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2017年6月19日 星期一

how to look right in Swing

internet source: Charleston Dancing

Swing is a very general term that includes too many different kind of dances; so when people say swing, there will be question marks as we which swing would be the mentioned one. It takes some effort to differentiate the styles, but once you get the basics, how to look right? Here, we are going to share some head-to-toe tips that can get the right look for you in Swing!

If you want to get the look with the fashion and accessories that come with being a swing dancer, first get some inspiration from the dancers of the era, looking at pictures of people jitterbug-ging in the 1940s would be a good idea.

Foot wear-
Back at the Swing time, people did not always wear suede soles, it mostly depended on the floors textures and the style they were dancing to- like performing aerials or not, sliding or not, tapping or not, hopping or not... leather would be their choice mostly. However, in general Lindy Hoppers preferred leather soles, and brogues were perfect. Dancers who loved more acrobatic kind of swing dancing, for instance Rock n Roll, Keds would be great. In fact, beginners of all kinds of swing would find Keds very nice to dance on.

For ladies, there was also decision to make as whether or not to go for the heels. It was absolutely up to the individual dancer, though women dancing Balboa almost always wore high heels. Again, leather soles are key as all parts of the foot must be able to pivot, shuffle and slide on the floor.


Want to learn more about Swing? Please check Dance Style Basics- Swing
or choose other dance styles on Kandykane's Dance Style Basics page. 
Want to self-learn some easiest dance steps? Make sure you get the free learning notes here!
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2017年4月10日 星期一

When we say we 'Jazz', what do you exactly mean?


Kandykane dancing Jazz

Everyone knows that we have Jazz dancing classes, after reading the class description, newcomers usually ask 'but what do we learn?'. To answer this, first we have to know that Jazz dance, through stylization, is an individualized dance and its form is heavily depends on personal expression, just as modern dance. For example, a basic jazz walk can take on many attitudes depending on the style and the number of official variations is up to 22 according to our technique book. In short, Jazz dancing is a broad term which includes many aspects and styles. It is worth taking a look at the many varieties of jazz if you really want to know what do we actually learn in a dance class.


Because jazz dance has so many influences from theater, social dance, classical dance, and music genres, many styles have become recognizable and have been given a descriptive name. Below are the major ones, please take special notice on the last three if you are our student, those are what we focus on.


Lyrical Jazz
Lyrical jazz is strongly influecned by ballet. Its movements use the entire body, extending the body lines. Movements possess a flowing quality, although a strong pulse may be used to emphasize dynamics. Sharp angular movements generally are avoided. The Luigi technique relates to lyrical jazz. Luigi combinations employ ballet technique but are performed with asymmetrical body lines, increased and varied movements of the spine, and syncopated rhythms and movements.


Musical Comedy or Theater Jazz
Musical Comedy, or theater jazz, is the style of jazz usually performed on the Nroadway stage and in early dance musicals. Theater jazz is characterized by movements that assist the story line of the play or musical. Often, the dance is an interaction oft he characters of the play in relation to the story’s plot.
Musical comedy jazz dance often incorporates props: hats, canes, chairs, and other objects relating to the story line of the play. New York and London are the hubs of musical comedy jazz, and many well-known masters of this style make their home there.




Comtemporary / Modern Jazz
This is heavily influenced by modern dance. It uses body contractions, flexed feet, and off-centre body shapes, which are reflective of modern dance techniques. This style of jazz dance may be more predominantly performed in concert or studio recitals in contrast to the styles of jazz dance used for Broadway shows, music videos, or TV and commercial specials. This style may be more expressive and floolows the exercise techniques of modern dance disciplines.




Afro Jazz
Afro Jazz stems from African movements explored by Katherine Dunham in the 1940s. It is often combined with ethnic dancs of the Caribbean Islands. The style is primitive, with major attention to movements of the spine, neck, and hips. The legs are usually in plie, and dancers typically dance barefooted. Accompaniment is primarily a drum, but other percussive instruments may be used depending on the dance. Many of the movements are duplications of movements used in African ceremonies, thus giving a hypnotic and ritualistic feeling to the dance style. 

West Coast Jazz
West Coast jazz is often recognized as the LA jazz dance style, although dance studios across the US teach it. Compared with lyrical jazz dance, West Coast jazz is angular and disjointed. It employs hip isolations, shoulder shrugs, and head rolls. Dance movements tend to be pedestrian, emphasizing walking, hand clapping, finger snapping, and general body isolations. Many of its dance steps come from social dance: the Jitterbug, the Two Step, the Frug.

Latin Jazz
A dance style influenced by Latin music and Latin social dance. Popular Latin music entered the jazz dance scene and gave rise to this style in choreography. Salsa often is the style of music used, in which the beat is counted ‘one and two’. The footwork is fast and syncopated while the body is loose, yet controlled. Steps also employ pauses and vogueing. Dance steps such as the mambo, conga, samba, tango, and cha-cha are used in the choreography. Many of these movements incorporate hip shakes as well as shoulder rolls and shimmies. The Latin music and movements make this a sensuous style of dance.


Hip Hop
As a child of break dancing, it consists of popping, locking, strutting, freestyle, and commercial moves. It began in the late 1970s, and its original movements now have come to be called ‘old school’. Old school moves include running man, kid n play, Roger Rabbit, Robocop, cabbage patch, buttrfly, tootsie roll, and others. ‘New School’ moves are more abstract and do not necessarily have specific names.
The hip hop culture is influenced by four elements:
  • DJs (disc jockeys and underground parties)
  • Graffiti (art)
  • MCs (rappers)
  • B-boys/-girls (breaker boy / girl dancers)
If you want to know more about Hip Hop and Street Dance, check here.

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2017年3月27日 星期一

A Quick Review of the Travels on the Dance Floor

http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=51wCQgAACAAJ&hl=zh-TW

A trip around the Latino countries to experience different styles of salsa and other Latin dances. Set off from Cuba, the Meca of salsa, made the way along the mainland, through Venezuela and Cali, Colombia's salsa city, to Panama. Then an island-hopping the Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, and gave a full stop in the Cuba-in-excile, the Latin quarter of Miami. Well, and a Salsa Congress in Blackpool.
Let's see how different among different salsa styles.

 
  Description   Class   Clubs and others
Cuban Salsa
(Havana, Cuba)
Tends to lean forward a bit and push the chest out.

Correct partner: palm vertical, pressing against the partner’s palm but not clasping her hand

Moves: forward-and-back, dile que no (cross-body step), enchufla (where the man spins his partner CCW then reconnects), the enchufla doble (where the lady gets half CCW turn, is caught and sent back before being spun completely round), encufla doble a la moderna (giving the lady a half-spin, then walking her in a circle while turning her again before sending both partners independently into a spin away from each other)

Salsa music in Havana has a steady and insistent rhythm. The crowd would clap the clave- the basic the basic three-two syncopated rhythm of salsa. Para disfrutar la musica.
Start with flexing the body and joints with different body isolating movements.

Have to find the internal point of balance at the centre of the chest, and swing from there, as if it’s a kind of pivot.
Everything follows the heart, el corazon.
Difference between Lady European visitors and Local people are noticeable.

Europeans tend to be preoccupied with elaborate moves and expect a lot of spins and exciting moves

Local Cuban dancers dance more simply, more subtly, and move in the rhythms of the music like fish in water. Cubanas follow the lead all right, but they don’t give the impression of being familiar with all the moves the man knows.
Venezuelan Salsa
(Caracas, Venezuela)
Basic as swinging from side to side instead of forward and backward, and turn straight from the drop-back

Using music from the coast, where there are more negros and the music is more African, which is more intricate and powerful.

Moves: Suzi Q, mambo (forward and back), guapea (where the partners step back, then come forward to meet, pressing palms together), arriba (man moving straight ahead, lady backing away), abaio (man moving backwards, taking lady forward), forward and backward, , open-out steps.
Rueda de casino, salsa circle dancing controlled by a caller, with da me (give me), and da me dos (give me two) using Cuban moves. 
People are precise, delicate, and light on their feet. But still turns are not often danced.

Clubs play also electronic music, reggaeton, house, hip hop, r ‘n’ b….  

The music drives the people. Everyone participate, dancing or clapping, people become part of the music. The clapping is a fourth percussion instrument, a collective heartbeat urging the music on.

Danced side by side, footsteps setting up a complex pattern with the syncopated handclaps.
Colombian Salsa
(Bogata, Colombia)
Colombian style started since 1960s. The key to it is simplicity.

Maintain floating precision with small steps and a lot of sensitivity to the music.

Colombian Salsa involves less body movement than Cuban, and fewer complicated turns.

It uses smaller steps and stay more upright.

Authentic Colombian way of footwork: a tap at 4 & 8. Each final toe-tap is completed by the lowering of the rest of the foot smoothly to the floor, as the opposite foot is lifted.

In particular, the style favour circular monememts of the hands: L in R, R in L and making little rhythmic movements with them as if polishing windows.

Moves: anticlockwise spins, Setentas, Sombrero (crossing hands, then holding and raising them so that they lady spins round and end with arms over each other’s shoulders before returning to the usual drop-back step), cross-over, cross-and-tap,

 
Teaching the footwork ‘left-right-left-left’, right-left-right-right’.  

Dance to slower music, the extra tap helps to keep time and fills gaps in the music that might otherwise seem uncomfortably long.
Steps similar to Venezuelan style, music is Cuban.

Dance low-key style, with just a few turns and complex moves, concentrating more on the subtle rhythmic interplay of their bodies than on elaborate pyrotechnic.

Colombian Salsa

(Cali, Colombia)
Taking through simple moves to see how clearly the lead is, then move on to more complicated turns.

The lovely, showy moves take time to get right, but the sheer neatness and apparent intricacy when it goes the way it should is an immense reward.

One of the turns: spin the lady cw and then back, turning myself in the opposite direction and passing her hand round behind my back. Then give her a neat push and both turn in opposite directions, returning to partner-hold as come face to face again.
Style of club dancers is similar to Venezuelan style: not showy, with very few turns or spins. 

Small, precise steps, continually dropping back, and neat little hand movements.

Dancers play around the music as if splashing about in shadow water.

It is  nifty, elegant style that couldn't be further from the exuberant circling and spinning of the Cuban approach.

Dance shows by Swing Latino involved fastest and dizzy patterns filled with showy moves that looked lethally dangerous. However, the moves are based on salsa and unlike the UK where so-called 'salsa' is often unrecognisable as having any relation to the way real people actually dance on Frjday nights in a genuine club.

One can recognize all the basic salsa pattern but just that it's taken to a degree of elabration, speed and accuracy, and with a whole layer of acrobatic added on top.

Even in shows, still there was tension and magnetism between the couples, the feeling that they're relating to each other and not just drawing a picture for the audience.

A kids' competition with astonishingly athletic and frentic moves like cartwheel and aerial in lightning speed.
Panama Salsa
(Panama City, Panama)
Dance the estilo linear, the linear style in which dancers move to and fro on a single axis called 'tramlines'.

A tight, neat, self-conscious style, with the guy looking very cool and controlled and the lady stepping like catwalk models.

Moves: forward-and-back, drop-back, side-step, cross-over in front and behind, left and right turn, cross-body, sombrero, Sambuca (reverse arm. Sambuca de mujer is holding both lady’s hands and raising her left hand above her head to turn her cw, so that her right arm ends up behind her back, then spinning her round again to extricate her. Sambuca de hombre involves doing the same thing to the man himself, turning cw so his own left arm ends up locked behind his back, his hand still holdng the lady’s right), deplazamiento lateral.
On the tramlines, when men move the girl across in front of them they do not swing them around and back like in Cuban style, just step neatly out of the way and push the lady across from one side to the other so she moves in a straight line.

In doing the Sambuca de hombre, the difficulty in linear style is that the lady can’t help the ma by moving round, so man is to spin fast enough to turn a full 180 degrees himself. Man has to make a complete turn so he can continue dancing, on the same old linear track, before turning back again at the same dizzying speed.
Dance the NY style like rather than doing the S. Am or Carribbean Salsa.
Puerto Rico
Estilo puertorriqueno (dance on two)- somehow the ‘on two’ rhythm is more natural, but less obvious.

Salsa has been made into something too complicated, the genuine salsa is a thing an 80-year old lady with two hip replacements can learn in 5 minutes. We gringos, with our competitiveness and obsession with technique, are in danger of forgetting the essence.

Dancing with elegant simplicity, expressing the music and their feelings for each other without a setenta complicada in sight. They have been reduced to dancing mostly with one another.

Moves: cross-body lead, sombreros, right- and left-hand turns.
Isolating exercises in class, ribcage sliding is particularly hard.

A German group learning the ‘on two’ and finds it tricky. For ‘on one’ dancers, it’s fine to start correctly but keeping to it and remembering to hit it again after turning or making a complicated move is much harder.

Cross-body lead for the man was taught with a small step back on the ‘six’ so as to stay in exactly the same position, rather than following the woman as she moves across.
Club has big bands; the sound is chunky, rich, sonorous, with the percussionists putting a strong intricate network of sound on top. Most of the band members are dancing as they play.

Afternoon dance are crowded with half a dozen couples, nobody doing anything showy, nor anyone dancing ‘on two’, just going to and fro or side to side, circling gently.

Salsa musicians talking about the future of salsa music: Salsa romantic has done so much damage and turned salsa into Hallmark sentiments, cheesy love-and-heartbreak stuff. Although people think that the way forward now is with reggaeton, a lot of reggaeton artists actually want to play salsa now. The music has a 300 years of history, it’s not going anywhere but just to reclaim urban relevance for traditional real salsa to make it meaningful.
Dominican Dances- Merengue & Bachata

(San Juan, Dominican Republic)
Won’t find much salsa, people listen to it a lot but can’t dance it as when they were growing up in merengue and bachata.

However, one can’t find much bachata because the middle class disapprove of it, it’s considered low and indecent. Clubs and discos in town are for tourists, as local can’t afford them.  Locals dance merengue and bachata in car washes, which turn into dance clubs on Fridays and Saturdays. 
--No salsa class--
Some reggaeton dancing in clubs, salsa unthinkable.

People in car wash are of all ages: groups, couples, children. Styles range from the elegant to the utterly casual, physiques from the tall, svelte and willowy to the bulging and frankly blobby.

Slender black couple dances elegant bachata: the man dancing with stylish restraint, pointing his toes, making small, neat, accurate movements, and the woman tall and slim, her skin-tight white trousers stretched over a bottom that wiggles with incredible agility and rhythmic precision.

When merengue is played, instantly couples hurriedly thread their way between the tables and flood onto the platform. The music is loud, punchy and exciting.
Miami Salsa
(Miami, Florida, USA)
Music is miles away from real Cuban music. The percussion lacks that Afro-Carribbean, rhythmic dynamic that powers the best Cuban Salsa.

Salsa dancers do Cuban style like without many fancy moves, often seems to begin on five, half way through the clave.

Rueda moves: guapea, enchufla, enchufla doble, vacilala, sombrero, exhibela, adios, with calling ‘da me’ and ‘da me dos’.
Need an assessment before attending classes in Salsa Lovers, the best salsa school there.

There are levels with vast number of rueda moves at first, one can take 2 lessons to learn how to adapt these moves for couple dancing. It’s the exact opposite of the system in the UK, where you learn salsa as a couple dance and at some later point get introduced to rueda.

Rueda callers use a system of hand signals: a flick of the hand =da me; tapping the head=sombrero; pointing to the eye= vacilala; a wave in the air= adios
DJ played salsa, merengue, reggaeton and other Latin styles, there’s a lot of jazz and rock influence. Salsa is not dominant.

When asking around for ladies of different colour/ages/physical built, all refused.

Blacks guys playing drums on the pavement outside a café, people are dancing Cuban rumba.  
Annual Salsa Congress, Blackpool, Lancashire
The instructor said in Spanish, ‘it’s not about learning moves. When two people dance together, the dance is an expression of what is in the heart. El Corazon.’

Authentic salsa isn’t about showy moves or competing. It’s about love and freedom, about the heart, and about letting the heart float in that music, the music that has such a depth history and colour and magic in it.
Some Reggaeton after isolating exercises.
Rueda dancing.

Dances of particular Orishas, gods form the Santeria patheon; Yemaya, the sea-goddess; the dance of Chango, the thunder god.
--

Get back to the Dance Reference page.

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2016年10月10日 星期一

A Little More to Spice Up the Dance! (part 3)- The CUBAN Dances

Let’s Spice your dancing up with extra Latin Styles! Here are what you can do with the ...


Kandykane dancing

THE CUBAN DANCES

Oh yes, this is the biggest family and Cuban Dances is the vaguest definition! Let’s think in this way, you can apply this to all Cuban rhythms: Ballroom Samba is one, but Reggaeton and Cuban Rumba are also good, what else? Find it out yourself!!


Kick Change

Man facing centre line and is on LF, which is crossed over the RF. Lady facing wall on RF, which is crossed over LF. Man retains a LH to RH hold.

Man
Lady
S
Move fwd ontot he RF slightly to the L
S
Move fwd onto the LF slightly to the R
S
Swaying a little to the L, kick the LF fwd from the knee
S
Swaying a little to the R, kick the RF fwd from the knee
S
Move back onto the LF
S
Move back onto the RF
a
Place the RF behind the LF (part weight)
a
Place the LF behind the RF (part weight)
S
Step inplace w/ the LF
S
Step inplace w/ the RF

**Style Tips: It adds a stylish flair to this figure for the couple to touch free hands on the kick. You can replace the kick with a tap, it makes it easier.
The Samba Strut
It is called ‘Samba Strut’ but it does not mean it needs to be in Samba only. The Samba Strut is a Latin-American Sequence Dance, performed to faster Samba music and synchronized w/ the musical phrase. The couples are arranged in a circle around the room. The men at inner circle facing outward, ladies at outside facing the centre. Start in a double hand hold.
Man
Lady
1
LF side
1
RF side
2
RF close
2
LF close
3
LF side
3
RF side
4
Touch the RF tot he side w/o weight
4
Touch the LF to the side w/o weight
5
RF side
5
LF side
6
LF close
6
RF close
7
RF side
7
LF side
8
Touch the LF to the side w/o weight
8
Touch the RF to the side w/o weight
9
Repeat Steps 1-8, releasing the RH hold, raising the L arm- under which the lady will turn- and taking up a Promenade hold in the end (Step 16)
9
Release the LH hold.
Place the RF fwd, turning R under the man’s raised arm.
10
10
LF side, back to the man
11
11
RF side, facing man
12
12
Touch the LF tot he side w/o weight
13
13
LF fwd, turning L under the man’s raised arm
14
14
RF side, back to the man
15
15
LF side, facing amn
16
16
Touch the RF to the side, w/o weight, end in PP
17-18
Now in PP.
LF Samba Walk, RF Samba Walk.
Repeat.
17-18
Now in PP.
LF Samba Walk, RF Samba Walk.
Repeat.
29-32
Release hold.
Repeat Steps 1-4 towards the centre.
Clap in the end (Step 32)
29-32
Release hold.
Repeat Steps 1-4 towards the centre.
Clap in the end (Step 32)
33-36
Repeat Steps 5-8, gradually turning to face outward, resume starting hold.
33-36
Repeat Steps 5-8, gradually turning to face inwards, resume starting hold.
If it is in a circle, move fwd tot he next partner over step 33-36
part 1- The SWING Family
part 2- The MAMBO Family
part 3- The CUBAN Dances (you are here)

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