Dancing line music sheet
This level has been moved on the levels' arrangement throughout several updates.In order to see the butterflies, you need set the game quality to Ultra.Some elements of the level, such as butterflies, grass, flowers, and a bench, use the same designs as the ones found in The Earth.At the start of the level, there is a snowman and some traces of snow, depicting the end of winter and the transition to spring.This level is the fourth level to be based off a season, the rest being The Winter, The Winter (House Remix), and The Autumn.
However, this had been fixed in later updates.When it was first added, two crowns were very close to each other.then at the end, various trees and bushes start growing, and butterflies appear. Dead trees and rocks fly up to prevent the line from crashing. The landscape in this level is quite simple. However, following the rhythm is the safest way. You don't have to follow the given path, just make your own path, for the real path is extremely wide. Due to the very wide path, it's the perfect level to practice quick tapping. The fog rises at approximately 70%, which makes the path and the line slightly harder to see. However, they can still crash into the boundary walls. The player can finish the level without following the given paths. If you share your artwork on social media, tag us at We love seeing your art!Ĭheck out other Andell Family Sundays Anytime activities on YouTube and Unframed.The Spring is one of the easiest levels in the game. John Altoon, Solo Flight on Jazz West Coast (album cover), 1957Ĭharles Gaines, Trisha Brown Dance: Set #3, 1980–1981 Is the music a slow, cool color or does it have a fiery, fast tempo? Choose a color to match what you hear-and dance across the paper!Ĭheck out these artworks from the collection for more inspiration! Get your whole body into the dance by making big marks on your paper! Press hard or soft-even use the side of your crayon for a really loud sound! Think about if you can hear a color in the sound. Just like when we drew our breath, there is no “right way” to draw what you hear. Play the music again, go over to the paper that is taped to the wall, pick up your drawing tool, and express the emotion of the sound through your line. Let’s record what we are hearing, feeling, and seeing. At the end of the song, strike a pose and freeze! What shapes does your body make? Pay attention to the loops and lines you make as you sway to the beat! Are you wiggly or robotic? Do you hear patterns in the sound? Now think of your whole body as a moving sculpture while you listen. This time, pick up your flashlight or simply use your finger to draw in the air as you dance. Can you hear loops or zigzags in the sound?
What do you hear? Is the sound fast and choppy or smooth and slow? Try to pick one instrument or voice to follow. Keeping up that same active listening, put on your music. Whatever the sound, add it to your line drawing.Īt this point, your ears are really observing lots of detail. Your lines can be long or short, fast or slow-just match the pace of your breath.īegin to notice the other sounds around you: the hum of the refrigerator, or a freeway nearby. Draw a line up as you inhale, then bring your line back down as you exhale. Now pick up your pencil and draw a line to match your breath.
Do this a few times until you feel a rhythm. Notice how the air whooshes into your nose and slowly pffffffs out as you exhale.