
Ultimate Guide to the Histories, Pioneers, Vocabulary, and Culture of Street Dance
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このコンテンツについて
1. Introduction
- Purpose: Distill the artistry, culture, and history of street dance for dancers and enthusiasts.
- Sources: Historical accounts, academic research, dancer oral histories.
- Key themes: “Street dance,” being “well-rounded,” “cultural preservation,” “educate before you recreate.”
2. Hip-Hop Dance Origins: The Bronx (1970s)
- Hip-hop pillars: DJing, rapping, graffiti, breakdance.
- DJ Kool Herc: Jamaican roots, innovated “break beats” at Bronx block parties, inspiring new dance forms.
- Dance traits: Musical “bounces/rocks,” social dances like Running Man, Dougie, and original Harlem Shake.
- Misconceptions: Not all street dance is hip-hop or “breakdancing”—80s movies blurred many styles. Breaking (Bronx) ≠ Funk styles (West Coast).
3. West Coast Funk Styles: California (1970s–80s)
- Boogaloo: Oakland; fluid, “boneless” cartoon-inspired rolls and dime stops.
- Popping: Fresno; sharp muscular “hits/pops”—Electric Boogaloos (Boogaloo Sam, Popin’ Pete) popularized it. Includes “waving.”
- Locking: Don Campbell invented “lock”—sudden freezes, splits, points—popular on Soul Train. Tony Basil helped form Campellock Dancers. Emphasis on tradition and the problem of “slop lockers” (inaccurate imitators).
- Waacking: Gay clubs, LA (1970s disco); rotational arms, dramatic posing, Hollywood glamour. Rooted in Black & Latino LGBTQ+ resilience.
4. East Coast Innovations: NY (Late 70s–2000s)
- Breaking: Bronx; athletic spins, flips, freezes. Key crew: Rock Steady Crew. 1981 Lincoln Center battle mainstreamed the style. “Settle beef in the circle” culture.
- Vogue: Harlem, late 80s; Black/Latinx LGBTQ+ ballroom scene. “Houses” as competitive families. Three styles: Old Way (geometry, “pinning” duels), New Way (flexibility, arm illusion), Vogue Femme (fluid, exaggerated femininity). Pioneers: Paris Dupree, Willi Ninja. "Paris Is Burning" controversy and "no game" critique emphasize authenticity.
- House Dance: 1980s Chicago/NY clubs (Frankie Knuckles); fast footwork, torso “jacking,” expansive moves. Innovators: Frankie Knuckles, Brian “Footwork” Green. Community-focused, improvisational.
- Lite Feet: Harlem, 2000s; quick, weightless footwork, hat/shoe tricks. Seen in subways, reflecting Harlem identity. Uptempo beats (100–110 bpm).
5. Becoming a Well-Rounded Dancer
- Master the groove/bounce first; break down moves, drill for muscle memory, focus on one style.
- Use resources: YouTube, Steezy, Funk In Focus, workshops, local groups.
- Attend cyphers/jams for improvisation and community; “dance like no one is watching.”
- Listen to foundation music (funk, soul, hip-hop, disco).
- Observe but don’t copy—find icons for inspiration.
- Know freestyle (flowing improv), choreography (set routines, often from freestyle), and battling (creative pressure).
6. Mindset & Authenticity
- Set small, consistent goals; practice alone or with supportive peers.
- Prioritize authenticity: Learn origins, respect communities (“educate before you recreate”). Study from history if OG access isn’t possible.
7. Conclusion
- Recap journey: From Bronx hip-hop, West Coast funk, to NY’s Vogue, House, and Light Feet.
- Each style = local roots and evolving culture, tightly linked to its music.
- Street dance uplifts identity, community, and self-expression—reinvented yet anchored in tradition.
- Closing thought: What music or “dance” shapes your life? Understanding origins deepens connection. Always “educate before you recreate”—in dance, and beyond.