1 / 20

Dance, Rhythm, and Movement

Dance, Rhythm, and Movement. Chapters 3-4. Rhythm. It is what the body feels first in music and responds to so eagerly . What are some examples that make your body sway, march, stomp your feet, clap etc..?. The Beat of Music.

Télécharger la présentation

Dance, Rhythm, and Movement

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. Dance, Rhythm, and Movement Chapters 3-4

  2. Rhythm • It is what the body feels first in music and responds to so eagerly. • What are some examples that make your body sway, march, stomp your feet, clap etc..?

  3. The Beat of Music • The beat or pulse gives music much of its energy, excitement and drive. • Felt time- the space that music appears to carve out for itself (the beat conveys this)

  4. Momentum of Music • We begin to anticipate what will happen in music and be delighted when something unexpected happens • We feel as if time flies by when engaged in a film, play, speech, or piece of music.

  5. Coordination • Musicians learn to perform more than one rhythm at a time. • Ex. A pianist may play one with the left hand and another with the right hand • Ex. Tap your head and rub your stomach

  6. Syncopation • Deliberate shifts of the accent so that it conflicts with the steady beat and tries to upset the steady pulse • Focuses on the weak beats to create an unexpected imbalance for pleasure.

  7. Dance • Has been part of the life of every tribe, society, and culture. • Marriage, birth, successful hunt, good crop, or a victory. • Evil spirits, prevent sickness or danger, and to cope with life.

  8. American Heritage • Dance is more than just physical movement, it is expression!!! • Dances are popular because of their distinctive rhythms • Today thousands of music videos feed our appetites for dance. • Think of certain tv shows or stations that just focus on the art of dance or music videos…

  9. Latin Influence • Dance music of Latin America and Cuba became popular in the states during the 1930’s and 40’s. • Popular dances: • Cha-cha • Rumba • Mambo • Calypso • Samba • Tango • Roots are traced back to Africa

  10. The Tango • Latin American dance performed at a moderately slow, walklike tempo • Gliding steps and dips • Became popular as a ballroom dance in Europe and the in the states after WWI

  11. The Samba • Afro-Brazilian dance that is faster and jazzier than the Tango • Improvisation

  12. Reggae • Popular music style mixing African and Caribbean rhythms created by Jamaican musicians.

  13. Tex-Mex Music • Dance music created by Texas-Mexicans • 3 influences: • Polka and waltz • Germans, Czechs and poles • Button accordion

  14. Native American Dance • Expresses the mystical elements of religion, love, birth, death, hunting, war, and celebration. • Music is considered sacred and not used just for entertainment. • Native Americans sing and dance to show pride in who they are as a people and to bring good fortune to their people as well.

  15. Theatrical Dance • America began to love this type of dancing in the 19th century during minstrel shows, operettas and vaudeville shows. • Tap dancing – feet are used as percussive instruments - is also distinctly American and made its Broadway debut in the early 1920’s in black musicals. • Bill “Bojangles” Robinson- known as the The King of Tap Dancers • Very integral part of American musical theatre

  16. Ballet • The art of telling a story through music and movement originated in ballet • Style of classical dance that emerged in France during the 16th century • Very strenuous dance lasting only a couple minutes at a time • Igor Stravinsky- wrote the first ballet score (The Firebird) 1910

  17. Modern Dance • Developed by American dancers as an alternative to ballet, made up of a variety of dance styles

  18. Suite • Set of instrumental pieces each in the character of a dance • Composed for a keyboard instrument or a small orchestra

  19. The Minuet • Rather slow and charming old French dance in triple meter • Originated as a country dance • The epitome of the classical period

  20. The Waltz • Started as a social dance and eventually graduated to concert hall • Unsophisticated and unrestrained • Popular for nearly 200 years

More Related