Beach Volleyball is an Olympic Sport; How about Dancesport?

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 04:  Kristyna Kolocova of Czech Republic and Marketa Slukova of Czech Republic celebrate during the Women's Beach Volleyball Round of 16 match between Brazil and Czech Republic on Day 8 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at Horse Guards Parade on August 4, 2012 in London, England.  (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

For some years there has been a lot of talk and some action regarding adding high-level Standard (AKA Ballroom) and Latin dancing to the Olympic offerings. For those who might sneer that dancing is not very strenuous, we suggest attending a competition and listening to the couples panting after a 2-3 minute routine.

A greater challenge is that there is already a great sufficiency of different sports included in the quadrennial Olympic Games, with vastly different audience preferences among them. Prior to the Games themselves, the International Olympic Committee reckoned that half the world would watch (in large measure via TV or on-line).

Unfortunately, it is difficult to get comparable worldwide “ratings”. Actually, it’s always been a mystery to us why they are called ratings, which implies that higher ratings means they are “better” in some sense beyond just the fact that watchers tuned their TVs to those particular programs.

Fortunately, however, there is an irreverent website fivethirtyeight.com that focuses on opinion poll analysis, politics, economics, and sports blogging. The website, which takes its name from the number of electors in the U.S. electoral college, surveyed 57,448 people during August 3-4 (no description of who was surveyed, perhaps just visitors to the website) as to their opinion of the best Olympic sport. The whole account is humorous, but the most interesting finding to us was that Beach Volleyball was #1. Hmmm. We suspect that this relative newcomer of a sport owes much of its popularity to its participants, who are very attractive women in very skimpy outfits. On this basis, we would think that at least the Latin half of the Dancesport events would be highly popular because their outfits can be as revealing as the women’s Beach Volleyball ones. No?

Does “In The Mood” Put You OUT of the Mood?

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The experts on musical taste formation say that our tastes are mostly formed during our 14-24 age range. For example, a 60-year-old today would relate to music popular during 1970-1980 and an 80-year-old today would relate to music from 1950-1960. Someone born after the heyday of swing (the Benny Goodman, Glen Miller, et al era), could logically say “‘In the Mood’ puts me out of the mood”. MAYBE folks who have been dancing a long time would relate to music from the time they started dancing (especially if they took a lot of lessons at that time).

Disco Balls Survived Longer Than the Hustle Dance

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Louisville, KY recently had a big party to celebrate its newest monument, an 11-foot diameter, 2,300-pound disco ball, to commemorate the city’s longtime role as the capital of American disco-ball manufacturing.

The heyday of disco-balls was during the 1970’s, when disco dancing was so popular. The signature dance at the time was the hustle, a sort of swing with several variations that takes some skill to make it look and feel good, but the music’s strong beat often also brings lots of unskilled “freestyle” folks onto the dance floor. For Wilddancer, it was difficult to learn the dance figures just by watching, because of their strangely syncopated steps in comparison to the more common and intuitive east coast swing or west coast swing dances.

Disco’s popularity was also helped by the Saturday Night Fever movie starring John Travolta (with his white suit and signature pose), with the Bee Gees’ “Staying Alive” song. And it also got a boost from the funny send-up of “Staying Alive” from the movie Airplane!

The disco feeling and faster tempo of that song are much better matches to the figures of the hustle than those of “The Hustle” that is often played today by disk jockeys unfamiliar with the dance.

Lindy Hop Dancer Frankie Manning Would Have Been 102 on May 26, 2016

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Frankie Manning didn’t invent the “Lindy Hop”, but he was instrumental in making it popular. The Lindy Hop was a “street dance”, i.e., something invented by the dancers themselves, rather than more elite dancing instructors. (In that respect it shares with the sophisticated Argentine Tango, which grew out from its origins in brothels.) It was being developed at the Savoy ballroom in Harlem (a black ghetto in New York City), and got named the Lindy Hop by one of the dancers there (Georges “Shorty” Snowden) when he was asked by a journalist what its name was, who groped for an answer and found it in the headlines about Charles Lindbergh’s flight across the Atlantic. Lindy went national and became higher class (and its name was changed to Jitterbug), particularly with Benny Goodman and big band swing starting in 1936. Frankie Manning wandered by the Savoy in 1929, and soon became a passionate Lindy dancer and the ambassador for it … to the extent that he was worshipped around the world for his artistry. Frankie’s favorite song was Count Basie’s “Shiny Stockings”, which seems slow to Wilddancer for Lindy Hop, but you can see hundreds of folks doing it in a tribute video made on his 88th birthday. We at Wilddancer had been dancing for 10+ years when we saw a swing dancer do a back flip onto his hands, and back onto his feet during a “For Dancers Only” program at Stanford University on April 14, 2000 by Wynton Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. It must have been Frankie Manning, who would have been “only 86” at the time. And he was 89 when he astonished a crowd in Sweden.

The Gresham’s Law of Social Couples Dancing Today

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Gresham’s law is an economic principle that is commonly stated as: “Bad money drives out good”. But this principle has much broader applicability. For example, to social couples dancing.

Human beings have a long history of dancing in some form, be it as individuals, couples, or groups. The first couples dance Wilddancer recognizes that is still being taught and done today in most western countries is the Mazurka, which started in the 1500’s. The first Waltz (the Volta) dates back to 1556, with many variations since then. The Ländler arrived in the Austrian countryside about 1690, then moved to Vienna and a variation became the Viennese Waltz. After these came (in historical order) the couples dances Bolero, Paso Doble, Polka, Merengue, Habanara and Milonga (now Tango), Foxtrot, Rumba, Samba, Lindy Hop (later called Jitterbug), Cha Cha, Mambo, East Coast Swing, Jive, West Coast Swing, Texas Two-Step, Hustle, and Nightclub Two Step.

People who have danced for many years will tell you that the Twist killed touch dancing. If so, the “Freestyle” that people have done for the last few decades (essentially waving your butt while shifting your feet a bit) has danced on its grave. Its two main virtues are that it does not take any training and it doesn’t take much space on a dance floor (assuming that the dancers are not too drunk). But it really isn’t a guy-gal couples dance, as one sees a lot of gal-gal couples (either the guys are in short supply or have two left feet). But the net result is that the unskilled dancers are monopolizing the dance floor and displacing the skilled ones, ergo Gresham’s Law of Social Couples Dancing.

Even worse, according to an essay entitled Dancing Properly by noted British philosopher Roger Scruton, Freestyle removes the sociability of the physical contact, and perpetuates the bad manners so rampant in current times.

Top Ten Car Tunes for Social Dancing

car tunes composite 600x450Some of the best songs written about cars are among the best ones for dancing, too. Wilddancer often gets asked by dancers (who’ve had some lessons, so they know the difference between an east coast and a west coast swing, for example) to recommend songs for bands or DJs to play for dancing. Here is our personal list, which fortunately includes seven different dance steps:
1. Cuda Janet (Plymouth Barracuda) by Wild Bill Coggshall (2014) – West Coast Swing
2. Pink Cadillac (Cadillac) by Bruce Springsteen (1984) – Hustle
3. Little GTO (Pontiac GTO) by Ronny and the Daytonas (1964) – East Coast Swing
4. One Piece at a Time (Cadillac) by Johnny Cash (1976) – Country 2-Step
5. Hot Rod Lincoln (Lincoln) by Commander Cody et al (1972) – 10-Step (this is a kind of polka that’s simple but fast; you can see it on YouTube
6. Mustang Sally (Ford Mustang) by Wilson Pickett (1966) – West Coast Swing
7. Little Deuce Coupe (1932 Ford) by Beach Boys (1963) – East Coast Swing
8. Little Red Corvette (Chevrolet Corvette) by Prince (1983) – Cha Cha
9. Jaguar and Thunderbird (Jaguar & Ford Thunderbird) by Chuck Berry – Country 2-Step
10. In My Merry Oldsmobile (Oldsmobile) by Bing Crosby – Viennese Waltz

Bill Nye, The Science Guy, … and Swing Dancer

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According to the Wall Street Journal, Bill Nye’s favorite pastime is swing dancing. And he understands it as well as he understands the science that has made him a celebrity, because he knows that the women he dances with are all better dancers than he is (as noted in the Wilddancer “For Men Only” subpage). And he shares with Wilddancer a degree in mechanical engineering from Cornell University.

Ballroom Dancing Is the Success Key for BeyondCore Founder and CEO

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There are lots of routes to success in Silicon Valley. Data Visualization Company founder and CEO Arijit Sengupta took one that might be considered highly unusual … unless you knew how extensive the social couples dancing offerings were at his alma mater. (In fact, a key reason that the Clintons’ daughter Chelsea chose Stanford University was because of its extensive dance offerings. And the dedication and major contributions of of Richard Powers have kept Stanford famous for its dancing.) But what is interesting about Arijit Sengupta is that he has woven dance-inspired ideas—e.g., a “floating floor” for his office or favorite songs for his smartphone’s ringtones—into his business life, as chronicled in Fast Company. His only regret: he doesn’t have enough time to dance anymore because his company is so successful that he is in great demand to lead it and to speak on behalf on the Big Data industry.

Mountain Winery Names Featured Beverage Wilddancer

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From the Saratoga, CA-based Mountain Winery you can see the whole South Bay. We couldn’t resist attending their April 18 Country Roadhouse event, because it featured a proven country-western band called WANTED) But when marketing director Katelyn Studebaker found out what Wilddancer does, she immediately named their featured whiskey sour after us. And she had the dance floor well set up, with a lane around the outside for the dances that moved (mostly two-step and cowboy cha cha on April 18) and the center for swing and other dances that don’t move.

Chinese Youngsters Complain Oldsters’ Dance Music is too Loud!

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Chinese people love social couples dancing. They do it, along with numerous other fitness activities (tai chi, karate, hacky sack (yup!), …), in parks, usually early in the morning. Wilddancer has joined them in Shanghai and Beijing. We deemed ourselves too young to particpate in the “Seniles Disco” in Shanghai (lost in translation), but joined a group who had music that matched what we often danced to. And we had to dance with everyone in the group, essentially none of whom had ever taken lessons in western-style ballroom or latin dances. In Beijing it was on National Day, and our west coast swing made all our new friends watch (and applaud).