Riot and Frolic

a mostly ballroom dance, but also a bunch of other stuff, blog

It's come to my attention recently that many people consider the ballroom dance repertoire limiting in its ability to "freestyle" a dance.  As in, there are patterns and amalgamations and figures that need to be completed from A to Z before a dancer can move onto the next one.  Waltz was being compared to West Coast Swing and much was said about West Coast's easy improvisation and interpretation with different songs.  

Well.

First of all, there are several ballroom dances that have worlds and moons of their own: West Coast Swing, Salsa, Argentine Tango, and Lindy are the big ones.  Dancers who enjoy these styles are often specialists and don't do (or aren't actively learning) many other dances.  Becoming well-versed in ONE DANCE'S vocabulary is very different than learning 10 or more dances and the basic accompanying movements.  

Those of us who do many dances have the same learning curve, but it is often much MUCH longer since there are so many dances involved.  Don't feel bad if someone is really good at Salsa after a few months when you still can't get through a mediocre Foxtrot, Rumba, or Cha-Cha without panicking at some point.  

Instead of being sad about the overwhelming amount of patterns and levels and dances, I'll make it really really simple:

Elements of Dance

  • At its most basic, dancing is walking and turning.  Period.  I know you're testing this and thinking about all your fancy patterns, but that's all it is: walking and turning.
  • You must know the basic timing of each dance.  The first thing that makes the walking and the turning look like the dancing is the timing.  Like, in time with music.  If you are not dancing in time with music, you are not dancing.  You are doing dance steps while music is playing.  TWO VERY DIFFERENT THINGS.  

– If you cannot hear the beat in the music, you must learn how.  (We'll talk about how to do that another day.)

– You must make this timing clear through your steps (slows are 2 beats, quicks are 1, etc.). 

– You WILL continue to LISTEN to the music throughout each dance to make sure you are still Dancing.

How To Be Creative

I hope you see the irony in my telling you how to be creative, but here it goes:

  • experiment.  With or without a partner, but always with music playing, you can…

– see how many steps you can dance forward before you feel stupid.  Likewise with side steps or back steps.  Rotate them, travel them, march them, make a circle, make a straight line, make a bee line for the bar, whatever.

– try a Rumba pattern in Waltz (using Waltz timing, but Rumba foot patterns).

– try a Waltz pattern in Salsa.

  • be confident.  Just because you haven't done something before doesn't mean it doesn't exist. If it works, it's a step.
  • ask questions.  

– Did you try something and it failed?

– WHY did it fail?

– Did it almost  work?

– Could you hold a beat, or syncopate a step, or go outside partner to make it work?

  • do it again.  No one gets really good at something by thinking about it.  It takes a bajillion times of f-ing it up before you consistently get a high-fiveable moment.  
  • brush it off.  Made a mistake?  It's dancing, not brain surgery.  Fun, not life or death.  

Go forth and dance.  

3f853da19d981844e61e309efe214106
Two years ago: Not Seven, in which I omit the nuts.

 

Posted in

8 responses to “How To Be Creative in Dance”

  1. Jeremy Avatar
    Jeremy

    Excellent point about One Dance vs. Many Dances. The deeper you get into any one dance, the more creative you can be with it. So if you’re only dancing One Dance, you’ll become creative in that dance much faster than you will if you do Nine Dances. It’s not that Waltz, etc., are any less free or creative, it’s just that most people do not get beyond the patterns…

    Like

  2. bgballroom Avatar

    International style Standard Viennese waltz (before the new rules for whichever group that allows more steps) looks as uncreative as you can get. And yet…. We don’t compete in Viennese yet, but even Standard Waltz, even at Silver or Gold level, has a ridiculous amount of style variations. “Turn your head on one, turn your head on two, turn your head on three, but not until the very end of the three. No, don’t turn your head at all!” And this is before even touching on choreography.
    “You WILL continue to LISTEN to the music throughout each dance to make sure you are still Dancing.” Important rule! And you have to do it even when thinking about which version of the head turn you are working on this week:-)_

    Like

  3. Shanon Avatar
    Shanon

    I had a lesson with Jonathan Roberts yesterday, and he said much the same as you re: creativity in dance! So I left feeling like I’m “allowed” to try new things (styling rather than, say, timing) rather than fear “it’s not syllabus, so I can’t do that.”

    Like

  4. Riot and Frolic Avatar

    Thanks, Jeremy. ISN’T IT SO TRUE?!

    Like

  5. Riot and Frolic Avatar

    Most people DON’T have a great internal metronome, so yeah, checking in with the music is usually a good thing.
    OH! Head styling. The often-forgotten and mostly ignored fifth limb!

    Like

  6. Riot and Frolic Avatar

    Right? Most dancers are so afraid of failing that they never try anything new and therefore never succeed as much as they could. Screw something up; it’s good for you!

    Like

  7. William Avatar

    Well It’s very difficult for every performer to touch the inner soul of the character in the performance and It takes well practice and effort as well.

    Like

  8. Riot and Frolic Avatar

    Dancing takes practice?!
    I jest, but yes, practice and effort is required, which is surprisingly surprising to many people.

    Like

Leave a reply to Riot and Frolic Cancel reply