…
As for not stepping ON the beat…well, I’m sort of implying that. Even with nice, even, normal, straight-up, non-changing beats there are ways of stretching and compressing the timing of your dancing. You can arrive on a step a shade ahead of the beat, or hold one step until the very very very last moment of one beat and have to really hustle to “make it to the next beat” on time. There can be slight differences in when you step ver us when you arrive. These are very very very slight differences in timing—much less than a sixteenth note, I’m talking about fractions of fractions of a second. Can they be seen by others? I don’t know. Can they be felt? Absolutely, when they’re done right and combined well…
@ johnem; I dont have a problem with teaching being academic; as someone who works 99% intuitively I need that stating of the bleeding obvious
This is not a new concept. I have been doing it ever since I started dancing, and have even tried to teach it in my "How To Hear Music and Understand Rhythms" class. I'm not being pious; I am saying that I didn't realize that it isn't a common thing.
I feel it... with the music.. and I make it fit. That's how I dance regardless of what type of dance (or skating) I'm doing. I don't know anything about all this other stuff and I can't explain it any better than that. Since I get compliments, I can only assume it works for me. Seems these discussions are over-complicating the whole idea?
If whatever you are doing works, then by all means, keep doing it. But not everyone has it all figured out (whether on the conscious or subconscious level).Personally, with these threads on music and cadencia and arc'ing and whatever, I'm starting to channel the young ballerina in movie The Turning Point". She is given very abstract choreography and when she "emotes" too much, the choreographer tells her to "just count to the counts I give you".
She says;
"I don't count"
He says:
"So how do you know what to do, when?"
She replies:
"I feel it.. with the music... and I make it fit"
(he says "well don't feel it, count it" and she walks off in a huff)
I feel it... with the music.. and I make it fit. That's how I dance regardless of what type of dance (or skating) I'm doing. I don't know anything about all this other stuff and I can't explain it any better than that. Since I get compliments, I can only assume it works for me. Seems these discussions are over-complicating the whole idea?
Isn't that amazing, I don't count either! I would rather suffer a tortured death. I recall my first Salsa class, they had me counting. As a result, for years, it was the one dance that I couldn't do."I don't count"
You don't. As Chrisjj would say: "They are hopeless."The questions is, how do you explain what you are doing to someone who doesn't feel it. It's not so easy to do.
If whatever you are doing works, then by all means, keep doing it. But not everyone has it all figured out (whether on the conscious or subconscious level).
The questions is, how do you explain what you are doing to someone who doesn't feel it. It's not so easy to do.
Well, (surprisingly enough) I disagree with ChrisJJ. Just because he can't doesn't mean that others can't. It is difficult, though.You don't. As Chrisjj would say: "They are hopeless."![]()
Keep it simple. No so-called arcs, phrases, cadences whatever...
Yes - but later.I would say that understanding phrasing in music is essential for good musicality.