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SALSAFIX

By TICA, Section Events

I had heard so much about Frankie Martinez’ style that to see him perform was a must. Now that I have, I will say that the man is the epitome of a performer. He loves it, he loves his audience and the audience loves him. He dances for the camera, smiles to it, calls for applause, demands a reaction… he just seems to be doing what he was born to do.

I had a chance to take this picture with him at the pre-Congress party (of course as Murphy’s law goes I had to close my eyes, but ignore me and look at him, doesn’t he look great?).

Prior to taking the picture, I kept noticing that someone created a 3-person-deep circle every time he danced. I peeked into one of the circles to see what they were all looking at. Although I had seen several pictures of Frankie before, I was still not sure if the one surrounded was him. So after one of the songs was over and the circle broke up, I stopped him and asked: “Excuse me, what is your name?” “Frankie Martinez” “ohhh... so THAT is what the circle is all about!” I said. He smiled. As far as I was concerned the conversation was over, but then to my surprise he asked: “and what is your name?” and then we exchanged a few more sentences. That little show of down-to-earth-ness right then, won me over into another Frankie Martinez’ fan. Why? Because I live in Los Angeles, where I see the Salsa ‘greats’ day in and day out at the clubs, and I can assure you that the majority of them feed off strangers’ admiration without ever showing back a hint of interest, or even basic politeness. Way to go Frankie Martinez!

 

epilepsy and other retardations...Frankified too.

Date 2002/9/11 15:56:04
Topic: SalsaGang Daily

Did what I think happened, happen?

I really don’t know what to say. Even as I sit here writing this “review” I am absolutely dumbfounded by what I saw and experienced this last weekend. Ever since the Puerto Rico Congress, I have heard nothing but amazing things about a dancer… Frankie Martinez… by public consent he walked on water, healed the ailed and fed the masses. I was unconvinced, but then again I am a cynic and a jackass, a horrible combination.


I comically coined phrases, patterns, foot work and spastic movements to ridicule and demean the elevation of a New York dancer to a near demi-god status here in the Bay Area… boy was I wrong. Yeah, yeah, yeah…I am usually wrong, in fact once, I thought I was right, but in actuality, I was wrong and so that was that. As of yet I have not been right yet but this particular faux pas was retarded even by my own standards.

Being a cynic and often thinking more of myself than I really should, I “thought” that I was safe in belittling the wave of consciousness that was Frankie-fied… Light started to dawn on me when I went down to the Mambo Conference and I was lucky enough to see great dancers like Johnny (affectionately called Jr., Frankie Jr.) and Jessica (affectionately called “dear”). I was amazed at how they accented the music with their bodies and how they continued to keep their individuality amongst the sea of dancers… here I was, a self-proclaimed salsa addict and I couldn’t accent a note or an instrument if I had too. And there they were, making the music come alive. I guess I would compare it to what a person might “see” if they could “see” music. I know, terrible analogy, but I am a jackass.

Frankie and Aisha (oh boy, don’t even get me started on Aisha) Frankie and my wife, I mean Aisha, got to town mid week in preparation for “church.” Nothing, I mean nothing could have prepared me for what would transpire… both Frankie and Aisha were tired and rightly so, the flight had really taken its toll. But even in their diminished capacity I saw stuff done that no one, I mean no one in their right mind would/should try to duplicate.

Friday was the first in a weekend full of surprises and bewilderments… I thought I was a good teacher, in fact I thought that I was a very good teacher. I was wrong. Watching Frankie teach TOTAL first timers how to dance on2 was absolute artistry… he had chemistry, style he was composed and articulate, he was funny and berating, he was engaging and humorous he was in essence the teacher I would want to be, but am not… and so much more.

They say that those who teach, can't do and those that do, can’t teach… well, Frankie and Aisha are none of the above. Frankie and Aisha performed one of their 5 routines! That is right 5. UNBELIEVEABLE, that is the only description that does the performance any justice… there are copies of the performance out there… buy a flower, lunch, dinner… whatever it takes to see it! If you have only seen it once, beg, plead, do huge favors to see it again because I guarantee you missed most of what was happening. Frankie and Aisha did things with their bodies that can only be described as “art.” Not the normal stilted formations, partner work, footwork… no annoying voice trailers, no annoying mixes of music, no followers tearing off their costumes, or fancy accoutrements to distract the audience… it was absolute magic the stuff that Disney would be gushing over!

Living in the electricity of the performance, the night was a blur. If you missed it…too bad, you missed a performance of the likes I have never seen before.

Saturday was a lesson from a master. I was suddenly transported to my Aikido studio and my Sensei (master) was instructing me in the details of a forward roll...I had this urge to get up and bow to Frankie. It has been many years since I have seen a person with such control of a class, I have never seen such charisma, not just in salsa, I am talking through 29 years of life. I have never met such a natural and competent teacher.

Sunday… Sunday was a unique experience for me. Not only was I, once again, amazed at the level of dance and teaching but I was floored at the depth of thought, knowledge and wisdom that Frankie possessed.

We have a lot of teachers and dancers in the Bay Area, some are good, some are not so good, some should take up ping pong. Frankie, well he is beyond that, kind of like, well me… I am the jackass of all jackasses… he is the ONLY teacher/dancer that dances better than he teaches and teaches better than he dances... and now if you understand that, you are a jackass.

In Oriental Philosophy, there is a concept called “returning to nothing.” Bruce Lee captured that concept in practice when he said “a punch is just a punch”… for those of you lucky enough to understand what that concept, please enlighten me… cause I don’t… regardless, it sounds good and Frankie is amazing and he quoted Bruce Lee, what else do you really need, Aisha… but that’s me… so there.

For the record, I have never met a teacher: better prepared, more crystal in delivery, confident without conceit, and have a BEAUTIFUL partner.

If you miss them, haha!!! If you were part of that group that didn’t miss them, join me… hahahaha!!! Frankie and Aisha… come back and soon!

Totally Awesome!
2lf

This article comes from SalsaGang Member Site
http://www.salsagang.com/portal



NATURAL DANCER by Maya

 

 


There are some people who are just born with natural grace and body awareness. There are some who will never acquire that poise no matter how hard they try. Most of us, however, fall into the category of regular folks who can learn to dance and perfect their style; some with more ease than others.

I used to be a doomsayer thinking you cannot learn certain things, especially in arts - either you have it or you don't. But a few people proved me wrong as I watched their progress over time. On the other hand, even talent and natural elegance are not enough.

Frankie Martinez' moves look so natural you would think he danced his way out of his mother's womb. He did not even have any professional dance training. But did you know he had 17 years experience in martial arts? That razor sharp precision in every step he takes cannot be sucked in with mother's milk. Hard work combined with creativity gave birth to that "cool cat"'s dancing style. (Not to confuse with Seon's smooth and flirty cattish style).

Frankie's moves are unique. Our Bay Area salsa junkies seem to be stuck in their attempts to come up with more and more complicated arm-twisting interchanges forgetting that a simple shoulder lift or a heel clap might be more effective. Frankie himself admits that his choreography will look funny unless it's "danced". What he means is every move, including the most basic, should be done with a proper technique - a training that he offers to the members of his dance troupe Abakua.

What distinguishes Frankie and other professional dancers from amateurs is the QUALITY of their movement, HOW it's done, rather than WHAT is done. Most salsa groups, including Eddie Torres, work only on their routines. That difference between amateur and professional dancing was particularly striking during Frankie and Aisha's performance. The routine was the same for both of them, but the audience drooled watching every step he made.

To watch him dance, you'd say it's all improvisations, chaotic and unpredictable. A lot of shines, a lot of moves reminiscent of hip-hop and other modern styles as well as his own creations. You might even wonder if it's mambo at all. But the appeal of Frankie's playfulness is based on years of rigorous training when he acquired a wide repertoire of moves and now can mix and match them at will. He is at that elusive top level of art when your solid technical foundation allows you to "fly".

Can one learn that? Theoretically, you can, and Frankie is teaching his patterns at workshops. However, he constantly reminds students about the importance of style in his moves.

Frankie Martinez is a performer, his social dancing is not partner oriented (remember, the lady is the picture and the leader is the frame?). His lead looked casual and relaxed, but in fact, was very gentle and precise - something that was common to all the visiting salsa masters I had a chance to dance with. They use no force at all; they simply guide you (in Frankie's case even just point) to the way for you to follow.

However, if we want to dance with somebody like Frankie, we better develop our own variety of shines if we don't want to look like a helpless plaything on the dance floor. It would be even better if we could respond to his playfulness in kind. (Frankie noticed our mambo aficionados taking their dancing way too seriously). Do salseros want us to develop our own creativity to compete with theirs? That's another "can of worms" I'll keep a lid on for now.

Our smooth salsa fans might not find Frankie's style very appealing. For social dancers it's a lot easier to become smooth repeating the same patterns and routines than be creative and improvise. Maybe, just maybe, if we simply relaxed and started dancing for fun listening to the music and forgetting about "mistakes" or how we might look on the floor, we might find ourselves on that euphoric "cloud 9" of improvisation. Until that happens, we will all be at awe watching Frankie's performances and thinking: he's a natural. --- Maya/Salsaloca
 

 

Frankie Martinez, Structure and Bruce Lee

Posted by bluelizard on 2002/9/26

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Success in Dancing II: Frankie M, Structure and Bruce Lee


"Before I studied the martial arts, a punch was just a punch, a kick just a kick, an act that I performed instinctually without structure or technique. After I started to study the martial arts, a punch was no longer 'just' a punch, a kick was no longer 'just' a kick. Now that I understood the martial arts, a punch is just a punch again, and a kick just like a kick."

Bruce Lee liked to start his seminars with a statement similar to the one above. He actually got it from an old Zen tenant:

“Before I studied Zen, a rock was a rock, and a tree a tree. Then I started studying Zen, I realized a rock was not a rock and a tree was not a tree. Now that I understand Zen, a rock is a rock and a tree a tree.”

When you first study the martial arts, a punch is just a punch, a kick is just a kick, a throw is just a throw. They are physical acts that you do in times of stress the limited only by the kung fu flicks you have seen. Then as you study, the martial arts begins to train you on fundamentals: weight balance, hand position, eye contact, feet placement, thrust, torque, timing, snap, alignment, stability, patterns, a seemingly endless laundry list of thoughts and checks before a punch or kick is executed properly... the minutia seems endless. Push-ups performed for failing to follow a technique correctly have exceeded all frames of accounting.

As these techniques become more and more ingrained through practice, realization dawns, all these techniques help me say… “Hey, a punch is a punch and a kick is a kick.”

It is really the same thing in anything. Take learning to write cursive. Before the forth grade, we all wrote just fine, but during the forth grade we learn to “write” in a new style, a faster, more fluid style… we begin by RE-learning the whole alphabet from “a” again… tracing already formed characters but eventually all the rules and practice distills into your “own” style.

The most valuable thing I’ve ever gotten from a salsa workshop was from Frankie Martinez’s Q and A session (by the way, don't ever miss a Q and A session from him) after a Master’s class, when he was here in San Francisco. Someone in the crowd asked him about counting, timing, clave, basic steps, dancing on the slot and structure. And why he doesn’t dance like the old school style of dancing.

Frankie, a mambo instructor for a long time and a martial arts instructor for 20 years or so, quoted Bruce Lee, the quote that I started with. And he explained further that the mambo basic step is just a basic step to put you in a structure so that you can communicate with other dancers. Eventually the basic step becomes and evolves as your OWN basic steps, meaning your body, your genetics and your own style will dictate how you do the basic.

It was an eye opener for me. FRANKIE MARTINEZ HAS SET ME FREE FROM THE CLASSICAL MESS. Now I understand why some salsa masters don’t do the basic step or even dance in the slot. Don’t get me wrong. Structure is good. It is what dancers need to build good foundations in dancing. But once salsa dancing becomes a part of your body, the foundation you’ve built evolves into something that fits you. But remember that you will never be a good dancer as you are now if it wasn’t for structure or foundation.

So let me also end with a quote:

“Take no thought of who is right or wrong or who is better than. Be not for or against. For in the landscape of spring, there is neither better nor worse? The flowering branches grow naturally. Some long, some short.” Bruce Lee