1 / 9

Cultural Dance Unit

Cultural Dance Unit. Dances: Arabic, African, Salsa, Cha-Cha. Arabic Dance. Technique: focus on torso movements & strong muscle isolations . Emphasizes communication of emotion . Arabic dance is often improvisational .

gwen
Télécharger la présentation

Cultural Dance Unit

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cultural Dance Unit Dances: Arabic, African, Salsa, Cha-Cha

  2. Arabic Dance • Technique: focus on torso movements & strong muscle isolations. • Emphasizes communication of emotion. • Arabic dance is often improvisational. • Most often, performed by women, while mens’ style has remained separate & folk in style.

  3. Arabic (cont’d) • The term ‘Arabic Dance’ covers various forms & styles of dance developed from folk dances of Egypt, w/influences from Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, and Greece. • A theory about Arabic dancing is that it began as a series of abdominal exercises designed to help girls prepare for pregnancy. • When the dance began evolving, it was for social purposes, rather than for performance. • The context was in the womens’ quarters, called a harem (men were not allowed).

  4. African Dance • ‘African Dance’ refers mainly to the dances of theSubsaharanand of West Africa. • Many dances are from different tribes within one country. • Africans dance on all sorts of occasions to express their inner feelings of joy, sorrow, etc. • African dance is polycentric: the body is segmented into several centers of movement, incl. the shoulders, chest, pelvis, arms, legs, etc.

  5. African Dance (cont’d) • This results in complex movements “inside” the body, rather than the European style of movement: moving through space with the body as a whole unit. • Even though the dancing is spontaneous & voluntary, the drumbeat provides the rhythm that holds the dancers together. • Traditional dances don’t often appear in isolation, but are parts of broader cultural activities.

  6. African (cont’d) • Examples: Warrior dances, Dances of Love (at weddings & anniversaries), Rites of Passage, and Coming of Age Dances (to give confidence to the dancers as they are formally acknowledged that they have become adults). • Other examples: Dances of Welcome (showing respect for visitors, and to show how talented & attractive the host villagers are), Dances of Possession & Summoning (important in many traditional African religions). • The Summoning dances share the link of calling to a spirit. TheOrishasare the deities found in many african religions.

  7. Cha-Cha • A Latin American dance from Cuba. • First called the Cha-Cha-Cha. • Developed in the early 1950’s, as a tempo-variant between the slow Rumba & the faster Mambo. • Pierre Lavelle, a dance teacher from the UK, visited Cuba in 1952. He noticed the Mambo danced w/a triple step in place of the slow one. He brought his idea to Europe and eventually created what is now the Ballroom Cha-Cha.

  8. Cha-Cha (cont’d) • This dance became popular around 1954. • The Cha-Cha is danced in 4/4 time, as a rock-step, cha-cha-cha (& 1, 2-3-4). • Like most Latin dances, the weight is forward & most of the movement is below the ribcage (minimal torso movement). • The steps are small, w/ball of foot first, to better execute the hip motion. • Feet stay close to the floor, w/hips relaxed. • Upper body shifts over the supporting foots as steps are taken.

  9. Salsa Dance • Danced w/6 steps over 8 counts of music. • Turns are an important feature. • Salsa has a side-to-side feel, bec. of the hip movements. • Various styles of music, using percussive instruments (several layers of instruments) • Origins are in several Afro-Carribbeandances. • Therefore, there is no single root of origin. • Though it did not develop there, the term ‘Salsa’ was created in New York City.

More Related