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The Origins of Country and
Western Dancing
This was
copied from an article by Lori Heikkila
at http://www.centralhome.com/ballroomcountry/western.htm
Louis
Whistler - The best I can tell, this article was written in the early
1990's. However, I have researched the contents and I can find
no errors, and it is very good information. Therefore, I have
copied it without change.
Dance, along with music, has always dynamically
expressed the spirit and personality of every culture. Modern western
dance is part of this global language and its roots run wide and deep.
They can be traced to the taverns of Ireland and to the ballrooms of
Europe, to the Czarist palaces of Russia and further back still to the
fluid tribal rituals of Africa. Representatives from all of these
cultures brought their native dances when they landed in America.
Widely differing peoples who had little or no exposure to one another
gathered and danced on common ground.
The cowboy was not the most limber of
creatures. The long hours in the saddle and strenuous work produced
dancers of questionable finesse. He was not of a temperament to master
intricate dance steps or to gracefully lead a fair maiden across the
floor to the strains of a fiddler's reel. Rather he would join a dance
with a wild whoop and a goat cry. Joseph McCoy, the first great cattle
baron, wrote in 1874 that the cowboy "usually enters the dance
with a peculiar zest, his eyes lit up with excitement, liquor and
lust. He stomps in without stopping to divest himself of his sombrero,
spurs or pistols." This dance style was not so much original as
it was a spontaneous adaptation of traditional moves brought west by
various immigrant cultures.
Puritanical thought, religious prohibitions
and traditional customs firmly established the in East began to move
West with the pioneers. Worldly pleasures such as dancing were often
frowned upon, and when not altogether banned, were designed to keep
contact and spontaneity at a minimum. Consequently, it was the minuet,
cotillion, pattern dances, courtly processions, and "safe"
folk dances that were favored by the early settlers.
The open unexplored spaces of the West both
shaped the character and determined the interaction of its settlers.
People organized barn dances, husking and quilting bees, cowboy balls
and get-togethers. Invitation was by word of mouth and those who heard
usually came to dance. To prevent chaos from dominating the dance
floor (few people knew the same steps), a figure who soon became
legendary emerged. This hero was the caller and it was his job to
orchestrate the heterogeneous crowd into harmonious movement.
Working with the steps of formal quadrilles
and folk dances, he added a "cowboy waltz" position and
helped promote the square dance. This new hybrid was considerably more
casual that the traditions from which it derived, but it still
inhibited the young who were ready for a dance that would add a more
intimate hold on their partner.
A new dance called the Polka started moving
West. Having "the intimacy of the Waltz and the vivacity of the
Irish jig", the Polka was embraced with enthusiasm.
The western population included such groups
as Poles, Germans, French, Irish, Jews, Scandinavians, Czechs and
Russians and each still enjoyed their own folk dances, but many found
common refuge in the polka. New hybrids were also developed, creating
offspring such as the Varsouvianna and the Two Step. German settlers
in El Paso, Texas developed the Schottische and line dances which were
important precursors of modern western dances such as the Cotton-Eyed
Joe.
Folks gathered just about anywhere to dance
-- on ranches, in barns, in the wide open spaces under the stars.
Slowly a dance that was specifically "western" began to
evolve. Novelty moves and styles popular in Appalachia and the South
came west and were absorbed by the new settlers. The freed Black
Americans in particular exerted a stylistic influence that can still
be seen in today's country swing dance. However, the most important
influence came from the cowboy!
The cowboy paid little attention to
traditional dance forms. One observer commented in 1873, that
"some punchers danced like a bear 'round a beehive that was
afraid of getting stung. Others didn't seem to know how to handle a
calico, and got as rough as they do handlin' cattle in brandin'
pens."
The swing of the leg when dismounting from
a horse became a mighty Polka gallop. Women were handled as if the
cowboy were throwing a beating calf to the ground to be branded. Heavy
army issue boots contributed to crude footwork. The habit of wearing
spurs even on the dance floor forced the cowboy to keep his feet apart
and shuffle as he moved to the music. Several of these cowboy
mannerisms, although tamed, survive in today's modern western dance.
The "double arms over" move is reminiscent of the final
"tying off" of a calf's legs prior to branding. The basic
"push pull" position recaptures the rhythm of grasping the
reins.
The beginning of the twentieth century
brought new music and dance. In the middle of this explosion was the
Black American. Their principal source of relaxation and entertainment
had been their music and dance. In the old South, contests were
frequently held on the plantation to see "who owned the fastest
dancer." Fascinated and envious of the rhythmic freedom of
Blacks, Whites later "corked up" in black face and toured
the country.
By the turn of the century carnivals,
minstrel shows, medicine shows and eventually vaudeville routines
frequently showcased Black dancers or White imitators. The Black dance
style was referred to as "jazz" or "eccentric
dancing". These fast, gyrating, acrobatic and tap dances had
names like the Turkey Trot, Grizzly Bear, Kangaroo Dip and Chicken
Scratch. Black dance was viewed as a novelty, sometimes ridiculed, but
the intricate footwork and fluid motions of Black performers were
slowly seeping into America's dance repertoire.
By 1916, two years after the War began, New
Orleans jazz was in full bloom. Just one year later historian Bernard
Grun proclaimed Chicago the "world's jazz center". Inspired
by the improvisational elements in jazz, couples began to experiment
on the dance floor: They separated, broke apart, twirled, and jigged.
Throughout the 1920's, radio brought music
to the whole nation. Chicago radio station WLS began broadcasting the
"National Barn Dance" in 1924. A year later the now famous
"Grand Ole Opry" from Nashville was initiated.
In the late 1920's, George
"Shorty" Snowden brought the entire Savoy Ballroom audience
to its feet with his rapid, break-away solo steps. Charles Lindbergh
had crossed the Atlantic in 1927 in one dramatic "hop", and
when Snowden was asked what his dance was called, he replied, the
"Lindy Hop".
In 1938 Benny Goodman ushered in a new jazz
style. His big band swing sound was listened to around the world and
soon the Lindy Hop gave birth to the Jitterbug, a fast moving
combination of fancy footwork and elaborate spins, twirls and turns,
many of which can still be seen in contemporary country swing moves.
One of the many fascinated listeners out
West was Bob Wills. When jazz hit, Bob was struck. Eventually he
formed his own western big band and helped create a genre of music
known as western swing. Today's modern country swing dance derives
directly from the music Wills played and the way people danced to it.
A new musical tempo could be heard after
the Second Word War. Be-bop, a kind of wild and dizzying swing
offshoot popular in big cities quickly gave birth to "pop"
music. Rockabilly arrived in the '50's and by the middle of the decade
had become known as rock 'n roll.
Rock 'n roll was music of the '50's, but
the dance that accompanied it was very similar to Jitterbug and Swing.
The style of dance changed dramatically in the early 1960's where
partners were couples only in name and where each allowed his body to
dance directly to the sounds, lights and strobes.
Couple dancing regained popularity in the
mid 1970's with the emergence of Disco. In the late 1970's as Disco
died and country music continued to rise in rapid popularity, a
resurgence of interest in western dance emerged. Older dancers
suddenly became models for a new generation.
Now that swing is back, people are dancing
into the 90's with a smile, a hat and a friendly attitude!
This was
copied from an article by by Lori Heikkila
at http://www.centralhome.com/ballroomcountry/western.htm
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