Nadine Shah
For such an acclaimed and relevant singer such as Nadine Shah to imply the show features in her work is a glowing testament to its wide appeal. The programme has had to say goodbye to a number of family favourites, none less than Bruce Forsyth and Len Goodman. To add to the poignancy of this song it is also a tribute to the memory of the singer’s mother, whom she had watched the show with over many years, but sadly passed away in August 2020.Nadine herself went into a spiral of depression during lockdown suffering from PTSD and addiction, eventually she tried to commit suicide in Easter 2022. Recovering for two months in rehab she is once again sharing her life through her music. Living naked through her music.I hadn’t realised when I started writing this, about a very specific song and singer that so many directions of travel would open up. There is a whole history of lyrics penned by artists after personal tragedy, music about dancing and words exploring the trauma of living through a pandemic.In the end I decide to stay true to the title, who is the greatest dancer? Now, I’m not going to tell you, each reader will have a different view on this, I am however gong to tease you with a few variations in the extreme. Perhaps you are a purist, ballet, the true and beautiful form of art, the world of Rudolf Nureyev and Anna Pavlova. Or the golden age of cinema starlit by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.If disco fever is more your thang, then the garish delights of Saturdays nights blazing the trails for wannabees John Travolta’s disgracing dancefloors everywhere. The outrageous Madonna pushing the boundaries of decency, unforgettable. The green shades of Irish dreams led us through the river with Michael Flatley, nothing lost in translation.Or the slick moonwalking excess of Michael Jackson, spawning look-a-likes the world over. Iconic movies Footloose, Fame but most of all Johnny Castle (below) and ‘nobody puts baby in the corner’ copied from then until eternity.Dirty Dancing
Whichever floats you boat or makes you cringe they all bring memories flooding back. I don’t really know what Nadine Shah was imagining when she wrote this song, but perhaps the looseness and ethereal nature of the music and lines allows anyone of us to interpret it the way we choose, as any good piece of art should, and remember what was special for us about our greatest dancer.To hold you in my arms is to hide the world away.All my dreams and desires combined in one special place.
Through starlight and magic realms, we sway effortlessly,
A spectacle to which even the planets take a bow,
Gliding and swooning, hypnotic rhythms beat,
Entwined as one for the briefest moment until,
I too step back in awe, of ‘The Greatest Dancer.’
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