Monday, December 25, 2006

Learn to read! This Christmas, give yourself the gift of literacy. Labanotation.

Friday, November 17, 2006

I want to make every song feel different from every other song. Every song is different from every other song, so I believe this is an achievable goal.

Well okay: how can this be done? I simply don't have the raw creativity to produce a new, insightful musical interpretation from thin air every three minutes. What I need for now is a starting point. Recently I've been playing with two simple ideas that I think are a good start to finding the unique character of a song: both have to do with aligning your movement with the underlying rhythm (or groove) of the song.

The first idea: Use the "ple" of the tri-ple-step; this is (perhaps) swing music, the "ple" is not a square eighth note. Listen to what the musicians are doing with their "ples"-- in some song's they'll emphasize it; in some, they'll hang back; in some, they'll rush it; in some, they'll make it skip. My "ple" should do all these things and more; my "ple" should be able to go anywhere between the "tri" and the "step" that best matches or complements what I hear.

The second idea: Move the "1", meaning start your swingout on a beat other than the downbeat of the measure. Each beat of the swingout has a different feel: imagine doing an endless sequence of swingouts, it would feel in some way like you're riding the surface of a wave that repeats every eight beats. I imagine that the music has a surface too, and ideally the wave of the dance should follow or accentuate or complement the surface of the music. The idea here is that the dance might fit certain music better if you shift it to one side or the other by some amount (by shifting the "1" to a different beat).

Those are just ideas I've been playing with to try to get started. Currently I feel that my dancing is pretty monotonous or discordant ninety percent of the time: either I get stuck repeating things I've already done hundreds of times, or I make up some random sequences that have little relation to the things I should be connected with. My goal and desire is to get the feeling of uniqueness and musical harmony to be the norm. Each song has its own personality, its own character, its own loves and lives; and I don't want to be blind to that.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Often when I'm dancing I feel that I'm just outputting a random sequence of moves. Even in the best cases when the movements seem to fit the music and I can follow and complement the lines of the instruments and harmonize with the rhythm section, I still feel a blatant lack of overall structure. For instance, maybe a song repeats a phrase twice and then repeats it later: would it not make sense to use similar or even identical sequences of moves each time it repeats in the music? Maybe there is a particular break that reoccurs throughout the song: would it not make sense to use similar dance breaks at every occurrence instead of treating each one individually?

I think of the dancers as another musical instrument: dancers should share in the music the same way musicians do. When a musician solos, he still has to follow the structure of the song, but I feel that when I dance I dance in total disregard for the concept of structure. I think that a dance should follow the structure of the song instead of simply relying on what the instruments are playing at a single given point in the music.

But how does musical structure translate to dance structure? Given a phrase of music, how do you determine what an appropriate phrase of dancing would be? And given an entire song, what tricks or techniques do you need to improvise a dance that reflects the song's structure?

I suppose that just like an individual move or the way that a specific move is executed can have a feeling to it, a sequence of moves or the way that a series of moves is transitioned can also have a certain feeling. So my next goal is to start becoming aware of what those "phrase feelings" are.