{"id":4475,"date":"2012-09-25T10:39:50","date_gmt":"2012-09-25T17:39:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/?p=4475"},"modified":"2012-09-25T10:39:50","modified_gmt":"2012-09-25T17:39:50","slug":"najia-no-choreo-improv-sharpen-edge","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/09\/25\/najia-no-choreo-improv-sharpen-edge\/","title":{"rendered":"Sharpening Your Dancer\u2019s Edge:"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Performing Without Choreography<\/h2>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art57\/graphics57\/bert-paintbynumber.jpg\" class=\"floatright\" width=\"300\" height=\"409\" alt=\"Bert &amp; Dalilah- paint by number\" \/><\/p>\n<h3>by <a href=\"..\/najia\/index.htm\">Najia Marlyz<\/a><br \/>\n<span class=\"footnotes\">Caravan Magazine 1990, volume 11, number 2\u2014Theme  rewritten for GS August 16, 2012<br \/>\nposted September 25, 2012<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>In the \u201850s, there was a hobby-craft oil painting  craze that you may never have heard about called \u201cPainting by the  Numbers&quot;.\u00a0 Fortunately, it died the  anonymous death it so richly deserved, and the art world breathed a sigh of  relief.\u00a0 Now, however, we dancers appear  to have invented a new threat to artistic expression, and concomitantly, a  threat to female autonomy. <\/p>\n<p>My late mentor, friend, and dance partner, <a href=\"\/aboutuspages\/bert.htm\"><span class=\"artist\">Bert  Balladine<\/span><\/a>, once made the observation that a student could go to ballet class  for 50 years, learning steps and technique, and never learn to dance a role in \u201cSwan  Lake\u201d until the last days of rehearsal.\u00a0\u00a0  I opined to Bert that it is our specific desire and drive to upgrade the  reputation of Oriental dance that is causing us to gravitate into the teaching  and memorization of precise choreography; the idea of dance governed by  choreography is more a western notion that was not inherent originally a part  of the Middle Eastern dance solo. <\/p>\n<p>The duplicity of the fail-safe mentality that  demands choreography puzzles me: women are attracted to the beauty, freedom of  expression, and spontaneity of Raqs Sharqi. Nevertheless, when they desire to excel  in the form, they often choose to deal with it by mastering a choreographed  set, replete with facial expressions and copying ethnic gestures, supposedly  indicating depth of feeling and drama.\u00a0  Worse yet, it comes to light often that these choreographies are created  by someone else, and that someone else is usually a man rather than a  woman.\u00a0 What kind of satisfaction can  that offer a creative woman?<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Dancing choreography by someone else introduces an  opportunity for the ultimate abdication in artistic, self-expression.<\/p>\n<p> Nevertheless, the dancer or the printed program rarely credits where credit  is due to her choreographer.\u00a0 It is  extremely rare to see a printed Belly dance program that credits the  choreographer alongside the dancer.\u00a0  Instead, the name of the choreographer usually goes unmentioned and the  dancer takes all credit, collecting accolades for the performance as if it were  her own work. Yet, in a whisper she says (or only thinks to herself), \u201cI paid a  lot of money for it; I hope nobody is videoing because I own it. It is mine!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The art of choreography is acceptable, even welcome,  when interacting with fellow dancers in a troupe performance, but personally, I  fail to see the thrill or satisfaction of executing someone else&#8217;s creation for  your solo.\u00a0 This practice seems like  resorting to painting \u201cBellydance by Numbers&quot;, if you will allow the  metaphor, and although it could possibly be far more breathtaking than one&#8217;s  own original efforts, it is a crutch that inhibits development of one&#8217;s own  choreographic possibilities, self-expression and personal performance message.<\/p>\n<p>I made allusion earlier in this article to  choreography, threatening female autonomy through dance.\u00a0 Lately, dancers have been flocking in droves  to those few male dance teachers who are known to be capable of creating  choreography for others and have been paying them sizable sums of money to  produce choreographed dances that are supposedly reserved to the particular  dancer for her use only.\u00a0 Often these  dances are quite good, but they lack a certain feminine understanding or message,  and perhaps it is no accident that some women feel so inadequate that they  would prefer to go to someone who could give them the &quot;right dance\u201d or  &quot;power in dance&quot; through a \u201cstore-bought\u201d choreography.\u00a0 Who could do it better than those they  personally believe to be more right and powerful than\u2014a man?<\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">A case may be made for the value of choreographies  used in classroom situations as teaching tools and transitions between steps;  however, teachers are increasingly using these stock routines as just so much  busy-work to fill obligatory class time, without much on-going creative  effort.\u00a0 Pre-choreographed dance is a  teacher\u2019s friend: it wears out the students physically without wearing out the  teacher mentally.\u00a0 So students leave  their lesson breathless, imagining they must have learned something for all  their outpouring of energy. <\/p>\n<p>  Sadly, seldom does the teacher who is dependant upon  choreography explain why she constructed the choreography as she did or discuss  the artistic choices that may have been possible or even more effective\u2014if the  students of the class had been able to reproduce them. Sometimes choreography  may be thought of as \u201cthe rising tide that raises all boats\u201d; it is a failsafe  for dancers that seem to have developed no performance \u201cedge\u201d. This concept of  developing a performance edge always brings us to the discussion of music,  musical content, dramatic content, and characterizations of instrumental voices  within the arrangements. Identification of musical themes within a composition  should evoke some esthetic response from a creative dancer that is far beyond a  mere execution of technique conceived by another person as befitting a specific  strain of music.<\/p>\n<p>Another old adage I am sure you know says, &quot;Give  a man a fish and he will eat dinner, but teach him how to fish, and he will  never go hungry.&quot;\u00a0 I believe that  teachers, without malevolent intent, often cheat their students, using a  complex choreographed segment in class to show off their superior skills rather  than teaching them to do it for themselves. In fact, I have heard them say so.  However, all they are certain to accomplish with this ego driven tactic is an  intimidated student. <\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">Class time might be better spent making students aware of  how to identify musical cues or dealing with the strengths and weaknesses of  the individual dancers as well as the expressive quality of various types of  body movement. A teacher should offer guidelines and explanations for why  certain body movements produce coherent body language that works for the  specific dancer.<\/p>\n<p>I have been disappointed when observing potentially  superior dancers varying their own dance personae beneath overly-technical  dance debris that did not relate to her intent or to her dance message (the  dancer&#8217;s own understanding of her music, and her own abilities to speak with  her body).\u00a0 My first rule of the Raqs  Sharqi game is this: your job as a dancer is to translate the intent and spirit  of the music to your audience.\u00a0 You must  long to make them &quot;see the music&quot; and feel it as you do\u2014not to mime  the lyrics or repeat what someone else has already done with it.\u00a0 If you choose to dance the choreography of  another, then you must also attune to the mentality of your choreographer in  order to do justice to his or her artistic work, because it is his\u2014you are no  longer the artist.\u00a0 You are a skilled  technician, but surely, that is hardly why you began to Bellydance when you  took your first lessons!\u00a0 For many  dancers, it seems their goal is merely to show off the classic and fit human  form or the new costume; so, I guess, to those dancers, being an excellent  technician or mimic should be enough wish fulfillment.<\/p>\n<p>I think it is well past time for Bellydancers to  mature as dancers\u2014at least in making an effort to learn the artistic skill of  choreographing for oneself, and then, taking it a step farther to making it  spontaneous. Even though the word \u201cchoreography\u201d originally meant writing  (graphing) our dance (choreo), it needs to evolve in Bellydance as a mental  note-taking rather than a formally written notation.\u00a0 Once you have made a series of movements to  express the content and intent of a particular musical theme, you must remember  and repeat the same with the same, perhaps with subtle variations when the  identical musical theme returns within the composition.\u00a0 I have often quoted Bert Balladine as saying  (because he was correct), \u201cYou have four roles as a Belly dancer\u2014dancer,  musician, actress, and choreographer\u2014not necessarily in that order.\u201d <\/p>\n<p class=\"highlight\">He was exactly  right when he impressed upon his dancers that Raqs Sharqi was at its strongest  point when it was a spontaneous, impassioned expression of a personal attitude  toward life, and I would add that each dancer should have one that is unique  unto her alone.<\/p>\n<p>If you wish to cling to the moth-eaten but proven ways  of the western stage dance, the thrill and adrenalin-rush of spontaneous  choreography will be missing for the most part. Perhaps it will be replaced in  your dance life by a new thrill. That replacement thrill: the \u201cflop-sweat\u201d  (fear of failure in a performance) and unnecessary anxiety generated when you  hear your music fired up for another dancer appearing on the same program with  you, who also learned the same choreography from your \u201cpersonal choreographer\u201d.  What will you do then? If you have perfected the technique of spontaneous  dance, you will reinvent what you were planning to do into a breathtaking,  one-of-a kind for your audience\u2014as well as yourself.<\/p>\n<h5>Resources:<\/h5>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<h6><a href=\"\/najia\/index.htm\">Author&#8217;s bio page<\/a><\/h6>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/graphics\/acommentbox.jpg\" alt=\"use the comment box\" align=\"right\" \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"ready4more\">\n<p>Have a comment? Use or comment section at the bottom of this page or <a href=\"mailto:editor@gildedserpent.com\">Send us a letter!<\/a> <br \/>\nCheck the &quot;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/let2ed.htm\">Letters to the Editor<\/a>&quot; for other possible viewpoints!<\/p>\n<p>Ready for more?<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p>\t\t\t<!--end ready4more --><\/p>\n<div class=\"articlelist\">\n<ul>\n<li><span class=\"articleauthor\">8-23-09<\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2009\/08\/23\/najiaimprov\/\"> Improvisation: Method Behind the Madness<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nOne of the biggest mistakes we western Bellydancers have made is presuming that the dancing to which Arabs refer as the \u201cEastern Dance\u201d is a theatrical dance that ought to be choreographed as if it were a ballet, or that its steps and movements are traditional like those of the Greek Hasapiko, an Arabic Depke, or a Hawaiian Hula.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-11-07<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art41\/najiaexecutioner.htm\">How to Avoid the Executioner: A Journey into Creative Listening<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\"> by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nStandardization can ruin an art form as it would the fashion industry&#8212;or any other endeavor based upon creative thinking.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-15-06<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/art37\/Najia%20Taxim.htm\">The Taxim from a Dancer&#8217;s Perspective:Tarab or Tyranny?<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\"> by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nSometimes, these improvisations can be quite elaborate. The effect is somewhat like modern jazz and stays within the framework of the traditional maqam or maqamat. <\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">1-11-03 <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/articles20\/najiahearmusic.htm\">Music to My Ears, How I Learned to Hear Like a Dancer<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nMusical interpretation is the single, most important skill that can elevate the Oriental dancer from the chorus line to the spotlight.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">11-21-02 <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/articles20\/najiaveil.htm\">The Great American Belly Dance Veil Routine<\/a><span class=\"articleauthor\"> by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nAfter having said all that, I must add that American style Oriental\/Belly dance is a distinctive style composed of creative elements that are simply outstanding.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">6-7-99 <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/Articles2\/najfanana.htm\">Becoming a Fanana of the Belly Dance<\/a>&#8211;<span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nInstead of a musical slave, I believe it is your calling as a dancer to interplay with the music.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">6-15-04 <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/articles27\/najialace1.htm\">Lace and My Muses Part 1: Egyptian Mummy Lace or \u201cAssiute Cloth\u201d<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nI fastened around my hips a white Assuite cloth encrusted with gold knots throughout, forming pictographs of falcons, pyramids, crosses, and diamond shaped designs.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">6-3-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/06\/03\/najia-american-dance-evolution\/\" class=\"articlelink\">Onstage In Search Of Our Dream: Historical American Dance Evolution<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nNonetheless, sometimes, what gives me an inner pang of pain is our self-imposed \u201csin of omission\u201d in honest reportage. Sometime what is not said is more important than what actually makes it into print or into the report.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">4-30-12<\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/04\/30\/najia-bert-teach-australia-1988\/\" class=\"articlelink\">Teaching Down Under in 1988, A Bert Balladine Reminiscence: Australia &amp; New Zealand<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Najia Marlyz<\/span><br \/>\nInternational seminars make you do more than you think you can when you see the dedication and sacrifices people make just to attend.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-20-12<\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/09\/20\/yasmin-cairo-dance-after-revolution\/\"><span class=\"articlelink\"> Planting Flowers and Dodging Riots, Dancing in Cairo After the Revolution<\/span><\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Yasmin<\/span><br \/>\nI left Cairo on September 9th, 2012, after a three-week visit to research the zar. I wrote the following article on my flight home \u2013 two days before the Libyan tragedy* and the violence outside Cairo\u2019s US Embassy. As my plane circled the pyramids I had no idea Egypt would once again become the center of world attention.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-18-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/09\/18\/elaine-okba-vintage-photos-london-60s\/\" class=\"articlelink\">The Glamorous Early Years of London Bellydancing:How Elaine Okba Became Fatin Shaukat in the 1960s! <\/a><span class=\"articleauthor\">Photos and Text submitted by Elaine Okba <\/span><br \/>Adel\u2019s father was the person who modified the accordion by putting in quarter tones so that the instrument could play Oriental music, and he played in Nahit Sabri\u2019s orchestra. When she came to London on a shopping spree she called us to have a meal with her. <\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-18-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/newsgraphics\/ComKaleidoscope.htm#carolena\" class=\"articlelink\">Video sample #3 of Carolena! on the Community Kaleidoscope<\/a>, <span class=\"articleauthor\">submitted by Yasmela<\/span><br \/>\nCarolena talks about coming up with the name of her troupe by talking with a clown. Her troupe members hated the name but the phone company loved it!<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-16-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/newsgraphics\/ComKaleidoscope.htm#angelika\" class=\"articlelink\">Gigbag Check #46 with Angelika on the CK<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">and Gigbag Check Page<\/span><br \/>\nAngelika Nemeth lives and teaches in Southern California. She teaches at 3 colleges and also takes tours to Cairo, Turkey, and other countries. She mentions 2 costumes designers in Egypt who she buys her costumes from. This video was taken in February 2011 around the time of the revolution in Egypt and many of the tours sponsors were not sure if they were going to be able to go on their tours this year because of the unrest. <\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-14-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/newsgraphics\/ComKaleidoscope.htm#john\" class=\"articlelink\">Video sample #2 of John Compton! on the Community Kaleidoscope<\/a>, <span class=\"articleauthor\">submitted by Yasmela<\/span><br \/>\nJohn Compton talks about his introduction to Troupe Bal Anat at the Northern California Renn Faire in the early 1970s.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-12-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/newsgraphics\/ComKaleidoscope.htm\" class=\"articlelink\">Gigbag Check #45 with Zahira<\/a><span class=\"articleauthor\">video interview <\/span><br \/>\nConducted at IBCC in May 2012, Zahira is a scholar as well as a dancer who in this interview was fusing steampunk and pirate style with her bellydance. <\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-10-12 <\/span><a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/09\/10\/jezibell-big-apple-peach-state\/\" class=\"articlelink\">From the Big Apple to the Peach State<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Jezibell<\/span><br \/>\n                    In Augusta, options are much more limited, and  dancers are more influenced by the Bellydance Superstars.  My teaching experience at Serena Studios opened doors for me in Manhattan, but people in this area had never heard of Serena.  I was trained to present a five-part cabaret show with live music, but here tribal improv prevailed.<\/li>\n<li><span class=\"articledate\">9-7-12<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/2012\/09\/07\/attending-workshops\/\" class=\"articlelink\">Attending Workshops, 7 Tips for Getting the Most Out of Them<\/a> <span class=\"articleauthor\">by Adriane<\/span><br \/>\n                    Sure, it was worth it to just soak in the presence of a Belly dance master for a few hours, get a good workout, and network with your Belly dance friends, but how can you make that time and money spent upon a workshop with a master teacher benefit you in the long run?                    <\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Performing Without Choreography by Najia Marlyz Caravan Magazine 1990, volume 11, number 2\u2014Theme rewritten for GS August 16, 2012 posted September 25, 2012 In the \u201850s, there was a hobby-craft oil painting craze that you may never have heard about called \u201cPainting by the Numbers&quot;.\u00a0 Fortunately, it died the anonymous death it so richly deserved, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[107,159,158,82,51,56,83,1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4475"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/7"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4475"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4475\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4475"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4475"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.gildedserpent.com\/cms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4475"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}