Out in the Pacific northwest, we generally tend to play quite a bit lower
than 120. We get complaints about 118 that we are playing too fast from
the dancers and callers. Kind of depends on the dance, how many four or
eight count moves, how far apart the lines are if its a big hall, the
experience of the dancer, some of the moves like hays and wavey lines. I
generally like about 114 if its not too hot. Some callers ask us to call
as slow at 110 which feels pretty draggy to me.
On Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 10:47 PM, tavi merrill <melodiouswoodchuck(a)gmail.com
wrote:
120 bpm is generally considered normal - but one of my
best dance
experiences ever, with the band "Old Grey Goose" left me both feeling
sublime, and realizing their tempos were on average a little lower than i
was used to. Ralph Sweet has a great thought about tempo - the idea that,
based on the length of the average human leg, there is a frequency of
motion at which the least force is expended to set it swinging (imagining
the dancer's leg as a pendulum)...
And i suppose that, like everything about dance music and calling, what is
ideal really depends upon the dancers present. Suffice it to say i've had
great experiences as a dancer around 118, but when i'm really "into" a
tune
on the fiddle, it's easy to warp up to 126 without realizing it. As a
fiddler new to playing for dancers, if your technique on notey reels is up
to snuff, it's easy to get carried away and confuse "energy" with speed -
sometimes the hardest thing is slowing down. On the dance floor that
confusion never happens, fast is just fast... and less enjoyable to dance.
Hence my making a somewhat conservative suggestion.
tavi
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