Saturday, August 30, 2014

Travel Steps Study Guide: Table of Contents

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Introduction

Foundation Concepts and Terminology

Time-Indexed List of Dance Vocabulary Demonstrated in Travel Steps

Reference Notes for Layered Footwork Combinations with Style Variations
             Annotation on the DVD describes the footwork in each combination.  In the choreography notation here, I’ve used bullets to denote layers on the footwork described in table headings.

Lesson Plans
              These lessons are designed for dancers who have some previous training, but include many very basic awareness exercises.  If some material isn’t useful to you, why not skip ahead? 

For continuing updates, please scroll to the bottom of this blog and look at all posts tagged "Travel Steps."

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Using Travel Steps and the Travel Steps Study Guide

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Travel Steps Study Guide 1.1: Using the Guide




 Travel Steps is part of World Dance New York’s “Movement Catalog” series of belly dance DVDs.  Unlike traditional how-to programs that include step-by-step instructions and follow-along dance segments, Movement Catalog DVDs are intended as an open-level reference demonstrating belly dance movement vocabulary.

Using Travel Steps and the Travel Steps Study Guide

Although Travel Steps runs in a DVD player as a continuous presentation, the program is a literal catalog of terms, concepts, and movements, containing hundreds of discrete entries.  Because these entries fly by, and because breakdowns and dance-along content were outside the scope of the DVD portion of this project, some dancers may wish for a slower, step-by-step reference.  I created the study guide for these users; I hope the supplemental materials presented here will help you take ownership of the Travel Steps material and incorporate it into your own practice.
The main section of this study guide is a time-indexed listing of the DVD’s contents that highlights key terminology, shows movement categories and the organizational framework of the presentation, and itemizes layering movements.  For Combinations, the listing in this guide also contains choreography notation and some additional information about learning and using the material on the DVD.  I’ve also included a short essay, “Using Footwork in Your Dance,” with some ideas about applying the material in Travel Steps, and some lesson plans to help structure independent study.  

I suggest dancers begin with the “Catalog of Steps” sections of the DVD (Layers and Timing Variations for Steps, Layers and Timing Variations for Step-Hold, and Combinations with Style Variations).  Analytical thinkers may find that following along with the content listing in the guide makes it easier to keep track of movements and layering possibilities.
Musically-sensitive dancers may see a few instances where my footfalls seem slightly off the beat.  Having been asked to develop material for the DVD in “dictionary format,” I anticipated that viewers would see a series of individual segments rather than a continuous presentation synchronized to a continuous audio track, and didn’t take care to ignore the melodic cues I heard in the music that was playing while I filmed.  The editing work is outstanding, but can’t totally make up for the fact that I danced for the camera in a stop-and-start fashion.  If you have trouble seeing the rhythm of the footfalls in any movement, I suggest muting the sound for a moment. 

For more information, or to start at the absolute beginning, read section two of the guide, Foundation Concepts and Terminology.  (While this information is also included on the DVD, a production decision was made that this section would release in “lecture format” without keywords highlighted in annotation.  As such, I believe the information is easier to follow and appreciate in print.)

For the truly detail-oriented, “Foundation Positions and Movements” are included on the DVD and indexed in the guide.   You’ll see that a production decision was made to present this section in a no-frills way.  Rather than settling down to watch this entire segment, I suggest users start with the guide’s list of moves and then consult the DVD as necessary.  




→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Organizational Methodology, Style and Nomenclature 

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↑↑    Travel Steps
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Travel Steps Study Guide 1.2: Defining and Naming Vocabulary

Organizational Methodology

Travel Steps builds literally from the ground up, describing each piece of dance vocabulary in terms of a foundation unit of either “step,” a full transfer of weight from one foot to the other, or “hold,” a count of choreography that does not transfer weight. Layers on steps and holds create a variety of movements; when linked together with sequencing, timing, and style variations, plain and layered steps and holds form combinations and choreography.

While traditional belly dance hipwork and isolations are included in this presentation, Travel Steps focuses mainly on timing variations and on articulations of the feet and legs.  For steps, I show walking and other patterns of steps in even succession, but emphasize ball-change and step-ball-change weight transfers.  I treat pivots, hops, heel lifts, knee lifts, and leg extensions as movements that happen between steps, and describe these articulations as layers on holds.  To show holds in the context of travel steps, I demonstrate each layered hold variation in a step-hold sequence.

Style and Nomenclature

Foot and leg movements are inherent to belly dance but were not historically emphasized or refined in the dance’s countries of origin, so some belly dancers may be accustomed to thinking of polished use of this vocabulary in terms of ballet, jazz, or other western forms.  Travel Steps uses three terms shared with ballet:  arabesque, attitude, and chassé.  I used these names (along with another generic term, grapevine) because they are used in common by many styles of dance, and widely understood in belly dance classes to refer to belly dance moves danced with belly dance technique; I’ve avoided other ballet terminology because I believe its use suggests that polished foot and leg technique in belly dance necessarily represents fusion.  Although precise foot and leg placement is a Western-influenced and contemporary development, I do not regard beautiful and intentional use of the feet and legs as inherently alien to a pure belly dance aesthetic or necessarily requiring cross-training.  While not appropriate or useful to every style, technique and clean lines for the whole body can be conceptualized from a belly dance perspective, developed within a belly dance training program, and proudly claimed as integrated and proper components of belly dance. 

To support precise dance, Travel Steps describes movements with precise language.  For this project I favored English-language movement names that describe skeletal placement and joint articulation, with the goal of transmitting “styleless” foundation technique, and helping dancers break down unfamiliar layered movements into identifiable components.  Travel Steps establishes and defines clear foundation terminology, and then applies that terminology with internal consistency to describe the mechanics of each movement.    Some dancers may find my language to be “plain English,” while others may see it as technical – from either viewpoint, it is not poetic.    When teaching a movement in the context of a choreography, genre, or particular dancer’s individual style, evocative language or nicknames (such as "Samia," "the butterfly," "the persnickety camel") may do a much better job of cuing a move or conveying its feeling than do my formal designations.  I encourage dancers to adapt my foundation nomenclature just as they adapt Travel Steps’ foundation technique—to suit their own style and purpose.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Attire 

←Previous:  Using Travel Steps and the Travel Steps Study Guide

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↑↑    Travel Steps
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Travel Steps Study Guide 1.3: Attire and Footwear


The Travel Steps costume worn with a long skirt.
I teach dance in tights or with bare legs to transmit as much information as possible about placement and alignment, and I designed my short skirt bedleh specifically for Travel Steps so that viewers could see my feet and legs.  While I recommend teaching and training in clothing that shows joint articulations and body lines, I don’t suggest that dancers use my teaching clothes as a model for performance costuming.  Minimalist designs that show the entire leg may be appropriate for theatrical and fusion work, but for folklore or traditional belly dance, follow the conventions of the style you are presenting, and choose costuming that is appropriately modest or daring for each context and venue.   Most traditional costumes include a floor-length skirt, although harem pants are frequently used in American cabaret, and gartered or flare pants are used in some tribal styles.  A short skirt may work in some nightclub environments; I also suggest it as a possibility for the contemporary lyrical fusion style shown in the “Combinations with Style Variations” section of Travel Steps.  [Note from Autumn, August 2014:  Much has changed in just a few short years.  Short-skirt costuming is not such a big deal anymore.]

Most dancers will find that the pivoting vocabulary in Travel Steps is much easier to dance in a soft-soled dance shoe than barefoot.  I love the look of barefoot dancing and the connection it gives me to the floor, but I’ve never been able to build up enough callouses to pivot barefoot with the same degree of ease I have in shoes.  (A wooden floor helps too.  You’ll see and hear a few very sticky pivots in Travel Steps; I was dancing on a floor designed to provide a high degree of friction and traction for modern dancers).  If I’m dancing anywhere other than a dance studio or theater stage, I also wear shoes as a basic common sense safety precaution.

I love the Fizzion shoe by Capezio (this is the shoe I’m wearing in the practice-clothing segments of Travel Steps), but many students looking for a lower-priced option will also be happy with a basic ballet slipper.  [Another note from Autumn, August 2014:  The price of the Fizzion has dropped significantly.  It's now cheaper than many ballet slippers.] For a fancier look, Miguelito makes ballet shoes in gold and silver.  [One more note from Autumn, August 2014:  Miguelito has discontinued its metallics, although some retailers still have a few in stock. I don't know of another source.  If you do, please tell me.]  In the performance-costume segments of Travel Steps, I’m wearing Dance Paws.  Half-soles and lyrical shoes like these are also a popular choice to decrease friction without covering the entire foot.  If you’re new to dance shoes, try on several styles from several manufacturers.  The construction nuances in different shoes make a big difference in the way each design feels and performs, and it’s worth shopping around to find the perfect match for the shape of your feet and how you use them against the floor.  Nearly all dance shoes have leather soles; if you’re looking specifically for a vegan shoe, there’s one available from Cynthia King. 

I rarely dance in high-heel shoes, but they’re also a costuming option.  Heels change your weight distribution and body alignment, so if you perform in heels, I suggest that you also wear them to train.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Describing Positions of the Feet and Legs 

←Previous:  Organizational Methodology and Style and Nomenclature

↑      Travel Steps Study Guide Table of Contents 
↑↑    Travel Steps
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Travel Steps Study Guide 2.1: Foundations, Feet and Legs


Foundation Concepts and Terminology: Describing Positions of the Feet and Legs

Weight Distribution and Transfer
In dance, weight means the weight of the body, and how it is distributed over the feet. When weight is equally distributed, neither foot can be lifted from the floor. By transferring weight forward or back, it becomes possible to lift the toes, or to lift the heels. By fully transferring weight left or right, one foot becomes free to lift off the floor.

Describing Unequal Weight Distribution
Weight-Bearing Foot
Standing Leg
Weighted Hip
Free Foot
Unweighted Leg
Unweighted Hip

When weight is unequally distributed between the left and right foot, movements can be described in terms of the weight-bearing foot, the standing leg (also called the supporting leg or weighted or weight-bearing leg), and the weighted hip. On the other side of the body is the free foot, unweighted leg, and unweighted hip.

Hip Rotation and Rotational Orientation of the Legs
Parallel
Turn-In
Relaxed Turnout
Engaged Turnout

Hip rotation is the action of the femur turning in the socket of the hip joint. Rotation in the unweighted hip turns the leg to a new orientation. Rotation in the weighted hip turns the body over the standing leg. When the top of the thigh bone faces front, the leg is in a parallel orientation. When it points across the body, the leg is turned in. A relaxed unweighted leg rolls naturally into a slightly turned out orientation. Muscle engagement can turn the leg further, into an engaged turn-out. Most belly dance hipwork requires a close parallel stance, but when one foot is lifted from the floor, the unweighted leg may turn in or slightly turn out. In Travel Steps, the standing leg usually has very slight turnout, to improve balance and stability. The basic orientation of the unweighted leg is slightly turned out when it is extended forward or back, and parallel when the knee is bent, or when the leg is extended to the side. Engaged turnout may be used for fusion, but is not used in traditional belly dance.

Articulation of the Ankle and Toes
Flat Weight-Bearing Foot
Lifted Heel (Weight-Bearing Foot)
Pointed Toes (Free Foot)
Flexed Free Foot (Men's Saidi Styling)

Weight on the foot depends largely on dance style and music tempo. Staying heavy on a flat foot creates grounded movement; lifting the heels gives a lighter feeling, and facilitates quick weight changes. A pointed toe extends and finishes the line of the unweighted leg. For Saidi steps, female dancers sometimes imitate men's flexed-foot styling, but Travel Steps shows Saidi in a theatricalized women's style, with a pointed toe.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Breaking Down Footwork into Steps and Holds
 
←Previous:  Attire

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Travel Steps Study Guide 2.2: Foundations, Steps and Holds


Foundation Concepts and Terminology: Breaking Down Footwork into Steps and Holds

On any count of music, the movement in the body may be described as a step, a full transfer of weight from one foot to the other, or a hold. During a hold, movement may continue in the body, but weight does not transfer.

Layering Steps with Movement
Weighted Hipwork
Upper Body Isolations
Sways

A step may be layered with weighted hip pushes, lifts, or other movements of the weighted hip, with isolations in the upper body, and with large full torso undulations, that sway to the side or back.

Layering Holds with Movement
Push
Pull
Touch
Knee-Lift
Extension
Heel-Lift
Hop
Heel Drop
Pivot
Unweighted Hipwork

During a hold, a dancer may perform weighted hipwork or upper body isolations in place, but she is also free to push the free foot out or pull it in, touch the free foot, lift the knee, or extend the unweighted leg. A weight transfer forward onto the ball of the foot or back onto the heel also allows movement of the weight-bearing foot during a hold: A heel lift floats the body up to create a level change or lifts the free foot from a touch to an extension; a hop lifts the foot entirely from the floor; a heel drop marks the beat of the music with a heavy accent. A pivot is a rotation on the ball or heel of the weight-bearing foot. In belly dance, movements of the unweighted leg, heel lifts and drops, and pivots are occasionally used alone, but are more commonly layered with one another and with unweighted hip movement, such as unweighted hip lifts, drops, twists, unweighted circling or undulating movements, or rotations of the leg in the socket of the unweighted hip joint.

Step-Hold
Step-Hip
Step-Touch
Step-Knee-Lift
Step-Extend
Step-Pivot

A step-hold is a 2-part sequence of a step, followed by a hold. Either the step or hold in a step-hold sequence may be layered with additional movement. The combinations frequently called “step-hip” are variations on step-hold, created from a touch layered with an unweighted hip movement. In addition to step-touch and step-hip, other variations include step-knee-lift, step-extend, and step-pivot. In choreography, step-hold sequences are often timed with a step on count 1, but if the body is already in position count 1 may be a hold. For instance, step-hip can be danced as hip-step, with a “hip” on count one, and a step on 2.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Steps

←Previous:  Describing Positions of the Feet and Legs

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Travel Steps Study Guide 2.3: Foundations, Single and Sequenced Steps


Foundation Concepts and Terminology: Individual Steps

A step describes a full transfer of weight from one foot to the other, in place, or moving the body to a new spot on the floor.

Step Out
Step Forward
Step Back
Step Side
Step Across Front
Step Across Back
A step out—forward, back, to the side, crossover to the front or crossover to the back--recenters the body over a new spot on the floor.

Step In | Step Together
A step in or step together brings the foot underneath the hip.

Step in Place
A step in place keeps the foot underneath the hip.

Ball-Change| Step-Ball-Change | “Cha-Cha-Cha”
A ball change is created by a step out to a new spot on the floor, quickly followed by a second step that takes the body back to the original location. A ball-change also describes a rebounding weight change, where the body is temporarily transferred to an unbalanced position. A step-ball-change (or, ball-change step) is a linked sequence of three steps that transfers weight right-left-right or left-right-left. When cuing choreography, the counts for quick step-ball-change sequences are sometimes verbalized as “cha cha cha.”

Foundation Concepts and Terminology: Steps in Even Succession

Time-Marking Steps
Time marking steps are rhythmic patterns of steps in place or combinations of steps in place, touches, holds, and ball changes.

Walk | Run
A walk or run describes a series of left-and-right alternating steps forward or steps back.

Step, Step-Together
Step, Cross-Behind
Grapevine
Push, Step Out, Pull, Step In
Belly Dance Chassé

Step-step together patterns take the body forward, back, or sideways, alternating between a step out on one foot and a step in place on the other . Using crossover steps in step-step together patterns allows the dancer to travel while maintaining a close spacing of the feet and legs. Movements like a weighted twist or undulation often travel on a step-cross behind pattern, starting with a step in place, and travelling with a crossover step to the back. The most common belly dance grapevine step is created from crossover steps and steps in place. A variation that crosses the stage more quickly combines crossover steps and steps out to the side. In belly dance, step-step together patterns that don’t use crossover steps usually push and pull the feet across the floor with sliding steps. A push sequence begins with the feet together. Slide the foot out, transfer weight, step together. A pull sequence begins with the feet apart. Slide the foot in, transfer weight, step out. A quick sequence of sliding steps creates a chassé. For continuing travel with chassé footwork, the pattern of the feet is: step out, step together, step out.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study GuideTurns 

←Previous: Breaking Down Footwork into Steps and Holds

↑      Travel Steps Study Guide Table of Contents 
↑↑    Travel Steps
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Travel Steps Study Guide 2.4: Foundations, Turns


Foundation Concepts and Terminology: Belly Dance Turn Technique

Flowing Out in Turns
Unlike Western dance forms, which often emphasize pulling in and up to turn, belly dance turns flow out, with a horizontal or grounded feeling. Belly dancers often turn with a shift, tilt, bend, or twist in the body, drawing spirals or multiple circles in the air. Layers on turns add still more circles upon circles through movements like hip circles, reaching arms, head rolls, or veil work. Turns in belly dance are usually initiated from a movement in the hips, solar plexus, or shoulders. The most common exceptions are cross-pivot turns, led by a pull from the free foot and the hopping pivot of Saidi dance, led by the unweighted leg .

Countertwist Technique
In the same way that belly dance uses torso movements to initiate turns, counter-twisting movements of the hips or upper body are sometimes used in belly dance to stop rotation, creating a feeling of unfurling energy and then snapping it back in. Countertwists punctuate the phrasing of combinations, creating both a visual and emotional accent in the flow of the dance. On a practical level, a countertwist allows the dancer to complete a turn with one foot lifted from the floor.

Placement on the Foot
Most belly dance turns pivot on the ball of the foot with the heel relatively close to the floor, but high heel lifts may be used. The cross-pivot turn rotates on both the ball and heel of the foot. Alternating toe-heel pivots create a gliding movement sometimes used in fusion. Heel pivots may be found under movements that shift body weight back, like hip circles or undulations. Some belly dancers also use heel pivots in turn technique borrowed from Indian dance.

Defining the Direction of Rotation
Inside and Outside
Open and Close

In Western dance forms, the naming convention for the direction of a turn reflects movements that are defined in terms of a working leg and a standing leg and the technique of initiating a turn by pulling in and up. “Inside” and “outside” turns are named relative to the side of the body of the working leg. An “inside” turn rotates toward the standing leg, and an “outside” turn rotates away from the standing leg. In belly dance, however, the “working” part of the body is usually the torso, and most turns originate with a movement of the hip or shoulder on the same side of the body as the weight bearing leg, so “inside” and “outside” feel opposite from the way they are named in Western dance. For instance, a pivot on the right foot might flow from a push of the right hip, or from an outside swing of the right arm. From a pure belly dance perspective, an “inside” rotation turns the working side of the body toward the unweighted leg, and an “outside” rotation turns the working side of the body away from the unweighted leg.

In Travel Steps, turns are named as movements that open or close, relative to the shoulder or to the hip over the weight-bearing leg, and relative to the energetic feeling in the belly, solar plexus, or heart . A pivot “open” is a clockwise pivot on the right foot or a counterclockwise pivot on the left foot, and follows a movement that opens the front of the body. A pivot to “close” rotates counterclockwise on the right foot or clockwise on the left, and follows a movement that closes the front of the body.

Movement Breakdown for Turns
In Travel Steps, pivots and steps are always treated as discrete components in movement breakdowns. Pivots happen between steps: weight is transferred to one foot in a step, a pivot moves the free foot over a new location on the floor, and then weight is transferred in another step. In step-pivot combinations, a pivot often takes a full count. Count “1” for the step, “2” for the pivot. Steps and pivots flow together in faster turns and turns across the floor, but the breakdown is the same. Step on the count, pivot between steps.

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Time-Indexed List of Dance Vocabulary Demonstrated in Travel Steps -Foundation Positions and Movements

←Previous: Steps 


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Travel Steps Study Guide 3.1: Time-Indexed Demonstrations, Foundations



Movement Vocabulary:  Foundation Positions and Movements

Movements on the Weight-Bearing Foot

52:37
Heel Lift
52:43
Heel Lift-Drop
52:49
Heel Drop
52:53
Hop
53:00
Pivot Variations


Basic Pivot Open (from the Solar Plexus)


Pivot Open Led from the Arm


Pivot Open Led from the Shoulder Blade


Pivot Open Led from Hip to the Side


Pivot Open Led from a Hip Circle


Basic Pivot to Close (from the Solar Plexus)


Pivot to Close Led from the Arm


Pivot to Close Led from a Hip Twist Forward

Positions and Movements of the Free Foot and Unweighted Leg

53:53
Touch Under the Body


Basic Touch Under the Body (Parallel)


Touch Under the Body with Turned-In Leg


Touch Under the Body with Turned-Out Leg
54:04
Knee-Lift


Basic


Knee-Lift with Turned-In Leg
54:15
Front:  Push Out, Straight-Leg Touch, Extend, Pull In


Basic Push Out Front and Pull In (with Hip Rotation)



From Parallel, Push Out and Turn Out; Pull In and Rotate Back In to Parallel


Basic Straight-Leg Touch Front (Turned-Out)


Basic Extension Front (Turned-Out)


Push Out Front and Pull In, Parallel Variation


Straight-Leg Touch Front, Parallel Variation


Extension Front Parallel Variation
54:43
Bent-Knee Touches and Front Attitudes


Basic Bent-Knee Touch Front


Parallel Attitude Front


Bent-Knee Touch Front, Turned-In Variation


Bent-Knee Touch Front, Turned-Out Variation


Turned-Out Attitude Front



For Saidi and Other Folklore
54:59
Side:  Push Out, Touch, Extend, Pull In


Basic Push Out and Pull In (Parallel)


Basic Touch Side (Parallel)


Basic Extension Side (Parallel)


Push Out Side and Pull In, Hip Rotation Variation



From Parallel, Push Out and Turn Out; Pull in and Rotate Back In to Parallel


Touch Side, Turned-Out Variation


Extension Side, Turned-Out Variation
55:25
Back:  Push Out, Touch, Extend, Knee-Bend, Pull In


Basic Push Out Back and Pull In (with Hip Rotation)


From Parallel, Push Out and Turn Out; Pull In and Rotate Back In to Parallel


Arabesque Touch (Turned Out)


Arabesque Extension (Turned Out)


Arabesque Attitude Touch (Turned Out)


Arabesque Attitude Extension (Turned Out)


Push Out Back and Pull In, Parallel Variation


Touch Back (Parallel)


Extension Back (Parallel)


Basic Bent-Knee Position (Parallel)


Bent-Knee Position, Turned-In Variation
56:02
Hipwork-Driven Touches and Extensions Front


Double Drop



From a Bent-Knee Touch Front to a Straight-Leg Touch Front


Hip Pull Back



From a Bent-Knee Touch Front to an Extension Front (Parallel Variation)


Hip Push-Twist: 



From a Basic Touch Under the Body with an Open Hip to an Extension Front


Lumbar Contract-Release with Straight Leg



Between a Straight-Leg Touch Front and an Extension Front


Lumbar Contract-Release with Bent Leg in Front of the Body



Between a Bent-Leg Touch Front and a Parallel Attitude Front
56:44
Hipwork-Driven Extensions Side


Full Shift Side



From a Touch Under the Body to a Side Extension


Weighted Hip Drop



From a Touch Under the Body to a Side Extension
56:56
Hipwork-Driven Touches and Extensions Back


Hip Forward



From a Basic Touch Under the Body to an Extension Back with an Open Hip


Lumbar Contract-Release with Bent Leg Behind the Body



Between a Basic Bent Knee Position and a Touch Back

Leg Sweeps and Circles

57:19
Sweep to the inside


From Arabesque Touch, Sweep around to Straight-Leg Touch Front



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation


From Arabesque Touch (Turned-Out), Sweep around with Hip Rotation to Touch Side (Parallel)



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation


From Touch Side (Parallel), Sweep around with Hip Rotation to Touch Front (Turned-Out)



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation
57:59
Sweep to the outside


From Straight-Leg Touch Front, Sweep around to Arabesque Touch



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation


From Straight-Leg Touch Front (Turned-Out), Sweep around with Hip Rotation to Touch Side (Parallel)



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation


From Touch Side (Parallel), Sweep around with Hip Rotation to Arabesque Touch (Turned-Out)



Basic



Heel Lift-Drop Variation



Forward-and-Back and Side-to-Side Leg Movements
58:58
Sagittal Circles


Knee Lift, Extend Forward, Pull In


Knee Lift, Extend Forward, Pull In (Parallel Variation)


Knee-Bend, Extend Forward, Pull In


Knee-Bend, Extend Forward, Pull In (Parallel Variation)
59:26  
Undulating 8

Hip Rotation to Pivot the Body Toward or Away From an Extended Leg

59:42
Pivot Open


From Extension Front, Pivot Open to Arabesque Extension


From Extension Front, Pivot Open to Extension Side


From Extension Side, Pivot Open to Arabesque Extension
1:00:15
Pivot to close


From Arabesque Extension, Pivot to Close into Straight-Leg Touch Front


From Arabesque Extension, Pivot to Close into Extension Side


From Extension Side, Pivot to Close into Straight-Leg Touch Front

Torso Isolation Layers for Holds

1:00:50
Basic Unweighted Hipwork


Unweighted Lift Forward


Unweighted Twist Forward


Unweighted Lift Side


Unweighted Twist Side


Knee-Lift with Twist Front-Back


Knee-Lift with Twist Front-Back, Extension Front
1:01:05
Upper Body Accent and Countertwist Layers for Holds


Reverse Undulation Accent


Spiraled Reverse Undulation Accent


Upper Body Countertwist


Upper Body Countertwist with Spiraled Reverse Undulation Accent

Turns

1:01:55
Cross-Pivot


Step Across Front


Step Across Back
1:02:16
Push-Pivot


Basic


With Opposition Hip Circle
1:02:23
Turns Across the Floor


Turn Open:  Travelling Turns


Turn To Close:  Travelling Turns


Turn Open:  3-Count Turn and Touch on “4”


Turn to Close:  Travel in a Curving Path

→ Next in the Travel Steps Study Guide: Time-Indexed List of Dance Vocabulary Demonstrated in Travel Steps -Layers and Timing Variations for Steps

←Previous: Turns 

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