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From:
Anig Browl
To:
IDM List
Date:
Thu, 5 Jul 2001 14:22:52 +0100
Subject:
Re: [idm] DJ Mixes to exercise to
Msg-Id:
<002601c10584$c83939a0$b4a4869f@pauls>
Mbox:
idm.0107.gz
From: Ben Kirkley <ben.kirkley@displaypost.co.uk>
quoted 1 line I'm not much of a dancer, but for those of you who are help me out a> I'm not much of a dancer, but for those of you who are help me out a
minute.
quoted 1 line Exactly how would you dance to something like Confield?> Exactly how would you dance to something like Confield?
Well, it's hard to say. It's certainly not danceable like a 4 to the floor style, so I often don't know what to do with my legs, I just shift my weight around depending on how I'm feeling. I don't mind the unpredictability of the music, I think it allows for a very expressive and reactive sort of dance. I used to do mime when I was a kid so I like the idea of dance that expresses abstract feelings (which is why I hate the formalism of ballet).
quoted 1 line Do you have to know the soundscape of the tune you're dancing to?> Do you have to know the soundscape of the tune you're dancing to?
No, though most tracks are structured enough to get a feel early on. A tune like Clipper from Tri Repetae is very easy to dance to, for example, with a nice chunky rhythm to keep your legs busy and flowing sounds for your arms. OTOH a track like Cfern from Confield, with lots of angular and irregular beat structures, would encourage me to deal in more basic units of movement...for example a dance step can involve lifting your leg, rotating it, stepping back onto that leg, turning on ones ankle and so on. Where the beat is very fractured it's interesting to explore different combinations of those basic movements as you move around the floor. I'm usually conscious of 5 things when I dance to any music; my legs, my shoulders, my arms, my hands/fingers, and what my head is doing. Depending on the track different things will move around, though this is all much more spontaneous than it sounds here of course. I'm listening to Pen Expers now, one of my favorites. My legs are inclined to step me about following the kick, while my shoulders and elbows are moving about in response to the snare/noise, expressing something about the texture and intensity of the beats with angle and sweep of movement. Those lovely string sounds seem to be to trying to break through the chaos of the beats, so I'd tend to start making pinching motions with my fingers that remind me of trying to draw something out from a narrow space, and my head might be weaving about and looking up, down, over my shoulder, depending on the vague emotional tenor of the music. It all sounds terribly artificiail and calculated but it's not, I'm just allowing my body to move in response to what I am feeling in the music and express something non-verbally. This is why I much prefer instrumental music to vocal.
quoted 2 lines It's not that I don't believe this music is danceable-to (without looking> It's not that I don't believe this music is danceable-to (without looking > like a complete dork), I just can't visualise it myself.
Well, I guess to another person my movements look like a cross between a sped-up martial arts drill and schizophrenic spasms. So yes, I probably look like a spaz or a dork. But really, why should I give a fuck if it makes me feel good? When I was younger I used to go out to nightclubs and worry about how I was looking, whether there was any chance of getting laid or not, whether I was cool and so on. When I began going to raves it was a great relief to drop some acid along with everyone else and just go nuts to the music, and I still like psy trance a great deal for its sheer danceability and energy. After a while of doing this I stopped caring at all about how it looked to other people, beyond the basic politeness of not barging into other people's space when one is dancing. By the time I got into IDM I was at the stage where I could feel equally unrestrained physically with or without drugs - in fact I think I get more out of IDM when I'm sober in many ways. My feeling is that if one is having fun and just letting the music dictate one's movements, it's going to be far more comfortable and really expressive, and will probably look cool anyway. The people who would write me off as a spaz probably think that IDM is 'just noise' or spazzy music anyway, so I don't care about that. Kids dance around any way they like to music (and a lot of kids like techno) and as long as they don't fall over it's great. I'd much rather feel that unrestrained than try to impose consistency or form onto dance movements. I find dancing very relaxing and I really enjoy dancing with someone else at a party where you can communicate about the music, feelings, etc. without having to speak. I don't think of myself as any special dancer, but people come up to me quite frequently at parties and say they like the way I move around, so I must be doing something right.
quoted 1 line Can one dance to noise-IDM and not look like they're on a gram of speed?> Can one dance to noise-IDM and not look like they're on a gram of speed?
Well, no...though all the above can be equally applied to a slow or mellow track just as easily as a busy one. The first IDM party I went to, I had a great time but my girlfriend thought everyone was on speed for just this reason. Then again the first time she met me she thought I was on speed too (I put a lot of energy into dancing and I'm also pale and skinny), but she let me chat her up anyway. So don't worry about it. Just shake yer booty and have fun :-) Anig Browl _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org