The Dancing Bug

Archive for the ‘community’ Category

Here are some of the best things that can happen while you’re out swing dancing:

  • Practically your favorite lead in the whole wide world is visiting from out of town to teach a workshop, and you get to reconnect and have some amazing dances together.
  • Two crazy leads get into a stealing war over you, giving you your very own birthday jam when it isn’t even your birthday.
  • You share some soul-healing dances with a lead who has the good sense and taste to know that a really yummy Balboa basic is worth ten times its weight in tricky moves.
  • You have a crazy lead-and-follow switching dance with some giant moose of a guy, and you grab him and execute a dip right on the last beat of the song, and onlookers applaud.
  • You’re waiting for the perfect song to come on so that you can ask that really special person to dance, and then the song comes on, and you look around the room for that person, only to find them pointing at you and asking you for a dance.
  • About nine people tell you they love your outfit.

All those things happened to me at the dance last night. Thank you, Mindy Hazeltine and Stumptown Dance, for the night. Thank you, friends and neighbors all, for being an awesome swing dancing community.

And a special mention to the impossibly swoony Peter Flahiff: Thank you for being wonderful. L.A.’s gain is the Pacific Northwest’s loss, and I shall miss you piteously. See you next year at the California Balboa Classic!

It’s Wednesday, and I’m almost recovered from the Portland Lindy Exchange this past weekend. And like every year, I have to ask: why do we do this to ourselves?

An exchange is a ton of work. Not just for the organizers, promoters, volunteers, hosts, venue operators, musicians, sound technicians, caterers and cleanup people. I mean just to attend one is a big deal. You travel by car, boat, bus or plane from wherever you come from to stay with strange people and live out of a suitcase for three days, risking no sleep, sketchy food options, and unfamiliar mass transit while you trust google maps to get you to random, out-of-the-way dance venues, often in the scariest parts of town. And all this for the privilege of paying a hundred bucks to dance with strangers for twelve hours a day.

Normal people would look at that list and say, “You’ve gotta be kidding.”

But we never claimed to be normal, did we? We swing dancers look at that list and say, “Aw, hell yeah!”

There’s always that one Christmas moment during every exchange that reminds you why you started this crazy dancing lifestyle in the first place. Mine usually happens at the Sunday afternoon dance, and it happened that way this year.

See, I’m normally kind of a middle-aged sort. On my non-dancing nights I’m usually in bed by ten. Pulling all-nighters is something I do only infrequently, reluctantly, and under extreme duress. Like if someone is in the hospital, or if there’s a lindy exchange going on.

So this past Saturday night, I’m eating something that seems like dinner at around twelve-thirty a.m. And I’m half-loopy from exhaustion. Between dancing outside all afternoon and then subsisting on a quick snack and a nap in the car, my resources are severely depleted. And I’m looking down from the second floor balcony, watching the dancers below on the dance floor, and the music is getting louder and faster, while the dancers seem to be dancing in slow-motion, and there are tracers of light following them all around, and all the colors are running together, and I’m thinking, people pay their drug dealers good money for this sort of thing.

And then a few hours later, after a couple more rounds of dancing, getting a second wind, hitting the wall, collapsing and dying, and then dancing some more, I’m amazed to notice that I’m vacuuming. The dance is over,  and the band is dismantling their equipment, and it’s daylight out. And I’m so crazy tired that my brain taps into some weird college-era neural pathway and I find myself craving Egg McMuffins.

After a long drive home, we finally fall in bed and sleep for a blessed couple of hours. Literally, just a couple hours, just enough to not die, before we have to get up, shower, and drive back to the dance again.

It’s the Sunday afternoon dance, and despite my crazy exhaustion, I know it’s going to be incredible.

I approach the venue, and I hear that distant music and the shuffling, stomping, creaking noises of dancing feet and the murmur of people trying to talk over the band, and it’s like coming home. I walk up the stairs, and there’s all my people. Some are sitting in the lobby with sweaty faces, fanning themselves. Some are dolling themselves up in the bathroom. Some are standing around guzzling water. And lots of them are dancing. I push my way through the clumps of lollygaggers up to where the band is playing, and someone waggles his eyebrows at me, and we’re dancing, and it’s so crazy hot in the room it’s like dancing on the sun.

The Sunday afternoon band this year was the Two Man Gentleman Band, and they were amazing. So funny and so danceable. I’m with all my old and new friends in this crowded, sweaty room, dancing Balboa the way it was meant to be danced, because there’s no room to dance any other way, in a swirl of faces and arms and legs and vintage dresses and sweat-soaked t-shirts and sloshing drinks, trying not to kick over chairs and tables and speaker stands, like it’s some crazy acid trip, only instead of Jimi Hendrix there’s old-timey dance music playing, and no actual drugs are involved. It’s desperately confusing and sort of nauseating, and I haven’t had this much fun since… the last lindy exchange!

And it suddenly hits me. THIS MOMENT, this crazy moment when I feel like I’m dancing better than I ever thought I could, with people who are healthier and nicer and better-looking and more talented than any other people I know, to this crazy band like no other, this one crazy moment is why we go to all that trouble. And it’s totally worth it.

Last night I finally got up the nerve to ask one of our hippest and most accomplished young follows, a girl I don’t even know, to dance one with me. We had a acceptably fun dance, and she thanked me graciously not only at the end of the song, but later as she was leaving. That was awesome.

And a lot of other awesome stuff happened last night as well:

I also had a fun dance with a young man where we seamlessly switched roles for each of the verses of the song we were dancing to. It was great, you’da thought we’d choreographed it ahead of time.

I saw one young man who was doing more following than leading. I think he got around to dancing with mostly all of the top-end leads who were out last night. Lots of times I saw him switching off roles with his partner during a song.

I saw a girl leading her male dance partner during several songs.

I saw both men and women freely jumping into the jam circle to dance with same-sex partners, like it wasn’t even any big deal.

I think the funniest thing was when two excellent leads realized they were approaching the same girl to ask her to dance. To be goofy, they started dancing with each other instead. They went on to finish out the song together and it was an amazing dance to watch.

Need I say that all this role-switching warmed my heart? And on just a regular old DJed night at a regular old weekly venue too. I’m proud of Portland for generating all this crazy dance energy. And if the beautiful city of my birth were to end up known as the most ambidancetrous scene in the world, that wouldn’t hurt my feelings one bit!

 

This happens. You spot an unfamiliar dancer across the dance floor, and they just look amazing. Smiling and confident, with the grace of a gazelle and all the flashy moves you’ve seen on YouTube. Finally, someone around here who looks like they know what they’re doing! Must be from out of town.

So you get in line and somehow wangle a dance out of this person. And ouch! He rips your arm off. Or she bounces around like a fish on a line. And they looked so great! What went wrong?

Then on the other hand, every once in a while you’ll decide to throw a bone to some poor, pathetic soul who’s hovering around the dance floor, looking lonely and mediocre, and it turns out to be the best dance of your life. Ever had that happen?

I think dancers tend to fall into two categories, those who instinctively concentrate on how they look to spectators, and the others who’d rather focus on how they feel to their partners.

I tend to fall into the second category. I’m always trying to figure out ways to be more light, more leadable, more squishy. I usually avoid performances if I can help it, rarely participate in jams, and don’t really like to see pictures of myself dancing. And with good reason, since I usually look pretty awkward.

Usually when I get asked to dance by a stranger, he’ll start out by leading all this simple stuff because he thinks I’m a beginner. And then partway through the dance he realizes I kinda know what I’m doing, and he gets this surprised look on his face, and it ends up being a really good dance. And I get a lot of compliments about my connection.

But it kinda sucks! Because I always think if my dancing looked spectacular, more strangers might ask me to dance. And it would be fun to have some awesome pictures to post on Facebook. And honestly? I think dancers SHOULD look good to spectators. That’s a big part of what draws new people into the scene.

But.

I really don’t like it when I’m dancing with someone and he’s so focused on everyone around us that he forgets I’m there. After all, it’s nice when your dance partner actually looks at you once in a while. And it’s annoying when your partner leads a lot of flashy stuff without realizing that you’re not keeping up. Sometimes you just don’t feel like working so hard. You ever notice that these performance-oriented guys sit out half the time? One dance and they’re exhausted, it’s like they take a nice little social pastime and turn it into an endurance sport.

Yet as a community we really depend on our show-offy dancers. I well remember that when I started dancing, I was watching those performers. They were the ones who inspired me to want to dance, even if later I realized some of them were all style and no substance.

Of course, the very best dancers do both. Once dancers reach a certain level of proficiency, the stuff they do that makes them feel so nice to dance with also makes them look amazing. There’s no difference between the two. It’s all about efficient movement combined with transparent self-expression.

But what about the rest of us? Most of us are either one way or the other, we either feel nice to dance with but look boring, or we beat people up and win contests. So what do you think? While we’re learning, if we’ve got to be one or the other, is it better to look good, or to feel good?

I hope you don’t mind if I get a little maudlin all up in this blog, but I just gotta send out a big weepy hug to everyone who commented on my last post. Swing dancers are the sweetest people.

A terribly wise and spiritual-minded type person once told me that if your family of origin doesn’t quite do it for you, when you grow up you gotta go out and find your own tribe.

Part of the reason I never stray long from swing dancing is that for better or worse, you people are my tribe.

I believe I’ve mentioned before in this blog that I live in the sticks and have to drive an hour to get to any dancing. All the driving I do has the unfortunate effect of turning what should be a healthy obsession with dancing into a slightly unhealthy one. I really feel guilty about contributing to traffic and pollution, and wasting two hours of irretrievable time every couple of days, and obviously gas isn’t getting any cheaper. So basically, it sucks.

In my town of 35,000 souls or so, which is charmingly located in the heart of wine country, there exists a completely restored, actual old authentic vintage ballroom with an amazing floor. Mostly it gets used for fundraising receptions and wedding rehearsal dinners, but it absolutely cries out to be danced in.

We tried to start a scene at the ballroom here last summer. It started out with a bang, then quickly fizzled. I have some ideas about what went wrong. I mean besides the unhelpful theory that suburban people are idiots.

The big mistake we made was that we tried to run it like we’d run a dance in Portland. We offered a free drop-in lesson and then three hours of dancing.

What we found is that people were coming in for the “free” lesson, and then leaving. The only people who’d stick around were a handful of college girls who used the time to practice their tumbling routines. Middle-aged couples would show up and then get freaked out by the idea of rotating in the lesson, so they’d drift off to the side and work on some country two-step. It was less than spectacular, and we swore we’d never try it again.

Well, we’re going to try it again.

This time, we’re going to format the thing a little differently, and see if it helps. Instead of a one-hour lesson and three hours of dancing, we’re going to reverse that and offer three hour-long lessons followed by an hour of free social dancing and practice time. We figure there just isn’t enough of a knowledge base about dancing out here in God’s country to be able to support a weekly social dance; these people need lessons. Maybe once people have learned enough and gotten some confidence about their dancing we’ll try it again with a weekly dance. But probably not for a year or so.

What do you think? Has anyone reading this ever started a brand-new scene anywhere? Do you have any suggestions for me?

 

I came across this post that I really love. It’s from Claudio Santorini and he’s talking about a lot of things from a lead’s perspective that I had never considered before. I feel like a latecomer to the party, since there are already a ton of comments on this post, but it only posted a few days ago. I was going to deconstruct it a little bit, but on second thought, it stands just fine on its own, without my commentary. So enjoy!

Been looking around at other dance blogs for inspiration this morning, and you know? There are some great blogs out there.

Here are some links to show you what my esteemed colleagues are getting up to these days:

  • The Mobtown Ballroom goes all political (temporarily) with an excellent statement of support for human rights.
  • Jamin Jackson has written a wonderful piece in honor of Frankie Manning and how indebted to him we all are as swing dancers.
  • Rebecca Brightly at Dance World Takeover has a very nice article for newbie dancers to get over the fear of going to that very first social dance. Her blog has a spiffy new look, too – I’m jealous!

So while you read those, you’ll have to excuse me. I’m heading out to the annual Alien Festival this afternoon – not much dancing, but plenty of aliens, so that’s something anyway.

See you tomorrow!

The other night I was out dancing at a venue that was also hosting a contra dance in another part of the building. When I stepped out to get a drink of water, I met a lady from the contra dance. She was wearing a button on her blouse that said “I am a new dancer!”

I was intrigued by this, so I asked her about it.

Apparently in that community they use these buttons a lot. Rather than being some sort of dunce cap, it is intended to encourage seasoned dancers to be nice and dance with the newbies.

This lady said it was her first time out dancing, and she really liked the whole button idea. She said everyone was being super nice and patient with her, and she’d danced every dance and was having a great time.

I’ve never heard of this idea being used in the swing community. Has anyone tried it? How did it work for you?

On the other hand, I recently came across this post about dance cards which offers another idea for encouraging people to dance with newbies.

I don’t know how I feel about these strategies. They seem sorta fraught. But I’m always looking for new ways to grow the community. If anyone has tried either of these ideas I would be very interested to hear how it went for you.

Birthday jams have become a peeve of mine.

See, when I first started out, birthday jams were a surprise. If someone knew it was your birthday, they would secretly tell the DJ, and sometime during the night, when you least expected it, all of a sudden you were being jammed. It was like this amazing surprise present out of the blue that you didn’t expect.

But they aren’t special anymore. Now they’re more like cattle calls. Every night, without fail, during the DJ break, someone stands up and announces the birthday jam. Anyone? Calling once, calling twice. Anniversary? Bar mitzvah? Anyone?

Sometimes you get fifteen people out there. Hard to feel special in a huge mob like that. Seems kinda artificial and pointless.

A lot of times people are put on the spot. New dancers are dragged out there when they don’t even want to be. They can’t dance, and they don’t even know what’s happening; their friends think it’s hilarious.

Or there are the old timers who only show up once a year, on their birthday, and then leave after the jam is over. Is that fair? Is that playing by the rules? A birthday jam should be about friendship and community, not entitlement and obligation.

Recently I was present at a dance where the birthday person was out of the room when the jam was announced. He missed his window. His friends tried to get the DJ to announce it later, but the DJ was unwilling to muck up his playlist with unnecessary interruptions or something.

So what happened is that his friends took the grass-roots approach. They just quietly passed the word along that during the next song they would jam the birthday guy. He was so surprised when out of nowhere the crowd made a circle around him and suddenly he was in the spotlight. He was beaming the whole time, and it was the best birthday jam I’ve seen in forever.

I think we need to stop doing regular birthday jams and go back to doing them on a request-only basis. What do you all think?


Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 193 other subscribers

Blog Stats

  • 33,283 hits