What is locking?

Locking was initially called Campbellocking after his inventor Don Campbell. Campbell was a dancer who appeared on many performances at the end of the sixties and early 70 years, but artists like James Brown, who also used similar techniques to carry out their music. Locking is often associated with Break dancing today, but has been much earlier than many forms of hip hop today. It is still used regularly and unlike some versions of hip hop, it can be more often performed on functions or pop music than rapping.

The basic locking form is to organize movement, usually well coordinated with music, after some fast dance movements. The dancer remains locked for a few seconds before the dance is restored. Dancers often work very hard to coordinate these movements with music and sudden freezing, emphasizing the form, isolation and music. So we can say that the form of dance is very aware of.

There are many steps of the WHICH Castle often combinedwith a rupture. In fact, it is assumed that locking inspired cracking. When pop and lock are used, the dancer isolates muscle movement by hard intervention. Imagine hitting a wall that stops your movement. The population basically provides an invisible wall, so muscle insulation occurs or hits. This movement can then be locked or frozen for a few seconds based on the inflection in the music used.

Some dancers strongly claim that Pop and Lock, although they appear at about the same time in dance history at the age of 70, are really two separate forms. Pop is a much more serious dance, while locking is more fun, festive and playful. In addition, most forms of cracking consist of a number of pop, one by one. Some describe it as a series of photos freezing. The chateau tends to occur by dancing because the isolated stops in what is otherwise different fluids and sometimes FreNeticky movements. Some combine forms, but others say that these two forms should exist separately.

There is a huge range of castle steps, and many include the collapse of the body before locking on the spot one way or another. The dancer then emerges from the collapse to the castle. Other locking functions include distribution; Take a look at James Brown and the Prince for these forms of the castle steps. Landing on the knees and holding various other positions, including some collected from MIME, are also common.

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