What is Ballroom Dancing
With A Difference?
(aka:
Round Dancing)
While "Ballroom Dancing With A Difference"
(Round Dancing)
is historically rooted in and still is related to
Square Dancing, it also has developed its own program. It gives
everyone the joy and delight of moving to music and the opportunity to
have fun with new friends. Though formal dance training is not
necessary, as with any new skill, dance lessons are required in
order to understand the figures and language used. Once the figures
are learned, the dancers are led through the routines by verbal prompting
(cueing). Dancers have the
opportunity to join a Round Dancing Club (such as Twilight Dancers) where they can continue to
develop their proficiency of figures and/or increase their repertoire of
dances. Often Square
Dance Clubs include Round Dancing in their
program.
"Ballroom Dancing With A Difference" is basically choreographed ballroom dancing with all couples
dancing the same figures around the floor at the same time, similar to a
formation dance team or to sequence dancing. Over the last 50+ years
thousands of routines have been choreographed to match specific music in
almost every dance style imaginable. A routine done to a specific piece of
music in New York or anywhere in the USA is almost always the same routine you would do to
that music in Japan or any other place worldwide at the same level of
difficulty.
This formation team type of dancing eliminates the traffic jam feeling
that you sometimes get while free form ballroom dancing. Dancers are able
to concentrate more on how they are executing figures and dancing as one
coherent unit as opposed to trying to think about which figure or pattern
to do next.
Dancers rely
on an instructor to guide them through the figures in each routine,
thereby eliminating the need to memorize. In an average evening session a
couple typically dances 20-60 different routines.
Another distinguishing characteristic of "Ballroom
Dancing With A Difference" is the use of a
"Cuer". Since there are far too many routines to memorize, a
Cuer calls out the name of each figure in the routine just before it is to
be executed. If you have a memory lapse or are unfamiliar with a
particular routine or figure, you can continue progressing with the dance
flow until you get to a spot or a figure that you recognize.
Dancers
learn from day 1 to associate each foot pattern with the figure name. This
makes it easier to teach future routines since the dancer has a repertoire
of figures at their fingertips (okay ‘foottips’). The average dancer
has a repertoire of hundreds of routines and will typically dance 20-60 of
these routines during the average evening. Clubs and classes in addition
to putting on known routines will also typically teach part or all of a
new routine or work on figures each evening.
This is not to say that "Ballroom Dancing With A
Difference" is better than conventional
Ballroom. Rather, the two complement each other. "Ballroom Dancing
With A Difference" helps you
strengthen your basic repertoire of Ballroom figures and permits you to do
some figures that you would not dare to try at a conventional Ballroom
Dance. We find that each type of dancing reinforces the other, and leads
to greater enjoyment of dancing in general.
There are 6
levels of dancing called phases. Phases 1 & 2 are "easy
level" and include waltz (bronze figures - enough to dance at your daughter's
wedding & elsewhere, the basics) and two-step (similar to a type of country western
dancing). Phase 3 & 4 are the intermediate
levels (bronze & silver figures) and include additional waltz figures
in addition to introductions to other rhythms in the International &
American styles. Rhythms include: foxtrot, quickstep (similar to Arthur
Murray foxtrot), international tango, American tango, Argentine tango,
cha, rumba, bolero, mambo, jive, swing, west coast swing, samba, paso
doble, slow two step (also called night-club two step), & others.
Phase 5 & 6 (gold, star, & above figures) take dancers into the
upper levels of dancing, including most of the figures you see at ballroom
competitions. At the upper levels many of the instructors are
trained by some of the best International & American Ballroom
teachers/competitors in the world. Several technique books &
videotapes have been created by Round Dance organizations and individuals
around the world (For Example: URDC,
ICBDA & ROUNDALAB).
"Ballroom
Dancing With A Difference" is good exercise and provides a relatively inexpensive evenings
entertainment: the price for a typical club dance is about $7-$15 per
couple for 1-1/2 to 3 hours. In addition, the social camaraderie should
not be overlooked. Dancers tend to be extremely friendly, sociable,
and very helpful people.
"Ballroom
Dancing With A Difference" (Round Dance) clubs & classes can be found in & around every
major city in the United States & Canada, as well as many cities in
Europe & Asia (especially Japan). There are also many weekend &
week long Round Dance festivals & conventions offered almost every week
of the year, many of these can be found in the DIXIE
Newsletter, on the URDC,
ICBDA
& ROUNDALAB websites, and
through local & international Round Dance organizations.