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Although good, workable systems have been around for centuries, the use of dance notation has never been an integral part of dance study and practice, as musical notation is in the study of music. Writing a dance score inevitably takes time, as does writing a book or a symphony; the time spent learning to read and write notation was often seen as wasted. Until the development in the 1960s of the simple Motif Notation (related to labanotation) and its application in the Language of Dance teaching method, in which the basic movement “building blocks” are explored, notation was not included in a child’s introduction to movement; dance was still taught solely by imitation. The study of labanotation includes an investigation into movement that not only enriches a dancer’s understanding of movement but also provides dance students with access to the scores of significant works of the past.

The advent of film and particularly in the 1970s of video recording overshadowed notation. Video has immediate appeal to dancers because it requires no lengthy study. Through experience, however, members of the dance world have come to recognize its limitations. The image is often not clear, and costumes or other dancers often block the view. A video is a record of a particular performance in which the dancers may have made mistakes (which is frequently the case); the viewer is unable to recognize the difference between the dance performance and the dance itself. Learning from video too often results in the personal mannerisms or mistakes of one dancer being picked up and exaggerated by another, which thus distorts the choreography. In contrast, the notated score is a record of the work itself in the same way that a musical score represents the work, not an individual’s performance of that work. In a score all aspects of choreographic detail—use of stage space, the relationship of performers to each other and to the music, and the choreographer’s development of movement themes—can be easily studied.

Although its use in the dance field has spread more slowly than many dance historians anticipated, notation remains an essential tool. In addition to accurately recording a working choreographer’s movement concepts, it uniquely enables the faithful preservation of past works—a major concern in the dance world. In music, scores from centuries past have preserved classic works, which modern composers may wish to modify, rearrange, or parody without loss of the originals. In dance, reliance on memory has resulted in an accumulative distortion of the originals. Without notation, unintentional changes soon become the known version, and the viewing public has no idea of the loss of authenticity.

Ann Hutchinson Guest