- Joined
- Feb 19, 2010
I think that's the problem though. Not all dances translate well to the ice. Think, for example, of Irish Step Dancing. Back in '98 I loved Bourne and Kratz's Riverdance, and couldn't understand why G&G, Krylova&O, and Annisina&P beat the Canadians. I mean, they were moving their feet so quickly, weren't they?Oh, I especially love RD because it's _the dance_ first and foremost. I don't get a story behind the routine most of the times anyway, so I'm more than happy to watch two dozens of tango or blues. So yeah, I'm very team abstract and team 'dance not a story'
But now I look back and understand that Irish Step Dancing is mostly done shoulder-to-shoulder, requiring few tight dance holds or interweaving patterns. In reality, any of the top teams could have mastered the quick dance steps b/c they were pretty much about two people skating side-by-side, individually. Don't get me wrong - I still think it was an iconic dance. However, that style doesn't really translate well to a man and a woman dancing in tight holds, etc., like (eg) a tango or jive does.
Sooooooo - we come to street dance. PC tried to translate that street dance style (I can't remember its name... sounds like Fracking or something...) to the ice, and while those sections (particularly at the beginning) were neat, they weren't really about the feet or blades or edges or turns or holds or whatever, which is what ice dancing is supposed to be about. If you look at most RDs this year, they are trying to dance according to an abstract idea/concept ('street dancing') with a random blues pattern thrown in there. Huh? What does backstreet boys have to do with a blues rhythm? Know what I mean?
Meh. Maybe I'm wrong. I just see this year's RD as an attempt to do something that doesn't make sense, and doesn't fit on the ice... Am I wrong?
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