HIP HOP DANCE
Hip-hop dance refers to street dance styles primarily performed to hip-hop music or that have evolved as part of hip-hop culture. It includes
a wide range of styles primarilybreaking, locking,
and popping which were created in the 1970s and
made popular by dance crews in the United States. The television
show Soul Train and the 1980s filmsBreakin', Beat Street,
and Wild Style showcased these crews and dance styles
in their early stages; therefore, giving hip-hop mainstream exposure. The dance
industry responded with a commercial, studio-based version of hip-hop—sometimes
called new style—and a
hip-hop influenced style of jazz dance called jazz-funk.
Classically trained dancers developed these studio styles in order to create
choreography from the hip-hop dances that were performed on the street. Because
of this development, hip-hop dance is practiced in both dance studios and
outdoor spaces.
The commercialization of hip-hop dance continued
into the 1990s and 2000s with the production of several other television shows
and movies such as The Grind, Planet B-Boy, Rize, StreetDance
3D, America's Best Dance Crew, Saigon
Electric, the Step Up film
series, and The LXD, a web series.
Though the dance is established in entertainment, including mild representation
in theater, it maintains a strong presence in urban neighborhoods which has led
to the creation of street dance derivatives turfing,krumping, and jerkin'.
1980s films, television shows, and the Internet
have contributed to introducing hip-hop dance outside of the United States.
Since being exposed, educational opportunities and dance competitions have
helped to maintain its presence abroad. Europe host several international
hip-hop competitions such as the UK B-Boy Championships, Juste Debout, and
EuroBattle. Australia host a team-based competition called World Supremacy
Battlegrounds and Japan host a two-on-two competition called World Dance
Colosseum.
What distinguishes hip-hop dance from other forms
of dance is that it is often freestyle(improvisational)
in nature and hip-hop dance crews often engage in freestyle dance
competitions—colloquially referred to as battles.
Crews, freestyling, and battles are identifiers of this style. Hip-hop dance
can be a form of entertainment or a hobby. It can also be a way to stay active
in competitive dance and a way to make a living by dancing professionally.
HISTORY
Hip-hop dance is a
broad category that includes a variety of urban styles. The older dance styles
that were created in the 1970s include uprock, breaking, and the funk styles. Breaking was created in The Bronx,
New York, incorporating dances that were popular in the 1960s and early 1970s
in African-American and Latino communities. In its earliest form, it began as elaborations on James Brown's
"Good Foot" dance which came out in
1972. Breaking at this period was not
primarily floor-oriented as seen today; it started out as toprock which dancers perform while standing
up. An influence on toprock was uprock which was created in Brooklyn, New York. Uprock looks similar to toprock, but
it is more aggressive and looks like a fight. It is also performed with
partners, but in toprock—and in breaking in general—each person takes turns
dancing. In 1973, DJ Kool Herc invented the break beat. A break beat is a
rhythmic, musical interlude of a song that has been looped over and over again
to extend that instrumental solo. Kool Herc did this to provide a means for
dancers who attended his parties to demonstrate their skills. B-boy and b-girl stands for "break-boy"
and "break-girl"; b-boys and b-girls dance to the break of a record.[10] Further influenced by martial arts and gymnastics,
breaking went from being a purely upright dance style—toprock only—to becoming
more floor-oriented.
At the same time breaking was developing in New
York, other styles were being created in California. The funk styles refers to severalstreet dance styles created in California in the
1970s such as roboting, bopping, hitting, locking, bustin', popping, electric
boogaloo, strutting, sac-ing, and dime-stopping. Out of all of these dances, boogaloo
is one of the oldest. It started out as a 1960s fad dance and was the subject
of several songs released during that time such as "Do the Boogaloo"
and "My Baby Likes to Boogaloo". From being a fad, it developed into a
dance style called electric boogaloo and a music genre called Latin
boogaloo. The most popular and widely practiced of the funk styles
are locking and popping. The television show, Soul Train, played a large role
in giving these styles commercial exposure. Both The Lockers and The Electric Boogaloos—dance crews
responsible for the spread of locking and popping—performed on this show.[15]
It is historically inaccurate to say that the funk
styles were always considered hip-hop. The funk styles were adopted into
hip-hop in large part due to the media. Once hip-hop activist and DJ, Afrika
Bambaataa, used the word "hip-hop" in a magazine interview
in 1982, "hip-hop dance" became an umbrella term encompassing all of
these styles. Due to the amount of attention locking
and popping were receiving, the media brought these styles under the
"breakdance" label causing confusion about their origin. They were created on the west coast
independent from breaking and were originally danced to funk music rather than hip-hop music.
As breaking, locking, and popping gained popularity
in the 1980s, hip-hop social dancing (party dancing) was starting to develop.Novelty and fad dances such as the Roger Rabbit, the Cabbage Patch, and the Worm appeared
in the 1980s followed by the Humptydance
and the Running Man in the 1990s. The music of the day was the driving
force in the development of these dances. For example, the 1980s rap group Gucci Crew II had a song called "The Cabbage
Patch" that the dance of the same name was based on.[21] 2000s era social dances include the Cha Cha Slide,
the Cat Daddy,
and the Dougie. The previously
mentioned dances are a sample of the many that have appeared since hip-hop
developed into a distinct dance style. Like hip-hop music, hip-hop social
dancing continues to change as new songs are released and new dances are
created to accompany them.
MAIN STYLE
Breaking
Breaking was created in
the South Bronx, New York City during the early 1970s. It is the first hip-hop dance style.
At the time of its creation, it was the only hip-hop dance style because Afrika
Bambaataa classified it as one of the five pillars of hip-hop culture along
with MCing(rapping), DJing (turntablism), graffiti writing, and knowledge. Though African Americans created
breaking, Puerto Ricans maintained its growth
and development when it was considered a fad in the late 1970s. In a 2001 interview Richard
"Crazy Legs" Colón, the president of Rock Steady
Crew, commented on how Puerto Ricans contributed to breaking:
"I think the difference is when the brothas first started doing [it] and
it was at its infancy they weren't doing acrobatic moves. That didn't come into
play until more Puerto Ricans got involved in the mid 70s. We then took the
dance, evolved it and kept it alive. In '79 I was getting dissed. I would go
into a dance and I would get dissed by a lot of brothas who would ask 'Why
y'all still doing that dance? That's played out'. By 79, there were very few
African American brothas that was doing this... We always maintained the flava.
It was like a changing of the guard and all we did was add more flava to
something that already existed." Breaking includes four foundational
dances: toprock, footwork-oriented steps performed while standing up; downrock,
footwork performed with both hands and feet on the floor; freezes, stylish
poses done on your hands; andpower moves, complex and impressive acrobatic moves. Transitions from toprock to downrock
are called "drops."
Traditionally, breakers dance within a cypher or an Apache Line. A cypher is a
circular shaped dance space formed by spectators that breakers use to perform
or battle in. Cyphers work well for one-on-one b-boy
(break-boy) battles; however, Apache Lines are more appropriate when the battle
is between two crews—teams of street dancers. In contrast to the circular shape
of a cypher, competing crews can face each other in this line formation,
challenge each other, and execute their burns (a move intended to humiliate the
opponent, i.e. crotch grabbing).
[edit]Locking
Locking, originally called Campbellocking, was
created in 1969 in Los Angeles, California by Don "Campbellock"
Campbell and popularized by his crew The Lockers. In addition to Campbell, the original
members of The Lockers were Fred "Mr. Penguin" Berry, Leo "Fluky
Luke" Williamson, Adolpho "Shabba Doo" Quiñones, Bill "Slim
the Robot" Williams, Greg "Campbellock Jr" Pope, and Toni Basil,
who also served as the group's manager. At the 2009 World Hip Hop Dance Championships, Basil
became the first female recipient of the Living Legend Award in honor of her
role in giving locking commercial exposure.[42]
Locking looks similar to popping, and the two are
frequently confused by the casual observer. In locking, dancers hold their
positions longer. The lock is the primary move used in locking.
It is "similar to a freeze or a sudden pause." A locker's dancing is characterized by
frequently locking in place and after a brief freeze
moving again. It is incorrect to call locking
"pop-locking". Locking and popping are two distinct
funk styles with their own histories, their own set of dance moves, their own
pioneers, and their own competition categories. Locking is more playful and
character-driven, whereas popping is more illusory. In popping, dancers push the
boundaries of what they can do with their bodies. Locking has specific dance moves that
distinguish it from popping and other funk styles. In the 2006 book Total Chaos, hip-hop historian
Jorge "Popmaster Fabel" Pabon lists some of these moves which include
"the lock, points, skeeter [rabbits], scooby doos, stop 'n go, which-away,
and the fancies." According toDance Spirit magazine, a dancer cannot perform both
locking and popping simultaneously.
[edit]Popping
Popping was created in Fresno, California in the 1970s and popularized by Samuel
"Boogaloo Sam" Solomon and his crew the Electric Boogaloos. It is based on the technique of
quickly contracting and relaxing muscles to cause a jerk in a dancer's body,
referred to as a pop or a hit.
Each hit should be synchronized to the rhythm and beats of the music. Popping
is also used as an umbrella term to refer to a wide range of closely related
illusionary dance styles such as strobing, liquid,
animation, twisto-flex, and waving.Dancers
often integrate these styles with standard popping to create a more varied
performance. In all of these subgenres it appears
to the spectator that the body is popping. The difference between each subgenre
is how exaggerated the popping is. In liquid, the body movements look like
water. The popping is so smooth that the movements do not look like popping at
all; they look fluid.The
opposite of this is strobing (also called ticking) in which the movements are
staccato and jerky.
Popping as an umbrella term also includes floating,
gliding, and sliding. These are lower body dances performed
with little to no movements in the chest or arms. In floating, gliding, and
sliding a dancer appears as if they are drifting across the floor on ice.[note 2]Opposite
from gliding is tutting, an upper body dance that uses the arms, hands, and
wrists to form right angles and create geometric box-like shapes. Tutting can
be done primarily with the fingers rather than the arms. This method is called
finger tutting. In both variations the movements are intricate, linear, and
form 90° or 45° angles. In practice, tutting looks like the characters on the art of ancient Egypt, hence the name—a reference to King Tut.
While popping as an umbrella term is widely used by
hip-hop dancers and in competitive hip-hop dancing, Timothy
"Popin' Pete" Solomon of
the Electric Boogaloos disagrees with the use of the word "popping"
in this way. Many of these related styles (animation, liquid, tutting, etc.)
can not be traced to one person or group. Solomon states "There are people
who wave and there are people who tut. They’re not popping. I say this to give
the people who created other styles their just dues and their props."
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