Hi Jim,
I always use music for my lessons. Live if the band is willing; recorded if not. For this purpose, I have an ipod and powerful battery powered speaker I can use that is sufficient to fill most spaces. My experience is music gives dancers an idea of phrasing and tempo of dance they might otherwise not understand. I build a very simple dance (Babaloo Reel) phrase by phrase. Been doing it for 20+ years, and pretty much cannot imagine NOT doing a lesson to music.
BTW, I have a fairly detailed description of my lesson, which I am happy to share if you want me to mail you a copy.
Regards,
Greg
I'd like to hear from any of you who can share experience or advice about making use of music during the introductory lesson (a/k/a "new dancers' orientation", "beginners' workshop", etc.) that often precedes a regularly scheduled contradance.
What source of music do you use? (Recorded music played on a device that you control? Live music played by a musician assisting with the lesson? Music that you yourself can play on some instrument while leading the session? Your own singing of song lyrics, nonsense syllables like "la la la", or dance calls? Music that may happen to be coming from the evening's band doing their sound check at the other end of the hall? ..) How--in as much detail as you care to supply--do you use that music in your teaching? What do you think/hope your use of music contributes to the effectiveness or fun of the lesson?
I tossed out a few ideas on this topic, with much uncertainty about which ones were any good, in a message I sent on September 2 in the "Brain Dead - Need Suggestions" thread. I'm re-raising the topic here under a more descriptive Subject line in hope of getting responses from people who can offer comments based on actual experience.
Thanks.
--Jim
_______________________________________________
List Name: Callers mailing list
List Address: Callers@lists.sharedweight.net
Archives: https://www.mail-archive.com/callers@lists.sharedweight.net/