- Joined
- Dec 28, 2006
To take it a little farther -- there is absolute music (what you call pure music) and there is program music. Not only does absolute music have "no story to tell", it has no reference to any scene, mood, image, tone painting, external programmatic theme, etc., etc. either.
The goal is that for ALL choices of music (absolute or programmatic) the skaters are ALWAYS supposed to add something to the music by their movement. That is the whole point. In all schools of choreography there is a fundamental principle that the movement should not "lean" on the music. The movement is supposed to complement and add to the music, so that the music and the movement together are more than the sum of their parts. If the choreography relies on the viewer knowing what the music is about, or if it is the music leading the viewer through the program then the choreography has failed. There are very few skating programs that come even close to meeting this ideal, which is why the presentation components for most skaters rightfully deserve to be in the toilet.
:agree: :agree:
like sasha's malagunea. that stood on it's on two feet.
:agree:
I have never seen a negative post about any of these three.