The origins of line dancing are not clear, but it definitely wasn’t in Miami. Line dancing has grown in popularity over the ...
For many Americans, the term “line dance” calls to mind uncles in 10-gallons turning their Tecovas to “Boot Scootin’ Boogie,” or even an awkward scuffle around the high school gym when P.E. class gets ...
For Ava Stratford-Davies, line dancing is more than just a hobby. The 16-year-old has enjoyed the country dance style since she was seven, following in the footsteps of her mum, grandmother and ...
Country line dancing has seen an explosive revival nationwide, heel-toeing its way onto social media and tapping into a wider array of music and the rise of country fusion. Hill Country in Manhattan ...
A hunting club, library, senior center and fire station are all venues for Carroll County’s line dancers to kick up their ...
Well north of Dixie, southern dance culture is having a moment. In February, Gottscheer Hall in Ridgewood, Queens started hosting a monthly hoedown, and damn Yankees can’t get enough. “New York has ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Black Southern line dance culture, and a co-sign from Beyoncé, has helped to popularize the song and its fan-snapping moves. By Kia Turner Wagener, ...
So, you’ve got to DJ a wedding or bar/bat mitzvah. You need music that can please crowds of all ages, that can get ...
One recent Wednesday night in Atlanta, dozens of people gathered in a studio space armed with water bottles, hand fans, towels and an expectation to be in sync. There were hugs among the regulars ...
“Now turn toward the water heater!” Joel Reske yells on a Sunday night inside a nondescript garage on a residential San Francisco street. About 50 people shuffle and spin on their toes in unison, ...
Line dancing dates back further than the 1990s, but it gained mainstream popularity in that decade. Even outside of the South, line dancing became a pastime. That’s due, in part, to the wildly popular ...