Sabrosura
Son Montuno
I'm still hiding in salsaforums anonymity, and it will be a long time til I as much publicly reveal my current city, let alone post a video of myself. hahaha
Lol, why so afraid
I'm still hiding in salsaforums anonymity, and it will be a long time til I as much publicly reveal my current city, let alone post a video of myself. hahaha
the only ones i'd watchdancing dembow that I will not post here![]()
I'm convinced I'm terrible. I am told all the time I'm better than I think I am, but I do not want to know whether this is said just to soothe my obvious self-doubt at timesLol, why so afraid![]()
It is meant genuinely, I do not reject that. But, what does the label "latin@" really mean?
Why ethnically label movement to determine worth of dance, and/or appreciation of a culture?
I have a hypothesis that ethnic background of a region dictates the swing in the region. The more afro populated a region, the more swing. The Caribbean has the advantage of being a slavery hub, imprinting characteristics of slaves in the society; for us in specific, dance movement. The movement, plain and simple, is inherent to caribeños. Where as places with lesser afro influence tend to lack a certain swing. While clubs aren't the only lacking that swing. Ccentral American regions also lack in that department. Frequenting central american clubs as a youngster always made wonder why body movement was far different than the ones I was used to in the caribbean. Caribbean swing was very infrequent in them. South Americans, well there is swing there too.Note that I am not idealizing latin@s, there are plenty of them who are not good dancers. But the fact remains that when you go on a dance floor dominated by latin@s, you tend to see rhythm and nice body movement. When you go on a dance floor dominated by non-latin@s, you tend to see...other things.![]()
[/quote]Also, as an ex-ballroom dancer I agree with your comment about ballroom dancers having lovely body movement. I've said this before, I credit most of my current dance abilities (salsa and others) to my ballroom dancing training in Eastern Europe which taught me good technique (both footwork and body movement), the likes of which is very hard to find in salsa classes.
It is meant genuinely, I do not reject that. But, what does the label "latin@" really mean?
I like french wineGood question! Literally, I'd say it means you're Italian.![]()
Whoops, I just asked you to reveal your location in another thread. Sorry!I'm still hiding in salsaforums anonymity, and it will be a long time til I as much publicly reveal my current city, let alone post a video of myself. hahaha
Note that I am not idealizing latin@s, there are plenty of them who are not good dancers. But the fact remains that when you go on a dance floor dominated by latin@s, you tend to see rhythm and nice body movement. When you go on a dance floor dominated by non-latin@s, you tend to see...other things.![]()
I'm convinced I'm terrible. I am told all the time I'm better than I think I am, but I do not want to know whether this is said just to soothe my obvious self-doubt at times![]()
As long as you are talking about dancing (not just latin dancing, though I would be inclined to include that too), and you've already opened the can of worms about ethnicity, I would disagree.
Of all ethnicities (what's wrong with the spell checker on this site, it flags so many legit spellings as errors without suggestion of correct spelling), that I have witnessed, I think that honor goes to African ethnicity. Whether they are from Western World, Caribbean/Latin or African continent, as a percentage, more of them have rhythm and body movement compared to other ethnicitiesJust like they dominate long distance running.
This belongs to racism thread.
the only ones i'd watch![]()
I have a hypothesis that ethnic background of a region dictates the swing in the region. The more afro populated a region, the more swing.
I think differences in dance capabilities are about 99% cultural (at least). The area I live in has very few minorities; as a result, they (we?) tend to adopt the majority (European-descent, Christian) culture more than other places where it's easier to keep one's parents' culture.
No doubt... though I'm looking more at a "civic" movement. Something "inherent" to a region as opposed to something purposely learned by a selected group of people.This, Both.
Re 2. Its also depends on what people reach for. If they want to stick to what they know i.e. meat and potatoes, they'll get meat and potatoes. Some people like to try out the new things (e.g. Quinoa, Jicama and whatever meat source is all the rage right now) and then one thing leads to another.
I think the same. It has to be, otherwise we'd all inherently dance the same.I think differences in dance capabilities are about 99% cultural (at least). The area I live in has very few minorities; as a result, they (we?) tend to adopt the majority (European-descent, Christian) culture more than other places where it's easier to keep one's parents' culture.
If you aren't interested why ask? I guess if you were you'd have the read the whole post. I was referring to not wanting to post a video of myself, because I felt my dancing is poor.Not that I am interested, but logically that doesn't seem to have anything to do with not wanting to disclose your location.