i hope and i pray that at 80years young i am still able to hear and move as beautifully as she doe's...music is a powerful thing for many reasons....but most of all it brings us closer to who we are really.
thank you for sharing this i am always happy and this still managaed to to give me a kind of rush...just beautiful....
Brilliant! Thanks for that one. Noteworthy also how the orchestra is playing for the dancers, in the way the Golden Age orchestras of tango were. They allow dancers to read their music and anticipate changes. And also, note how the dancers are in the music and work with everything. Beautiful. And btw, where dancing at old age is concerned, how about dancing at one's 100th birthday. Here's Carmencita Calderon, legendary partner of the legendary El Cachafaz: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuLVZnEpg4E And here she is in the old days: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Yv9V-3APpc *sniffle*
I love it. Here is another one that Jocelyne in Bristol/Bath posted on Facebook. I swear I am going to keep dancing til I can't move anymore. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkHvRCp3z5A
It's an interesting thing about the orchestra playing for the dancers. It definitely feels wonderful when there's a real collaboration between real, live musicians and dancers going on and they are paying attention to each other and appreciating each other. I think I see what you are talking about in this case, but I don't know how it's achieved.
Awesome conversation between dancers and musicians. Just inspiring! The pauses too, show great sensitivity and personality in the elder woman's dance! Thanks for the inspiration. E
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i hope and i pray that at 80years young i am still able to hear and move as beautifully as she doe's...music is a powerful thing for many reasons....but most of all it brings us closer to who we are really.
ReplyDeletethank you for sharing this i am always happy and this still managaed to to give me a kind of rush...just beautiful....
Brilliant! Thanks for that one.
ReplyDeleteNoteworthy also how the orchestra is playing for the dancers, in the way the Golden Age orchestras of tango were. They allow dancers to read their music and anticipate changes.
And also, note how the dancers are in the music and work with everything. Beautiful.
And btw, where dancing at old age is concerned, how about dancing at one's 100th birthday. Here's Carmencita Calderon, legendary partner of the legendary El Cachafaz:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuLVZnEpg4E
And here she is in the old days:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Yv9V-3APpc
*sniffle*
I love it. Here is another one that Jocelyne in Bristol/Bath posted on Facebook. I swear I am going to keep dancing til I can't move anymore.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkHvRCp3z5A
Clickable versions:
ReplyDeleteCarmencita Calderon at 100
And in 1933
Arlene's link.
It's an interesting thing about the orchestra playing for the dancers. It definitely feels wonderful when there's a real collaboration between real, live musicians and dancers going on and they are paying attention to each other and appreciating each other. I think I see what you are talking about in this case, but I don't know how it's achieved.
Awesome conversation between dancers and musicians. Just inspiring!
ReplyDeleteThe pauses too, show great sensitivity and personality in the elder woman's dance!
Thanks for the inspiration.
E
I really love what John Dokes is doing. It seems so gentle, without sacrificing the fire. Totally in the music. They're great together.
ReplyDeleteI think you might enjoy this
ReplyDelete:o)
I quite liked it, but he needed to cut the whole of the first two paragraphs and tighten up the rest of it by fifty percent. What a sermon! ;D
ReplyDeleteYeah but he's learning tango so I forgive him ;o)
ReplyDelete