CHOREOGRAPHY
BASICS
By: Max Perry To
choreograph an effective routine, a dancer will use several
techniques to create a dance that
will not only fit the music, but will feel good when danced.
The tools we use as choreographers
are knowledge of the dance components, a basic idea of phrasing
music, and an idea of how the material is to be used (the
dancers or organization or company, etc.).
______________________________________
|
- “A body
in motion tends to stay in motion”. There is an initial
force required to put the body in motion. Every time there
is a change in the directional movement, there is additional
force required to make the change. Too many abrupt changes
in direction are not as comfortable as letting the body
flow in the direction it wants to go, then gradually slow
before changing directions. This does not mean you should
slow down before every turn - I am referring to energy output
only!
- Choose music
that has a wide audience appeal. You do not want a piece
of music that sounds dated. The song should sound good every
time it is played. If you want artists to take notice, or
a national release, the rule is if you hear the song on
the radio, it is too late. These songs were recorded months
ago. Major established artists do not need a dance. Never
go for the obvious - choose a cut from the album that may
be released as a single or use a newer artist - possibly
an independent artist.
- Choose material
that has a wide audience appeal. Creating a dance to be
done by the locals is fine, but don’t expect it to
go over in other cities. Dancing is very regional. Use components
that are universal, unless you plan to release a video of
the experience.
- You don’t
have to show off everything you know in one dance! I know
you know how to do the splits, and perform acrobatics, but
it doesn’t necessarily have to be done in one dance.
The dances that have been the most successful in terms of
marketability, have been 32 counts or less, or can be taught
in 20 minutes or less, including playing the music. KEEP
IT SIMPLE AND TO THE POINT!
|
| The above pointers
are just suggestions. There will be exceptions to some of the
ideas presented. You may be asked to choreograph to a song that
just doesn’t “grab” you, or may be asked to
create a more difficult dance. |
| HOW TO
CHOREOGRAPH A LINE DANCE |
- CHARTING THE SONG
After deciding on a song to use, choreographers write the
beats on paper. This is known as “charting”
the song. You will end up with a graphic representation
of what the beat patterns look like and will know instantly
how long to make the dance.
As dancers, we are used to counting in 8’s. The reason
for this is that 100 years ago, instructors discovered that
it was easier and more effective for students to learn choreography
in larger sections than 2 or 4 beats. Sections of 8 or 2
measures became easier to remember. Most standard music
is in a common or standard 4/4 timing (3/4 for Waltz), which
means there are 4 beats per measure, with the quarter note
getting one beat or count. Counting 8 beat sections will
be easier to see the form the song will take. However, if
you are choreographing certain dances like the Rumba, Cha-Cha,
Mambo, etc. it is usually easier to count measures rather
than individual beats, so instead of the 8 representing
8 beats, the 8 will represent 8x4 beats.
The ideal situation would be to have each section of music
come out evenly in sections of 8 so that you would be able
to create a dance that does not contain any tags or bridges.
I like to chart like this:
|
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
I use a sheet of lined paper and play the song. I start counting
usually after the introduction to the song on the vocals. Every
time I count 8 beats (if that is the end of the phrase of music)
I write down an 8. The example above shows that the first section
of music has 4 sets of 8. The “A” means that this
is part of the verse of the song. The underline means that a
new section has started. In my example, there is another verse,
which I have labeled as another “A” because the
words may be different, but the music sounds the same. The example
shows that there are also 4 sets of 8 in the second verse or
32 counts.
When you have finished writing down all of the 8’s and
identified the sections of music, you then look at the total
counts for each section. |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
32 |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
32 |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
32 |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
32 |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
A |
32 |
8
8
8
8
____________ |
B |
32 |
Notice that each section has 32 counts. This tells me that
I could choreograph a dance with 32 counts and it would fit
the music exactly. If it was a very long song however, and I
had say 10 or more sections of 32, I might elect to do a dance
that is 64 counts simply because the dancers might get bored
doing the same dance too many times, so you could double the
32 to 64 and this would also work out.
By the way, I write down the left side of the page and then
add another column of numbers in a column to the right of the
first one and read it in that direction. |
| What do you do if all of the numbers are not 8’s? |
8
8
8
8
4
------------------
8
8
8
8
4 |
In this example, there are 4 extra beats in one section.
You would have a couple of options. You could ignore
the extra counts, in which case your dance would not fit
exactly with the music but would still be on time, or you
could choreograph what is called a “tag” to make
the
dance fit exactly to the song. |
Sometimes you will come across a piece of music
you just have to choreograph to that has sections of uneven
length.
Part “A” may have 40 counts and the chorus of the
song (B) may be only 32 counts, but the sections are consistent
Throughout the song. You would then have to choreograph an “AB”
type dance. This would have the dancers do
two different sets of choreography or sometimes 3 sets depending
on the structure of the song. Some pieces of music
have additional sections of music that would be labeled as “C”
in the case of a musical bridge in the middle of the
song that is not considered a verse or a chorus. Other situations
would include using a "re-start" if one of the sections
were
un-even. You would dance the choreography from the beginning
and then start over when the next section starts.
|
| B. FINDING THE “HOOK”
|
After finding
out the basic structure of the song you are interested in, you
then need to start using
dance patterns to create the dance itself. Many successful dances
have one distinctive movement
that dancers refer to as the “hook”. This is some
clever little pattern such as a kick that
happens in a certain part of the song that fits to something
that is going on in the song. For example
the kick may always happen on a cymbal crash, or a hip movement
may go with some other type
of percussion or a clap that would fit to a clicking or clapping
sound in the song.
When I first started
doing my own choreography I watched the dance floor and tried
to analyze what it was that
made the dancers all run out onto the dance floor and do a particular dance. Was it the song?
Was it a certain step? Just what was it that made one dance
more popular than another.
I determined that there were consistently 3 main elements that
were common to all of the
successful dances these are: |
| |
1. The dance had some way to
make noise (claps, stomps, snaps, etc.)
2. The dance had turns
3. The dance had a kick of some kind |
| I then applied
this to all of the dances I was choreographing at the time
– these were my “Hooks”. |
C. NAMING THE DANCE
|
Finding
a name for the dance is sometimes challenging. Different choreographers
use different guidelines.
Some choreographers find
clever words from the song they are using that are repeated enough times in the song
that most people would recognize. Other choreographers name
their dance after the
title of the song (some choreographers object to this) the
reason being is that dancers
from countries where English is not the native language have
a difficult time asking a DJ
to play a certain dance, or it is too much to try to learn
the English for a song title and a dance
title. The only problem with this is that if the song becomes
out dated or the dancers tire
of it, there will be a problem in the future in trying to
revive the dance or find another track
for the dance. I try to avoid naming a dance after a person
that nobody really knows because
you will have trouble marketing the dance if not too many
dancers know who the person
is. |
D. MARKETING THE DANCE
– HOW DO YOU SELL IT? |
The
number of dances being done today and the short shelf life
of many of them are a testament
to the number of choreographers who are successfully marketing
their dances. What needs
to be done in order to have your dance make an impact on dancers,
is to send it to as many
sources as possible. Linedancer Magazine and Kick –
it are 2 of the largest archives,
but there are many other excellent web sites. Send the dance
to friends who may teach
and/or dance in other areas.
Networking
is very important. If you are submitting a dance to a publication,
the rule is "The squeaky
wheel gets the grease."
This
means that upon receiving your dance, it is put into a pile
of other dances which sometimes
causes yours to become buried. The more you submit your dance,
the chances are better
that it will stay in the forefront. An employee of Country
Weekly magazine once gave
me a fax number for the express purpose of submitting my dances.
I couldn't figure out why
I never heard from them, until I asked the main office for
the number again and found out I
had been sending my line dances to "Soap Opera Digest"
instead of "Country Weekly"! No one
ever said anything! I guess I'm saying to be persistent.
If you are teaching your
dance at various dance events and classes, make sure you don't
give up too easily. Many
teachers, Myself included, sell themselves short by not devoting
enough time to letting
their dance start to become popular. If a dance doesn't become
an instant "hit", they
abandon it for another dance they just whipped up! Let the
dance evolve – remember that
it can take as long as 6 months or more before a dance will
"catch on".
|
E. HOW TO WRITE A STEP
DESCRIPTION |
A
well-written step description should contain as much information
as possible about the dance
and at the same time, should be short enough for publication.
Keep in mind that a step description
is designed to help you to re-create the choreography of the
dance. The step sheet
is a teaching tool and makes certain assumptions that the
dancer has already learned the fundamentals
of dance and they are proficient enough to read the description
and know for example,
what a shuffle or a grapevine is. A step description for a
beginner dance is not necessarily
to be read by beginners – it is just to re-create a
beginner dance. Certain basic movements
do not have to be broken down, like shuffle steps or grapevines.
A step description should
include the following:
|
| |
- Title of dance
- Choreographer's name and contact information
- Date of choreography
- Number of counts, level of dance
- Type of dance (line, mixer, pattern partner dance)
- Bridges, Tags, or phrased (AB)
- Song title – include artist, album title and exact
version of the song (extended, radio mix, etc.) preferably
at the top of the sheet to make all the information available
at a glance
- Use headings to give a listing of the components above
each section of choreography
- Whenever possible, have 1 column of numbers from 1-8
describing the count and a 2nd column listing numbers
that run consecutively as in 1-32 which will make it easy
to find a particular section if you get questions about
your dance. If it is an easy enough dance this is not
always necessary. You will have to use your own discretion
to avoid too much
clutter on the step description.
- If possible, list
|
| |
Max Perry
2843 SW 20th Street #8
Ocala, FL 34474-2991
Phone: 352-854-0942
danceordie@cox.net
www.maxperry.net |
|