Merengue: The Dance
~ from “Teaching & Salsa” by Loo Yeo |
The merengue is an extremely accessible dance, mainly because
the level of co-ordination between legs and arms is less crucial
to beginner dancers than, for example, in salsa. This fact is
greatly responsible for the rapid uptake of the merengue as a
dance worldwide. People can, with little or no instruction, merengue
straight away. Ladies in particular can learn to dance it very
quickly, so long as they receive a good lead. In many places,
instructors tend to teach off the merengue into salsa by introducing
the arm work in the merengue and fitting the footwork later in
salsa. This is a little unfair to the merengue, since learning
dancers tend perceive the merengue as a poor person's salsa, instead
of being a rich dance form in its own right.
History of the dance
Observing couples dance the merengue tells us two things; the
partnership hold originates from the Western Europe and the hip
action belies its African roots. Apart from that inference there
is little specific information currently available about the origin
of the merengue. A couple's bodies can vary from being pressed
together where only simple steps are performed, or with bodies
further apart to allow for turn combinations. Legend has it that
the Dominicans tend to dance further apart because they like to
show off their fancy footwork, whilst those from other Latin countries
tend to dance closer together. What is evident is that the turn
combinations found in the merengue bear similarity to that found
in other partnership dances. Arguments go on well into the night
about whether the moves were borrowed from other dances or if
the other dances borrowed moves from the merengue. It's probably
safer to assume a case of parallel development; since the human
anatomy allows the body to adopt only a limited number conformations
(safely), and it doesn't take long to explore most of them.
Basic Structure
The basic merengue is danced as a walk, a step being taken with
each leg in alternation on every beat. The amount of hip action
varies according to personal preference. It is considered an asymmetrical
dance because, in the basic walk, the same leg is used at the
beginning of each new bar of music. Although many turn combinations
can be executed with both partners performing the simple walk,
some moves allow the hips to synchronize better if one of the
partners performs a null weight change by tapping the foot on
the floor instead of stepping onto it. Synchronizing hips is normally
the responsibility of the partner leading the dance, because it
is easier for the lead to do it than to get the follower to do
so. Becoming proficient at synchronizing hips (and therefore feet)
confers and added advantage; that more turn combinations are available
in merengue than in salsa, as a result of being able to alter
the co-ordination between the arms, legs and transfer of weight
at any time during the dance.
Interpretation
Dancing the merengue to time is easy because the beats are usually
obvious, but the timing aspect of merengue is kept simple for
a reason. It's because the merengue is more than just about stepping
on the beats. It's about dancers expressing themselves to music,
and the merengue's flexibility is supposed to encourage just that.
What happens between the beats of the music is just as important.
The tambora roll and the corresponding saxophone/accordion “roll”
(from Merengue: the music) form an important part of the rhythm
structure, serving to lift the dancers' feet before grounding
them on beats one and three (called the downbeats). They are responsible
for the two alternating pulses that can be felt in the music.
The real trick is dancing in a manner that reflects the rhythm
structure, the music pulses and the way the melody weaves through
it.
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