Sunday, December 21, 2014

REPOST: Dirty Dancing, review: 'a hard-eyed fairy tale'


What makes Dirty Dancing a good film? Sarah Crompton reviews this classic film on the article below: 


Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze in Dirty Dancing
Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze in Dirty Dancing | Image Source: telegraph.co.uk


There was a time when I watched Dirty Dancing at least once a month and I am sure it did me a lot of good, because what seems an enjoyable piece of fluff about a summer camp romance is, in its own quiet way, a powerful morality tale.

It is set, as Baby (Jennifer Grey) says in her famous opening line, in "the summer of 1963 when everybody called me Baby, and it didn't occur to me to mind. That was before President Kennedy was shot, before the Beatles came."

Baby is an idealistic type who wants to change the world, while her sister "just wants to decorate it". She doesn't quite fit in and from the start she is attracted to bad-boy entertainer Johnny (Patrick Swayze) and the world of the camp staff, whose dancing is dirty, sexy, and a million miles away from the silly competitions taking place in the camp proper.

It's the dancing that everybody remembers; that and Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes's (I've Had) the Time of My Life, which won the Best Song Oscar and provides the rousing finale. And it's true that Grey's sheer joy and good humour as she practises her steps on bridges and in lakes is absolutely infectious, while Swayze transcends one of the worst haircuts in recent film history to convince as a terrific dancer and an attractive man.

But what makes Dirty Dancing such a good film is that it is about more than sex, love and the liberating power of dance. It's a girl's need for an abortion that enables Baby and Johnny to dance together and allows Baby to express her altruism and her belief that "everyone is alike and deserves a fair break". It is thus a hard-eyed fairy tale, albeit one with a very warm and witty heart.

When Johnny returns to put his holiday love centre stage ("nobody puts Baby in a corner") there's no suggestion of a happy ever after; the point is that they have shown each other and us how to live. I defy you not to cry and cheer at the same time.


Lou S. Habash is a jazz dance teacher who has taught both children and adult alike. Visit this Facebook page for more jazz related updates.





Friday, October 31, 2014

The musical cure: Why jazz is good for the brain



Image Source: freep.com


Studies have been conducted investigating the effectiveness of music therapy in aiding the recovery of patients with mental disability or those who suffered from stroke. These studies concluded that listening to jazz has potential benefits to their physical and mental health.

Jazz has the power to influence the types of brainwaves we produce. Songs with distinctive syncopation or fast beats can bring out Theta brainwaves, which are creative brainwaves that can induce "Eureka!" moments. Jazz trains the mind to think creatively and critically, improves its focus, maintains motivation, and reduces fatigue during a workout.


Image Source: jazzjournal.co.uk


Relaxing music also has the power to reduce anxiety and stress and is as good as any massage. These kinds of music can bring about Alpha brainwaves or Delta brainwaves. The difference between the two is that alpha brainwaves are produced when the brain synchronizes with the beat of the music (of up to 60 beats per minute). They can relax you but keep you conscious. Delta brainwaves have the opposite effect;they can induce better sleep especially if you're listening to soft and slow music in a relaxed position.

The other health benefits of jazz include:

● 25% less depression than non-listeners
● Improved memory and focus
● Aid in recovery for stroke victims
● Lowers and maintains blood pressure


Image Source: goalistics.com


I am Lou S. Habash, a jazz dance instructor. Learn more about why you should get into jazz by following me on Twitter.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

REPOST: Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga team up to celebrate jazz


Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett deliver surprising chemistry on a new album of jazz standards called  'Cheek to Cheek'. This article from the Daily Herald reviews this interesting collaboration.




 
Video Source: dailyherald.com



Kids, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga have homework for you: Listen to their new jazz album.

The Grammy winners say they hope "Cheek to Cheek," featuring selections from the Great American Songbook, will turn younger people on to jazz music.

"The point of this album is not only to bring Tony and I together to collaborate, but to bring jazz to an entirely new audience," Gaga said in a recent interview. "This is really about us giving jazz what it deserves, which is the upmost respect and upmost praise."

"Cheek to Cheek" features covers of songs from Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady" to Cole Porter's "Anything Goes" to Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life." Gaga and Bennett have worked on the album, which was released Tuesday, for two years.

"Besides having the whole world enjoying her right now, she has a vast group of young people who love her, and they've never heard popular jazz music, classical American music," Bennett said in a separate interview this week. "And my ambition was to do this album so they would get acquainted with that music."

Gaga, who grew up in New York like Bennett, said she has been singing jazz music since she was 13. She broke onto the music scene in 2008 with multiple No. 1 hits flavored with dance and electronic beats.

"It's truer to my nature," she said of recording jazz. "Because so much of what I've done has been heavily Auto-Tuned or made very electronic to fit on the radio, but this is so much easier because I'm a rebel and this is really rebellious for me to say goodbye to pop for a moment and just sing some pure jazz."

"The truth is that this is the original pop music of America," she added. "And I've been trying to explain to my fans in the best way that I can that these songs are truly timeless."

Gaga, 28, and Bennett, 88, first collaborated in 2011 on "The Lady is a Tramp." The song appeared on Bennett's album "Duets II," which sold more than 1 million copies and won two Grammy Awards. Bennett, who had his first No. 1 song in 1951, said the key to his longevity is maintaining high standards.

"I joined the American Theatre Wing (after fighting in World War II) and it was the best choice I ever made because the first thing they taught everybody, whether it was music or dancing or singing, they taught everybody 'Never compromise, only do quality,'" Bennett said. "And now it's all paid off."

To learn more about all kinds of great jazz moves and music, visit this Lou S. Habash Facebook page.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

New Orleans: The place for anything ‘jazz’

New Orleans sounds like no other place in the world. And one of the most amazing things about the city is its native music—jazz.

Image Source: theguardian.com

Also known as “Dixieland music,” New Orleans jazz is markedly one of the major elements that define the “Old South.” New Orleans is considered to be the birthplace of the genre, where jazz developed at the beginning of the 20th century, which soon branched out to other cities, including New York and Chicago in the 1920s.

Image Source: wikipedia.org

Contributing to the genre’s evolution, the Creole people of New Orleans and Buddy Bolden are credited for jazz’s development, along with icons such as Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, and Jelly Roll Morton.

Image Source: worldfestivaldirectory.com

Today, the gift of jazz music lives on in the region. New Orleans holds the largest traditional jazz festival in the United States, celebrated annually on Memorial Day weekend. The event is attended by approximately 100,000 visitors annually, with more or less than 150 bands from different parts of the globe.

In other smaller venues and locations, the Old South is known for having the greatest jazz clubs in the country. An example of this is the historic Preservation Hall, located in the French Quarter, and Fritzel's, which is renowned for its neighborhood pub atmosphere and local musicians.

Lou S. Habash is a dance teacher who is passionately in love with anything jazz. For links of her other blog articles about the genre, follow her on Twitter.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

REPOST: A Step Is Just a Step

In her Dance World Takeover blog, Rebecca Brightly expounds on the art of dance, a must-read for all dancers and dance enthusiasts. 
Before I studied the art, a punch to me was just a punch, a kick was just a kick. After I’d studied the art, a punch was no longer a punch, a kick no longer a kick. Now that I understand the art, a punch is just a punch, a kick is just a kick. -Bruce Lee
Image Source: rebeccabrightly.com

Once upon a time, Bruce Lee was a dancer. He studied many forms of movement, rather than getting indoctrinated in only one “way.”
On our shelf sits my husband’s copy of Tao of Jeet Kune Do, the book this quote is from. As far as the internet can tell me, the quote (like the rest of the book) is strongly influenced by Buddhist philosophy.
This “punch is just a punch” quote has been on my mind lately. Here’s why.
Months ago, a commenter on this blog remarked to me (paraphrased): “I can tell you are not an advanced dancer because you use words like ‘steps’ and ‘moves,’ showing that you do not have an in-depth understanding of full body movement.”
The comment initially annoyed me. Go figure.
But after shrugging it off, I could only shake my head. I’m all too familiar with that brimming sense of superiority displayed by the commenter. I, too, once looked for weaknesses in others’ dancing (or words or ideas) so I could knock them down and feel better about myself. I still catch myself doing it.
But this isn’t a post about how humility is good and arrogance is bad. (Is that even true?) And I didn’t write this to tell off some commenter who will probably never read my response.
Instead, I want to use this space to explain what Bruce’s words mean to me in a dancing sense.

Phase 1

Before I made a serious study of dancing, I learned moves. They were simple; they fit together easily into patterns I could do with my classmates. They each had names, and they were always done the same way.
Image Source: rebeccabrightly.com
But I couldn’t do anything very challenging or creative with my dancing.

Phase 2

After I’d studied and struggled for some time, my patterns fell away. Steps and moves became movements that flowed into one another, with no clear distinction between them. My motion flowed from my center, from the ground, from my partner. The steps and their names were irrelevant, I just flowed.
I was one with my partner! I was inside the music.
The first time I read Bruce’s quote years ago, I knew instantly my dancing was right in the middle of it—in that “all is one” mind space, teaching complexity, getting deep into detail, and chasing bliss.
I could also see the wisdom of passing out of this second phase. I knew there was more.

Phase 3

Now that I understand partner dancing… What words should come after that? How exactly do I express my sense of simplicity?
Now that I understand partner dancing, steps are just steps. Moves are just moves.
The foundations of movement all relate to one another, but I can once again see them as separate concepts. The music is around me, and I am a distinct individual once more. The simplicity of understanding has returned; it’s exactly as I thought, only now I get how simple it really is.
Image Source: rebeccabrightly.com
 When I say “step” or “move,” those words are a deliberate choice. I’m familiar with the panoply of complex movement concepts dancers invent and promote. I promote certain complex ideas myself.
Bruce’s words express something I’ve been trying to understand about my process of learning: This cycle of understanding that goes from simple, to complex, and back to simple again.
What is the essence, the soul of the movement, the TL;DR?
How can I communicate so that the newest of newbies can grasp what I’m saying?
I simplify relentlessly.
Part of teaching is understanding where your students are in their learning. I don’t always get it right. Words that seem profound and deeply intuitive to me may seem simplistic to you. I may use the words I mean, but they are not always the words you need to hear.
That’s why I like the Tao of Jeet Kune Do. I don’t understand everything Bruce Lee writes. In fact, much of it I skim over and save for another day.
You’re welcome to do the same with this blog. Or you can wrestle with my words and leave impassioned, thoughtful comments.
You can also leave arrogant comments, which will annoy me. But I know where you come from. I know that feeling of resistance, and I can’t stop you from having it.
Besides, you may be right. Perhaps one day again, a step will no longer be a step, a move no longer a move. There is much more to learn.
Lou S. Habash loves jazz and is a jazz dance instructor. Know more about dancing by following her blog.


Thursday, February 27, 2014

REPOST: Paco de Lucía, Flamenco Guitarist, Dies at 66

The  music world pays tribute to the world-renowned guitarist, Paco de Lucía.  Read more on this NYTimes.com article.
  
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Paco de Lucía, who was born into a musical family and grew up to become one of the world’s greatest guitarists, mastering flamenco music and finding new audiences by blending it with jazz and other genres, died on Wednesday in Mexico. He was 66.

His death was confirmed by a municipal official in Mr. de Lucía’s native city, Algeciras, on the coast of southern Spain.

Gaspar Armando García Torres, the Quintana Roo state attorney general, told Mexico’s Enfoque Radio that Mr. de Lucía had had a heart attack while on vacation at the Caribbean resort town of Playa del Carmen and died in a hospital, The Associated Press reported.

Mr. de Lucía established himself as a leading flamenco artist in the 1960s and ’70s, notably after forming a partnership with Camarón de la Isla, a singer who is widely considered to have revived and revolutionized flamenco in Spain. The duo released more than 10 records, both of classical flamenco and a fusion of rock and pop. Camarón de la Isla died in 1992.


Image Source: en.wikipedia.org
 
With the backing of bongo players and an electric bass, Mr. de Lucía produced one of Spain’s most familiar tunes, a rumba called “Entre Dos Aguas” (Between Two Waters), which was part of an album released in 1973, in the final years of the Franco dictatorship.

Mr. de Lucía was renowned for “the intensity of his concentration” and for the way he had “pushed flamenco’s traditional roots both backward and forward,” Ben Ratliff wrote in The New York Times in 2004 in a review of a de Lucía performance, with singers and a rhythm section, at the Beacon Theater in Manhattan.

Mr. de Lucía’s virtuosity was grounded in age-old flamenco techniques: hard-edge strumming, breakneck runs with every note sharply articulated, a touch that could be feathery or imperious, suspenseful phrasing and, most of all, a volatile sense of dynamics and drama.

He opened flamenco’s traditional boundaries to rhythms, harmonies and instruments from the wider world. Even when he was playing a tango, using jazz chords or backed by an electric bass, his music remained unmistakably and authoritatively flamenco.

“I am a purist within my aura of revolutionary, vanguardist or creator,” Mr. Lucía said in a 2004 interview with the Spanish newspaper El País. “I’m still a purist because I have always respected what I think is respectable. What I have is not the obedience the purists continue to have, but the respect for the essence, the old, the valid. Memory.”

He added: “What you do has to have credibility. No matter how far you go harmonically, no matter how crazy it seems, it has to smell and sound like flamenco.”

In the same interview, Mr. de Lucía said that the pressure to record frequently — something unknown to previous generations of flamenco performers — had compelled him to keep extending his music, “to keep growing and learning.” He insisted that his prodigious technique was never an end in itself.
“You must have enough technical dominion to forget about it,” he said. “That is when you can begin to express yourself.”

He was born Francisco Sánchez Gómez in Algeciras on Dec. 21, 1947, and aspired to play the guitar from childhood after receiving his first lessons from his father. When he was 14, he won an international flamenco competition and shortly thereafter made his first recording, “Los Chiquitos de Algeciras,” with his brother Ramón, who also played guitar.


Image Source: newsrender.barhashing.com
 
His Gypsy neighborhood inspired his stage name. It was full of children called Paco (short for Francisco), he said, so he was referred to as “the Paco of Lucía,” his mother’s name.
In the early 1980s he extended his longstanding collaboration with his brothers, Ramón and Pepe de Lucía, a singer, by forming a sextet with Jorge Pardo, Carles Benavent and Rubem Dantas, a Brazilian percussionist.

To modernize flamenco, the group introduced a new percussion instrument, the Peruvian cajón, a six-sided wooden box that they discovered while touring Latin America and that has since become a staple of flamenco music.

With Spain’s return to democracy, Mr. de Lucía increasingly spent time outside the country in the 1980s, often teaming up with leading jazz players, particularly the guitarists John McLaughlin and Al DiMeola. They toured worldwide, and their recordings included “Friday Night in San Francisco,” which sold more than a million copies.

In 1989 Mr. de Lucía performed at Carnegie Hall, where “his set of flamenco tunes and Andalusian melodies had the emotionally riveting quality of brilliant, impassioned conversation,” Stephen Holden wrote in his review in The Times.

In 2012, a double album of live concerts earned Mr. de Lucía his second Latin Grammy Award for best flamenco recording. His first came in 2004 for “Cositas Buenas” (Good Little Things), which features another major flamenco guitarist, Tomatito.


Image Source: music-bazaar.com
 
Mr. de Lucía received some of Spain’s most prestigious awards, including the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts in 1992 and the Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts in 2004.
Information about his survivors was not immediately available. A statement by his family, published in Spanish newspapers, said, “Paco lived as he wished and died playing with his children beside the sea.”

His death brought forth tributes in Spain and elsewhere. José Ignacio Wert, Spain’s culture minister, called Mr. de Lucía “a unique and unrepeatable figure.” The pianist Chick Corea said in a statement, “Paco inspired me in the construction of my own musical world as much as Miles Davis and John Coltrane, or Bartok and Mozart.” And José Mercé, a flamenco singer, said that nobody would reach Mr. de Lucía’s level in the next 200 years.

Lou S. Habash is a jazz dance teacher that loves jazz music. Know more about her by visiting this Facebook page.