Point-light displays of recorded movement data from feet and upper backs are introduced in the light tubes. The dancers are at first dancing in silence to the lights, then followed by my sparse fiddle playing.
When playing for dance, I have a strong visual focus on the dancers. In couple dances such as polska, the rotation is a complex phenomenon; it is possible to find articulations of the beat in different body movements. When playing for dance, I actively choose between strategies in my observation: focus on specific body parts to connect timing to one particular dance movement or adopt a more peripheral gaze, for example, over an entire dance floor. In all instances, the intention of these strategies is to activate a ‘listening’ to the dancers — to sense their movements kinaesthetically and interpret these sensations musically in my playing. Playing sparsely is a strategy for creating space for the dancers’ interpretation to take the lead, to focus the attention on the dancers’ phrasing.
The speed of the dancers’ feet is mapped to noise-based, wind-like, non-tonal sounds.
In the first experiments with dancers and sonified dance, it became apparent to me how much the dancers already make sounds: the treading, stomping, rustling of clothes, breathing etc. Still — many movements are in relative silence or are impossible to hear when playing. Sonified dance creates new conditions with the dancing body as a sounding instrument of music. Among many possible approaches to sonifying dance, the sounds are here created from pre-recorded movements. Auslander (2008) describes various hybrids of ‘liveness’ in contemporary media and popular music performances. Folk music and dance generally have a high degree of liveness — with simultaneous, often acoustic, performances sharing a physical space and moment in time. This performance introduces a hybrid of mediated, pre-recorded dance with live dance and music. With this comes a challenge for performers to refer to the mediated pre-recorded material in our close and immediate interaction.