The Language of BellyDance Part ll

4

Posted on : 28-10-2009 | By : Kathreen | In : Styles of Belly Dance

Isadora Duncan

” The dancer’s body is simply the luminous manifestation of the soul.”

Isadora Duncan

It came to me that this subject of the’ Language of Oriental Dance’ has, seemingly, many layers.

It is evident , from my own experience, and the years of witnessing and hearing about other women’s experience, that we unanimously agree that this dance is transformative. Regardless of our initial motive to learn to Belly Dance, the experience of the dance, the music and movement, the feminine quality, the fun and sisterhood…and the profound feeling of confidence ,clarity and connection with our spirit  that we each develop and experience is the  captivating gift we all share!

Just as Isadora Duncan, in the early 1900′s, created her own version of dance based on the themes of Greek Mythology, ‘Belly Dance’ in the Western world, particularly in America, has evolved it’s own mythology!

” Virtually alone, Isadora restored dance to a high place among the arts. Breaking with convention, Isadora traced the art of dance back to it’s roots as a sacred art.”

The restrictive and repressive era of Isadora was the catalyst for her to find a ‘template’ based on a cultural foundation to express her passion and spirit in a free and natural form of movement.

In the 60′s and 70′s in America women were also seeking ways to break free of convention. The ‘template’ of Oriental Dance which became labeled as ‘Belly Dance’ in the West provided not only the cultural foundation but the very essence of free and natural feminine movement!

Arabic music with it’s ‘Heartbeat’ rhythms, exciting, exotic sounds and melodies, along with the powerful movements of Oriental Dance, allowed the Western woman to enter an unfamiliar portal that opened the floodgates of creativity, personal power and freedom!

In the same way that Isadora ‘created’ a form of dance, based on what she imagined might have been in an ancient culture, we American dancers from the 70′s and beyond ‘created’ Belly Dance from what we only could imagine it to be…given our limited knowledge and exposure to the culture of it’s origins at that time.

Also, like Isadora, those of us that burned with the passion of our new found ‘freedom of expression and art’ sought to elevate ‘Belly Dance’ to a ‘high place among the arts’.

At the same time, in the land of it’s origins,the women of Oriental Dance were creating an equally powerful phenomenon within Middle Eastern Culture. The Oriental Dance Stars from Egypt and Lebanon,such as Najwa Fouad, Suhair Zake, Fifi Abdou, Mona El Said and Nadia Gamal, were actively evolving this Dance from it’s traditional origins, with the aid of the sweeping power of the film industry and tourism, to a popular and elevated stature on stage and silver screen!

It is interesting to note that although Oriental Dance and it’s Western forms of Belly Dance finds it’s expression as a Performance Art, at the same time, it is also, in both cultures, an experience of ‘Collective Joy!’ In the Middle East the women dance with and for each other in women’s parties,( Haflas) and gatherings just as Western women Dance together in classes, workshops and Haflas. In both instances this dance allows women to share sisterhood, joy and creativity in an environment that supports an experience of dance in freedom and abandon!

Here is a treasure from a Documentary of Moroccan Women Dancing in a Birth of a Child Celebration!

At the root of it all, the desire for individual and collective joy is the impetus to dance and to share our dancing with others. Whether we are alone on a stage or in a gathering, when the music calls, our soul responds and we call it ‘Dance’ !

Here is a wonderful video I just discovered that depicts the fun and pure joy that can emerge from even the most seemingly austere and grey surroundings! This is an ‘After New years’ gathering in Bulgaria…I believe this is actually called ‘Kucheck’ yet it seems to have Oriental Dance roots!

Cold weather…Hot Kucheck!

Music and Dance is truly our Universal Language!

And for now…I will just ” Shut up, and DANCE!

Zhagareeeeeettt!!!!

Comments (4)

Morrocan Road Trip is in order! I have seen this video and adore it. It makes me embrace my belly even more! Look up Morrocan Trance dance on YouTube for more… I would recommend checking out Lee Ali and taking one of her classes if she is ever in town. She is amazing!

Woohoo!
Petite FiFi

Thanks Kathreen! I love your writing. You really do speak to me thats for sure! Isadora Duncan, Loie Fuller, Ruth St Denis, Le Meri, have always been deep inspirations. As well as Maya Deren who taught me about the value of trance dance. Which is a big part of those 55 minute night club dance sets at Haji Baba in the old days! Ha! These days everything is mostly sound bites and dancers don’t get to know what this experience is .
Though much of my dance has been done to traditional Arabic music, with costumes and stylizations, (actually much of it still is, I have a rare and amazing 6 piece Arabic band I dance with in Seattle called House of Tarab). Oops! back on tract: However, I have as many people know, my more visionary side too. I have since the beginning of my belly dance experience understood (as in reference to your last article), the language of the dance. Thus, throughout my career, I have taken the liberty to say a lot more with my dance on stages and at parties than the average dancer. Some dancers think you are suppose to just smile and look pretty. Hmmm? Not good enough in my mind. My desire was to share more meaning through the artistic tool of belly dance. Even though I felt like Isadora Duncan did, an ancient echo from the past moving me. I also recognized this meant taking the dance in forward territory that was not as cultivated by others (yet). Intimacy on stage was not about sex, it’s about barring ones soul. This often results as a powerful transformative and profound experience for me and my audience. Again, I have to say it was Maya Deren’s book “Divine Horsemen” about Haitian trance dance that helped me understand this experience.
One of the most meaningful comments after one of these performances was made to me by a famous theatrical playwright. He said “That was a really great performance Delilah, it was not pretty”.
His observation spoke to the dimensionality that I was compelled to express. So in response to this quality, I my company was named Visionary Dance. Today this work is now being channeled widely into my groups called the The Neighborhood Temple Priestesses. We are growing all over the world now and have a yahoo group dancers can join and learn more what we do. This year 2010 it’s the theme for my annual January Hawaii Retreat. . . (see web sites). Anyways, We do deeply inspired dance works utilizing belly dance, unique veils dances, out door nature dances, shadow play, guided moving meditation, symbolic themes, festive ritual, aroma therapy, energy work, mythology and story telling. We are pretty diverse and do a lot of charity fund raising. Our goal is to connect, transform and bring our audience (many times mostly women like that Moroccan film clip) into that collective joy you speak of Kathreen.
By moving from our hearts we move other hearts.
Delilah
NOTES
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_Deren
http://www.streetswing.com/histmai2/d2lameri.htm
http://www.visionarydance.com
http://www. delilahs-belly-dance-retreat.com
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Neighborhood-Temple-Priestess

Another good article!!!

The Moroccan video brought me to tears of JOY!!

So did the Bulgarian one.

I think we must expand the language of the body, and Isadora Duncan certainly did that …for the time.

We must continue to go forward, and mix it up with other cultural impulses.

I hope you continue to write such articles. They are more helpful than you know!

I work with students who are middle age with all the attendant issues of middle age and I think it the very best of therapies. Getting them to shake their breasts without giggling and embarrassment is a big plus!

Getting them to move and express with their bodies recreates an empowerment they haven’t experienced in their lives. Getting them TO CLASS is a biggie!

LOL!..

Keep writing about the Spiritual extention, Kathreen, and I will too!

Lady Nyo …who is Teela when she dances.
.-= Lady Nyo´s last blog ..Some Easy and Inexpensive Recipes…. =-.

This particular blog, with its mention of Isadora Duncan, one of my all time favorite dancers, ties in to my passionate feelings about culture, and how we can change it to suit us. Culture is ours. We make it. It does not have to be dictated to us.

Write a comment

CommentLuv badge

Powered by eShop v.6