UMM P.E???

Cards (30)

  • POPPING
    was popularized by samuel
    boogaloo sam solomon and his
    crew the eclectric boogaloos
    it is technique of quickly
    contracting and relaxing
    muscles to cause a jerk in
    dancer's body.
  • B-BOYING alsocalled breakdancing. first hip-hop dance stylethat originated amongblack and puerto ricanyouth in new york cityduring the early 1970's.
  • LOCKING was created by Don Campbellock
    Campbel in 1969 in Los Angeles,
    California. It is usually performed
    by stopping the fast movement
    that you are doing,locking your
    body into a position, holding it
    and then continuing at the same
    speed as before.
  • KRUMPING is a form of dancing that
    originated in the African-
    American community of South
    Central Los Angeles California.
    Relatively form of "Urban"
    Black dance movement.
    is a dance style to release
    anger.
  • TUTTING it is creative way in making
    geometric shapes forming
    right angle using your body
    part
    It is derived from the positions
    people were drawn in during
    the days of the Ancient
    Egyptians.
  • SHUFFLING - The Melbourne Shuffle is a
    rave and club dance that
    originated in the late 1980's.
    People who dance the shuffle
    are often referred to as
    rockers, due in part to the
    popularity of shuffling in the
    early 1990's.
  • WAACKING is an African
    American form of street dance
    originating from 1970's disco
    era
    It consists of stylized posing
    and fast synchronized arm
    movements to the beat of the
    music.
  • Battle is a freestyle where dancers 'fight'
    against each other on the dance floor without
    contact.
    They form a circle and take turns trying to
    show each other up by using either a better
    style, more complex combinations, or harder
    moves.
  • Liquid Dancing a form of gestural dance that sometimes
    involves pantomime
    invokes the word liquid to describe the fluid-
    like motion of the dancers' body and limbs
    primarily the dancers' arms and hands which
    are the focus, though more advanced
    dancers work in a full range of body
    movements
    -similar to the styles of popping or locking.
  • Boogalo a fluid style, that uses every part of
    the body and involves using angles
    and smooth movements to make
    everything flow together
    it often uses rolling of the hips,
    knees, and the head and is often
    used as a transition
  • Ragga a dance style originating (in the late 70's)
    from street dance by Afrojamaïcans,
    Afrocarabians, which uses music which
    evolved from classical Reggae with a hip
    hop influence
    the style used is a combination between
    hip hop moves, afro moves with latin
    influences with sensuality
  • Ragga it requires very good physical condition,
    as many muscles are involved in the
    Raggajam, particularly in the lower part
    of the body
    correct execution requires good
    technique.
  • House Dance House is a group of dance styles primarily
    danced to house music that have roots in the
    clubs of Chicago in the late 70's and early 80's
    -the main styles include Footwork, Jacking and
    Lofting. Like hip hop dance it was created by
    black and latino Americans and is often
    improvisational in nature
  • Lyrical hip-hop is a fluid and more interpretive
    version of new style hip-hop most often
    danced to downtempo rap music or R&B
    music
    Lyrical is "hip-hop with emotion"
    it focuses more on choreography and
    performance and less on freestyles and battles
  • Stepping or step-dancing is a form of percussive
    dance in which the participant's entire body is
    used as an instrument to produce complex
    rhythms and sounds through a mixture of
    footsteps, spoken word, and hand claps
    though stepping may be performed by an
    individual, it is generally performed by groups of
    three or more, often in arrangements that
    resemble military formations
  • Free Running is a form of urban
    acrobatics in which participants, known as free
    runners, use the city and rural landscape to perform
    movements through its structures
    It incorporates efficient movements from parkour, adds
    aesthetic vaults and other acrobatics, such as tricking
    and street stunts, creating an athletic and aesthetically
    pleasing way of moving.
    It is commonly practiced at gymnasiums and in urban
    areas (such as cities or towns) that are cluttered with
    obstacles
  • Punking This style came in 1970s from the West coast,
    directly Los Angeles, where it was developed
    in clubs and underground scene
    Punking was first spotted in gay clubs in
    Hollywood
    Dancers began to represent it on television
    and it became well-known thanks to Soul Train
    Punking then became a part of many shows
    from Hollywood to Las Vegas
  • Voguing It was originally called "presentation" and later
    "performance".
    Over the years, the dance evolved into the more
    intricate and illusory form that is now called
    "vogue."
    Voguing is continually developed further as an
    established dance form that is practiced in the
    gay ballroom scene and clubs in major cities
    throughout the United States-mainly New York
    City, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Philadelphia,
    Washington D.C., Miami, Detroit, and Chicago
  • Librettist
    A person who writes the text of an opera or other long vocal work
  • Composer
    A person who writes music, especially as a professional occupation
  • Conductor
    A person who directs the performance of an orchestra or choir
  • Dancers
    A person who dances
  • Soloist
    A singer or other musician who performs a solo
  • Chorister
    A member of a choir, especially a child or young person singing the treble part in a church choir
  • Instrumentalists
    A player of a musical instrument
  • Choreographer
    A person who composes the sequence of steps and moves for a performance of dance
  • Stage Director
    An instructor in the theatre field who oversees and orchestrates the mounting of a theatre production
  • Lighting Designers
    Creates a lighting design that will properly showcase the performers and the setting, varying the design throughout the production to meet the action on stage
  • Set Designer
    A person who designs all the scenery, furniture and props the audience sees at a production of a play
  • Costume Designer
    A costume designer is a person who designs costumes for a film, stage production or television. The role of the costume designer is to create the characters' costumes