Dance, Dance, Dance
In this lens you'll see videos of a variety of dances, including my church dance team, S.A.W. (Soldiers at War).
So put on your tutu, I mean dancing shoes, and come along...
Table of Contents
Evolution of Dance
6 minutes of funny.....
The Waltz
from www.bobjanuary.com/waltz.htm
The WALTZ was a smash hit from the very start, mesmerizing its listeners into non-stop revelry. The waltz swept out of Germany in the middle of the eighteenth century to conquer all of Europe, inspiring an old German verse: "Whosoever the dance did discover/Had in mind each maid and lover/With all their burning ardor."The name of the waltz is taken from the Italian 'volver' - to turn, or revolve. It was an outgrowth of the ländler, a country dance in three-quarter time, and replaced the heavy hopping and jumping movements with more polished and graceful gliding.
It was, indeed, rural lads and lasses who first found these whirling steps so appealing. And so, the waltz originally was decidedly low-brow and provincial. In those days, there was something unsavory about a woman being gripped in a man's embrace while whirling in a frenzy around the dance floor.
The close contact with one's partners body contrasted sharply with the stately dances of the aristocracy - the minuets, polonaises, and quadrilles - in which one kept one's distance. A first-hand account of a village dance in the latter part of the eighteenth century read "The men dancers held up the dresses of their partners very high so that they should not trail and be stepped on, wrapped themselves both tightly in the covering, bringing their bodies as closely together as possible, and thus whirling about went on in the most indecent positions....
As they waltzed around on the darker side of the room, the kissing and the hugging became still bolder. It is the custom of the country, I know, and not as bad as it looks, but I can quite understand why the waltz has been banned in parts of Swabia and Switzerland."
Naturally, the scandalized upper classes could not endure to have the lower classes having all the fun, and so, in time, the waltz finally achieved a degree of legitimacy, yet not losing any of its basic appeal.
The Austrian music scholar, Max Graf, has written, "If there exists a form of music that is a direct expression of sensuality, it is the Viennese Waltz. It was the dance of the new Romantic Period after the Napoleonic Wars, and the contemporaries of the first waltzes were highly shocked at the eroticism of this dance in which a lady clung to her partner, closed her eyes as in a happy dream, and glided off as if the world had disappeared. The new waltz melodies overflowed with longing, desire and tenderness."
These new waltz melodies could trace their ancestry back to the beer gardens of early eighteenth century Vienna, and to the rural inns and tavern situated on the outskirts of Vienna and on the banks of the Danube River. Traveling orchestras, some of them from the ships and barges that plied the Danube, whetted the Viennese appetite for this new dance, and the waltz craze soon reached epidemic proportions.
Into this dance-mad atmosphere stepped Josef Lanner and Johann Strauss the elder, both band musicians and both at one time members of the same orchestra. In the compositions of these two men the waltz gained sophistication and a distinctly Viennese light-hearted spirit.
A contemporary music critic, Eduard Hanslick, wrote that "You cannot imagine the wild enthusiasm that these two men created in Vienna. Newspapers went into raptures over each new waltz, and innumerable articles appeared about Lanner and Strauss."
And when he visited he city in 1845, the composer Hector Berlioz, too, was struck with the passion for the waltz . "The Viennese youth abandons itself to its passion for dancing, a very real and delightful passion, which has led the Viennese to make a very real art of drawing-room dancing as far above the routine of our balls as the orchestra and waltzes of Strauss are superior to the polkas and strummers in the dancing salons of Paris. I have passed whole nights watching thousands on incomparable waltzers whirling about . . ."
Until his death in 1899 kept Europe whirling in blissful abandon. Even in 1919, H.L.Menken wrote: "The waltz never quite goes out of fashion; it is always just around the corner; every now and then it returns with a bang . . . It is sneaking, insidious, disarming, lovely. . . .The waltz, in fact, is magnificently improper-the art of tone turned lubricious. . . . There is something about a waltz that is irresistible. Try it on the fattest and sedatest or even on the thinnest and most acidulous of women, and she will be ready, in ten minutes, for a stealthy smack behind the door-nay, she will forthwith impart the embarrassing news that her husband misunderstands her and drinks too much and is going to Cleveland, O. on a business trip tomorrow."
Yes, the waltz is irresistible-and exceptionally durable. In a world where the Mosh and the Monkey are popular social dances, and the macarena, line dances, and the chicken dance sometimes seem to be the only alternatives, the waltz still holds on tenaciously to a small part of our dancing lives, for its lilting strains never fail to evoke three pleasure dearest to the heart of civilized man - wine, women, and song!
Waltz Music from Amazon
Tap Dance
from Wikipedia
Tap dance was developed in the United States during the nineteenth century, and is popular nowadays in many parts of the world. The name comes from the tapping sound made when the small metal plates on the dancer's shoes touch a hard surface. This lively, rhythmic tapping makes the performer not just a dancer, but also a percussive musician (and thus, for example, the American composer Morton Gould was able to compose a concerto for tap dancer and orchestra). Steve Martin and Gregory Hines Tap Dancing
Ballet Dance
from Wikipedia
Ballet is a formalized form of dance with its origins in the French court, further developed in France and Russia as a concert dance form. It is a highly technical form of dance with its own vocabulary. It is primarily performed with the accompaniment of classical music. It has been influential as a form of dance globally and is taught in ballet schools around the world which use their own culture and society to modernize the art. Ballet dance works (ballets) are choreographed, and also include mime, acting, and are set to music (usually orchestral but occasionally vocal). It is best known in the form of classical ballet, notable for its techniques, such as pointe work and turn-out of the legs, its graceful, flowing, precise movements, and its ethereal qualities. Later developments include neoclassical ballet and contemporary ballet.The etymology of the word "ballet" is related to the art form's history. The word ballet comes from the French and was borrowed into English around the 17th century. The French word in turn has its origins in Italian balletto, a diminutive of ballo (dance). Ballet ultimately traces back to Latin ballare, meaning to dance.
A great website I found about ballet is "Wendy Burke School of Dance" You'll find it HERE
Or try this http://www.dance4it.com/ballethistory.htm
Cafe Press Dance Items
Dirty Dancing
She's Like the Wind
Dirty Dancing Products
Dance Poll
2009 Calendar
Stomp Dance
from Wikipedia
Faith Ministries Center Dance Team
S.A.W. (Soldiers at War)

Reader Feedback
-
Reply
- Plaukikaz Plaukikaz Jun 24, 2009 @ 4:40 pm
- Nice lens. I love dancing and old movies with dancing scenes. Thanks. 5*
-
Reply
- TogetherAgain TogetherAgain Mar 14, 2009 @ 7:49 pm
- Great lens. I loved to dance when I was young, and to watch now. Had the great privilege to see Greg Hines before his death. You'd have loved it. Great lens, thanks.
-
Reply
- ElizabethJeanAllen ElizabethJeanAllen Feb 21, 2009 @ 7:24 am
- When I was younger, dancing was a lot of fun. Now I enjoy watching more than dancing. Its the socializing does it for me.
Great lens
Lizzy

Follow Me on Twitter

- mbrownauthor
- aka Margaret Ann Brown
- 247 followers
- 244 following
-
- I just received a purple star on Squidoo for: Dutch Village...My Favorite Summer Destination! / http://tinyurl.com/yffcpka
-
- Reading this: http://www.squidoo.com/silentnightandmore
-
- Reading this: http://www.squidoo.com/myfavoritechristmascookies
-
- Reading this: http://www.squidoo.com/origin-of-christmas-tree
Buzz Machine
- Bankruptcy squandered
- Tweet: Here's what I think bankrupt newspaper companies should be doing.
The AP lists the status of... - Signs of hope
- David Carr wrote another good and hopeful column today (this, I told him, was his burning bush colum...
- Google’s synchronicity
- On the latest This Week in Google, we talked about many of Google's product announcements and enhanc...






