Almost all beginners can step on the beat, with a little (decent) instruction. Dancing to the music means movement energy corresponds to musical energy, which is about the beat plus the phrase.
When a beginner moves WITH the phrase of the music, the movements feel right, and he has more confidence. When a beginner takes steps that don't correspond to the phrase, he feels lost and confused. Usually, he says "I can't hear the beat", but he means he can't feel the phrase of the music. So, I'm with Martin, not Huck on this one. Sounds like Huck took a class with a teacher who doesn't know how to explain musical movement. A lot of teachers are intuitive about music, but have no idea how to teach it. On Apr 25, 2011, at 12:28 PM, Huck Kennedy wrote: > On Mon, Apr 25, 2011 at 10:57 AM, Nussbaum, Martin <[email protected] > > wrote: >> Totally disagree with all those who want to isolate tango instruction >> from the music. The only reason to dance IS the music. > > While I absolutely agree that music is the only reason to dance, > learning a movement and practicing aren't dancing. So overall I > disagree with Martin, and believe those who say learning technique > should come separately from trying to apply musicality are correct. > When trying to master basic movement, musicality can be a distraction. > ... > Now having said all that, and at the risk of sounding like I'm > contradicting myself, I agree with Martin that musicality still needs > to be introduced from the very beginning, even if it's just practicing > simple walking expressed musically. > > Huck Tom Stermitz c: 303-725-5963 http://www.tango.org Denver, CO 80207 _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
