Eurythmics

I discovered last night while reading the Jacques Barzun book that eurythmics is not just the name of an 80’s band. It’s also something REALLY cool:

Eurythmics – harmonious bodily movement, especially as expressed according to the system of �mile Jaques-Dalcroze, who developed eurythmics (1903) at the Geneva Conservatory of Music in an effort to overcome the rhythmic difficulties of his students. His aim was to bring the body under control of the mind through a system of gymnastics correlated with music. First, an unconscious technique of bodily response to the rhythm of music is developed, with the student eventually able to improvise an interpretation, through gesture language, of an entire composition. The system has influenced not only musical instruction but also the ballet and even fields outside of musical study. The first demonstrations of it were given in 1905, and the first Jaques-Dalcroze Institute in the United States was established ten years later. For a history of the Dalcroze method of eurythmics, see Nicolas Slonimsky, Music since 1900 (4th ed., 1971). See Elsa Findlay, Rhythm and Movement: Applications of Dalcroze Eurhythmics (1971).

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