Can You Learn to Dance From Dvds?

by Dance Diva on May 15, 2011

Many great and famous dancers and choreographers have released a video or DVD teaching their moves and routines. Are videos and DVDs the best way of learning to ?

Well 1 thing's for sure, many people are grateful for such videos because there aren't a lot of opportunities to learn to where they are. Imagine living in a small rural village and wanting to learn break dancing or urban moves. Next to impossible!

These DVDs/ videos make these moves accessible to people who would otherwise only have the chance to learn them if they moved out of their hometown. This is why sites such as YouTube are so great! The difference of course is that the tutorials on YouTube are usually short whereas a DVD will usually cover quite a bit of ground.

DVDs are also great because once you have it, you have it. You can watch it over and over again as you have the teacher in your home. All you have to do is practise the moves! And we all know that practise makes perfect.

DVDs and videos also are great value for money, you pay once and you can take the class over and over again. For people who are really pushed for money, they can make a great investment. It is possible to get a great DVD with a great choreographer or teacher who would be hard to get hold of in real life.

The thing to remember with DVDs is that they can never replace a real-life, real world training. It's just one lesson. A DVD cannot cover everything or provide the ongoing training needed to become a better dancer. A great hip-hop dancer for example has most likely taken hundreds of classes.

The big difference really is in the ongoing training. If you are looking into buying a DVD, it's probably good to buy a DVD that teaches the techniques and basics and not just routines. A routine is good to have on a DVD, but it's better if it's combined with lots of break-downs of techniques. Certain basics which you can practise and get better with time.

Also don't go easy on yourself just because you're learning from a DVD. Don't say, "I'll watch 20 minutes now, then I'll watch some TV then maybe watch another 15 minutes of the DVD." Actually participate and take the class in the DVD like you would in real life. Practise slow then at full tempo with the music, don't just practise really slowly.

If you do buy a DVD the most important thing is to actually do the exercises and routines being taught in the videos! If you just watch it, you won't get much benefit apart from becoming more knowledgeable. You probably want to actually be able to do the moves in the videos, not just be knowledgeable about them.

If you really want to learn a certain style of or you find a great choreographer or dancer you want to learn from then by all means buy their video. But where possible, also try and attend real-life classes and workshops when you can and you'll find that you'll be making even faster progress.

writes for , a portal and directory that answers many of dancers most pressing questions and features the latest news in the world of .


Gel Man writes for Dance Gel, a portal and directory that answers many of dancers most pressing questions and features the latest news in the world of .


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