Rundquist
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 431
carebear said:Is that an onion on your belt? lol
Grandpa Simpson, I salute you.
carebear said:Is that an onion on your belt? lol
John in Covina said:For many people a scene has to change and evolve to continue to be exciting. These changes bring in new people which adds to the evolution of things. All of this tends to be a detraction to the PURISTS! Business wise a business will attempt to appeal to the widest audience. Only if a clearly viable example of success with the purist approach is shown as a wining prosition otherwise the business men won't cater to the purists.
The only thing is knowledge is power and an educated audience learns to apprieciate things more and more so it is possible to be a proponent of the Purist Movement and sway more to the cause. If you can get a group of purists up to dance at a club for the real stuff then maybe the generalists will equate the real deal with what they want to be doing.
Any of this make sense?
Absolutely. Dancing and music wasn’t a pass time. It was a release from a crappy living. I’ve heard the same thing said about Mambo music of the 50’s & 60’s. You can’t recreate that.Paisley said:Some of our dance teachers do talk about where lindy, balboa and other dances came from. In one class, the teacher said that the dancing of the 30s couldn't really be recreated because the dancers are different. Black people in the 20s, 30s and 40s led lives that were much harder than that of a typical white 20-something in 2006. It's the idea that artists have to suffer to make great works.
Rundquist said:If you want your “scene” to be the way you want it, you guys are going to have to band together as best you can and make a concerted effort. Musical snobbery needs to go out the door.
Wild Root said:I've seen plenty of footage of dance contests and saw the real dancers go to town! They all smiled and were happy... they danced like mad and were hard core about it! When I dance to a song I like, I smile and my best moves come out... it's really amazing! A kind older man was at a dance; after the dance, he stopped me; he said: Young man, out of all the dancers on that floor, you were the one having fun! He told me that I was fun to watch and that I was enjoying my self... unlike most of the others who dance with a stone face.
Real Jitterbug music makes me happy and I feel compelled to dance! That's why I like it... it just makes me happy!
=WR=
lolWild Root said:Well, I wouldn't consider my self a musical snob... but, I do believe in types of music that are appropriate for different types of dances. Who's going to polka to KISS? Who would brake dance to Beethoven?
Wild Root said:I'm an organized person, I believe there are styles of music better suited for dancing the Jitterbug. Jazz and swing music isn't musty old music from the 20's to the 40's... not at all, it's considered America's "Classical" musical period... it was invented here, it's special.
=WR=
Paisley said:Although these aren't from the "classical" period, would you also include Bobby Darin ("Beyond the Sea" and "Mack the Knife"), later recordings of Ella and Louis ("Dancing Cheek to Cheek" and "Can't take that away from Me"), Sam Cooke ("She was only Sixteen," "Summertime"), "Midnight in Moscow," "Little Bitty Pretty One," Basie's "Moten Swing," et al. as good for swing dance? I would really miss those songs if they weren't played.
koopkooper said:Wildroot, I DJ from time to time and I've gotta say I think it's a bit rude to bring a CD for the DJ to play, it kinda says "man I hate your music, play this, I think my musical choices are better than yours"
As a DJ I am offended by people who run out to their glove compartment and pull out a stack of CD's. I don't care who hands it to me, I just say "thanks but no thanks,burn me a copy and I'll take it home to listen to properly and I may play it on another night if I think it will suit my set, I'm not willing to make a snapp decision on a song which might clear the floor" (which happend in your case)
I think it's a bit like the person who comes to a party at your house with his own music, apparently I'm not capable of making a decison on what my guests might like to listen to.....anyway that's my two cents worth.
Sure the music might suck and you have every right to leave, but do think og the poor cat trying to do his job, he doesn't need to be pestered by the punter and their musical whims. The same goes for bands, just because the song you'd like is not on the bands playlist is not reason to take it out on them either, they aren't a jukebox, sure ask them when they take a break of they know a song, if they don't the band leader might ask you about the song and try to learn it. I guess what I'm saying is that there is a civil way of doing this.
I think it's a bit like the person who comes to a party at your house with his own music, apparently I'm not capable of making a decison on what my guests might like to listen to.....anyway that's my two cents worth.