탱고 공연 첫 퍼스트 패스 - 안무 구조

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그것은 정말로 8 초의 세계입니다. 19 세기에 작성된 문학을 읽으면 문장이 더 길어지고 느리게 읽습니다. 생각은 진화하는 데 시간이 걸리고 자주 복잡합니다. 4 ~ 5 년 전에 제작 된 훌륭한 영화를보고 우리가 한 상처를 시간을 내주는 경우, 상처 사이의 시간은 오늘보다 오래 지속됩니다 (오늘 약 8 초마다 바뀝니다).

  • 오늘날 청중을 붙잡기 위해서는 톤, 타이밍, 기분의 변화가 필요합니다.
  • 소도구는 도울 수 있지만 관객이 소품에 익숙해 질 것임을 이해합니다.
  • 레벨의 변화는 도움이됩니다 : 당신은 공기가 있고, 바닥에 서서 춤을 추고, 바닥에 아주 가까이 있습니다.
  • 그러나 무엇을하고 있든간에, 현명하게 보이는 것보다 훨씬 근본적으로 다른 느낌으로 변해야합니다.
아티스트 이름:
Astor Piazzolla
노래 제목:
Adiós Nonino
앨범 제목:
RCA Victor 100 Años - Astor Piazzolla
아티스트 웹 사이트:
http://www.piazzolla.org

Piazzolla의 탱고는 재즈 요소의 통합, 확장 된 하모니와 불협화음의 사용, 대위법의 사용, 확장 된 구성 형태로의 벤처 등 전통적인 탱고와 구별되었습니다. 아르헨티나의 정신 분석 학자 카를로스 쿠리 (Carlos Kuri)가 지적했듯이, 피아졸라 (Piazzolla)의 다른 유명한 서양 음악 요소와의 탱고 융합은 너무 성공적이어서 이러한 영향을 초월한 새로운 개인 스타일을 만들어 냈습니다.

00:05
Now, as you think about choreographing to the music, the first thing...
00:08
Sometimes, away from the music, but general choreographic structure, is that you want to create variety.
00:15
So, for example, when a dance starts, I might have some dramatic introduction.
00:21
Let me get a chair, to symbolize the woman.
00:23
And, as that dramatic introduction happens,
00:27
That'll eat up time. And it will be varied. And it will be interesting. You'll like, "How cool is that?"
00:33
So, there's the woman in the chair.
00:37
You walk up to her.
00:43
You caress her hair. You're here. You rise.
00:50
You know, so you have this beginning thing, which is very cool. And the audience looks, and is like, "Wow, how cool!"
00:55
And then, after that, you kick the chair away.
00:59
Whatever it is. And, then you start to dance.
01:04
And, maybe you do lots of fancy cool steps, sacadas and enganches, enganches and boleo, blah-blah-blah-blah-blah.
01:12
And the audience is, "Look, how cool is that!" We like that when the audience says that.
01:16
And then, after that, well, you need something more to add drama.
01:21
So, maybe, now you have some sort of big trick, where she's in the air. We had a few things about lifts.
01:28
And then, after they're, like, drooling over your amazing lifts, then you add in some acting. And then you repeat.
01:36
So, the point is, that you want to have a section, which is, maybe, 20 to 30 seconds, err on the side of low,
01:43
For acting. Oh, sorry, for an introduction.
01:47
And then, after your introduction, you want a section that's 20 to 30 seconds, that's really cool, for a different reason.
01:52
So, instead of being sort of separate dramatic acting thing, sort of movement, you have cool tango steps.
01:59
And then you have a section that's 20 to 30 seconds, that's really cool, but for a new reason.
02:03
Maybe, this one's really cool because you have a great lift.
02:07
You know, or a couple great lifts. And then, maybe you have another section, and that's really cool.
02:12
You see the pattern, everything is really cool, but for different reasons.
02:14
So, if I do the exact same thing for 45 seconds, even if it's really cool for the first 20 seconds,
02:21
The last 20 seconds you'll be like, "I've had enough. Show me something new".
02:26
So, when you're choreographing, it helps if you find music that is very varied. We'll have a chapter on that.
02:30
And... Even if the music is not varied, you go away from the music, and then you come back.
02:35
The music is going, "Ba-da-da-da-da"; you're doing, "Huh". You know, you sort of emote slow passion.
02:43
And then, later on, you can go, "Ba-da-da-da-da". And, the audience's eye is refreshed.