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macropis

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  • Connection to/interest in ballet** (Please describe. Examples: fan, teacher, dancer, writer, avid balletgoer)
    dancer, dance enthusiast
  • City**
    St. Louis
  • State (US only)**, Country (Outside US only)**
    IL
  1. THank you for your thoughts, SanderO. They are very interesting and insightful to me. And that's okay; most people don't understand belly dance. I wrote an article a while back that explains some of the characteristics and aesthetics, mostly via a comparison to western dance forms such as ballet. comparison of belly dance and western dance. If it seems biased towards belly dance it is only because its purpose is to explain what belly dance is, not to exhault ballet as high art (most people already know the latter). Also, just for comparative purposes, a different dancer dancing very purely in the Egyptian style to the same piece of music: I mostly agree with this. As much as I admire ballet, I wouldn't call it *the* ultimate aesthetic but it is amazing and beautiful. I just think there are other dances and ways of moving just as amazing, but in other ways and for different reasons. I do completely agree that most people merely inhabit their bodies and lumber around, a fact I find very sad. It is sad because just about anyone could be more than that if they valued the function and potential of their bodies more. Yes, pretty much. There is a lot of bad fusion out there. Some of us are purists who are offended by the concept that the dance needs to be westernized or "made better" by adding ballet to it, but at the same time fusion can be great art when well done, and Sabah does a very nice job with this. Very few dancers are so proficient in ballet and belly dance as to be able to pull this off. I would hate to see it catch on as a trendy thing in which every ballet dancer who's had a belly dance class (or vice versa) butchers both forms by trying to combine them. Me too!!
  2. I wasn't sure whether to place this in this forum or the "modern and other dance" forum, so my apologies if it seems out of place. This youtube link is of a dancer performing a fusion of ballet and Middle Eastern dance. What makes this rather unusual is she is dancing on pointe, a technique I generally would think does not lend itself to successful fusion, particularly with Middle Eastern dance. Personally, I like many dance genres, but as a general rule do not care much for fusion, especially when traditional ethnic dances are involved. However, this one really works for me. While the dance features a lot of pointe technique, the essential aesthetics of the dance are primarily Middle Eastern. The piece of music (Lissa Fakir) is an instrumental version of a profound Egyptian love song made famous by the reknowned Arab vocalist Oum Kalthoum. It is a very complicated piece of music and I like how the dancer uses pointe to interpret various parts of it. This has been discussed at length by Middle Eastern dancers, but I am interested in how it would be perceived by ballet enthusiasts. Beautiful? Confusing? Harmonious? Disharmonious?
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