Surprise! The Solomon Douglas Swingtet at Jam Cellar Tonight!
Surprise! Tonight, the Solomon Douglas Swingtet!
You don't want to miss a night of live music at the Jam Cellar. Solomon Douglas's 8 piece big band will swing your socks off tonight, so bring extra socks. $10 entry fee.
May Inter/Adv Series: What You Need
This month: both leaders and followers will go through a boot-camp style fix of their weaknesses, and a hard-core workout of their strengths. Personal attention and private-lesson like setting. $55 for entire series; $15 drop-ins.
MUSICALITY and RHYTHMIC FOOTWORK Special Inter/Adv Lindy Hop workshop with Bobby and Kate, May 22
Bobby and Kate will hold two special classes from 2 p.m.-4 p.m. May 22. The first, is their patented Musicality in Lindy Hop class, at 2 p.m., centered on both leader and follower musicality. Then, at 3 p.m. is Fancy Footwork in the Rhythmic Style a class that has footwork cookies for both Leaders and Followers, that will wonderfully compliment your new musicality skills. Each class is $10. It happens at DC Dance Collective, 4908 Wisconsin Ave. NW, a few blocks down from Chevy Chase Ballroom. (I know, I know, we love Chevy Chase, too. Especially in Fletch.)
June Inter/Adv Series: "A FEW OF OUR FAVORITE THINGS"
During the five Tuesdays in June, some of Jam Cellar's most advanced dancers will teach some of their favorite things ever! Moves, styling, footwork, movement, you name it! (No, seriously, there will be a naming contest). Students should know basic 6-count moves, Swing-outs, basic Charleston patterns like side-by-side and Tandem. Students who have taken our Basic Lindy Hop and Building Your Basics Classes should be qualified. $65 (There are Five Tuesdays in June!).
Beginner Lindy Hop series starts June 1
Our patented, famous six-week Beginner Lindy Hop series begins again on June 1st. Tell your friends.
A Way-too-Brief History of Balboa
Introduction, Preface, Apology, Rant
Everytime I write about the history of Balboa, I get a little anxious; I'm still learning more and more all the time, and know what it's like to cringe at something I once wrote. (A poem I wrote in High School called "A Nation of Puritan Farmers" comes to mind.) And being an instructor, I know a flippant word or joke I say could suddenly put on many more pounds than I expected it to. It doesn't help that several of my close friends and team mates are considered Balboa historians, and have put a lot of work into researching the dance and keeping misinformation from being spread, so, well, yeah.
This was an essay written several years ago for the All Balboa Weekend. It has since been used for other events, such as the Balboa Rendezvous and Munich Balboa Weekend. The original task was to write an entertaining page-long history of Balboa–hence, I tried to just fit in the basic facts and a few jokes.
I also, at the time, wanted to remind people that just because one Balboa old timer says something, doesn't mean it's a good idea, or even true for the dance as a whole. (This was a common problem at the time).
The Old Timer's never had a set-in-stone dance vocabulary, an important fact every new dancer should know. For instance, the question "Does Balboa have a pulse?" could mean something totally different to five different old timers, and another ten wouldn't know what on earth you were talking about.
But I did want to stress the importance of paying attention to them, listening to them, watching them dance, dancing with them, and forming one's own opinions about the dance based on that evidence–not forgetting them. If we forgot them, we'll probably never reach true Balboa, (Pure Balboa, Bal-Swing, or SoCal Swing, etc).
Speaking of dance vocabulary, know that the term "Balboa" in this essay, as it does to most modern dancers, is short for "Dances including the original (now called "Pure") Balboa, Bal-Swing, and any dances such as So-Cal Swing that are historically linked but are not Lindy Hop."
Also, the original essay is combined with various sections of the NEW essay I wrote for the upcoming All Balboa Weekend 10th anniversary. I was displeased with the original for several reasons–the main two being that (1) it made it seem like we don't know what Balboa is really about, but we understand a great deal about Balboa, even if we don't have concrete facts about its history, and (2) it didn't mention the importance of people like Sylvia Sykes, Jonathan Bixby, and Dwight Lupardus, who's influence on the dance today is inestimable.
Hopefully I have corrected these errors in the new draft. Still, please know that it is, as titled, a way too brief history of Balboa.
A Way-Too-Brief History of Balboa
Two for one Special Edition
by Robert White
The history of Balboa begins with a man who was fond of hiding in barrels with dogs, which I think you will find is evident in several of the classic dance steps.
In 1509, Vasco Núñez de Balboa stowedaway with his dog on a ship to hide from his debtors; he then went on to become one of the greatest Spanish conquistadors in history, discovering the Pacific Ocean (hard to miss, right?), naming dozens of cities, and ruling people under the classic method of government by raping and pillaging. In 1519, he was framed by his father-in-law, and beheaded, reminding us all that in-laws can be trusted only so far.
Many years later, a posh sea-side town in Southern California was named Balboa in his honor, and, with the advent of jazz music, a dance step called the Balboa became popular at this seaside town.
There is an interesting point here, and it is this: we know what day a specific man in the 1500s hid in a barrel with his dog; but we can't tell you anything absolutely definitive about the creation of the 90-year-old dance called Balboa.
Balboa began around 80 to 90 years ago in Southern California, when, we are almost positive, the Charleston evolved into the chest-to-chest partner dance we now call "Pure" Balboa.
At some point in the 30s, also in southern California, there sprang up a dance with turns, kicks, and other steps, which they simply called "swing." It was not Lindy Hop, but a different, open-position partnered swing dance. Today, it is sometimes referred to as So-Cal Swing, LA Swing, or Ray Rand Swing (After the popular Ray Rand swingers, which included Maxie Dorf).
And at some other point we're not quite sure of, the dances were combined and evolved into what we now call Bal-Swing.
We're not quite sure of the finer details, you see.
This is mainly because the only people who would know are what can only be described as in their 90s. Even when they were in their 50s through 70s and younger dancers began searching for answers, the old timers all had different opinions, none of which completely matched, but most of which were "absolutely the way it was," proving once again that one might as well argue with bacon as with a senior citizen.
And since Balboa was a "street dance," developed without any rules or regulations, every original dancer can have a slightly different idea about what it specifically is.
It doesn't help that we never see Old Timers dance anymore. They more often sit in chairs and smile at people, until you ask them for feedback, at which point they say "That's not Balboa!" and "You're doing it wrong!" (That's not very fair–many of them actually had plenty of advice. They would say things like "Keep it casual" and "You're chopping the sh#% out of it", that sort of thing.)
So, what IS Balboa, and where did it come from? What we do know–the cold, hard facts, are these:
1) Balboa ("Pure Balboa" or "Strict Balboa") probably evolved from the Charleston, but we have no DNA proof, just the obvious family resemblance.
2) Balboa was danced chest-to-chest, probably because of ballroom restrictions on open-dancing.
3) The term "bal-swing" was not in the vocabulary of the original dancers in their youth. There were two separate dances called Balboa (what we now call "Pure Balboa") and "Swing" (what we now term "So Cal Swing,").
4) All the original footage of Balboa and So-Cal Swing that we have would take up the first third of a Friends episode. There are 230 episodes of Friends. This means you are 700 times more likely to see Ross than you ever will of original Balboa. Think about that.
But, what in dancing is about cold, hard facts?
The original scene sounds like it was a pretty fun time. Dance competitions and live bands all over the place, and dance styles so regionalized that you could supposedly tell which high school or college kids went to based on how they did their basic.
Then World War II happened, the only thing in the world with the power to stop a good swing dancing scene. America suddenly "grew up." The "feel happy" jazz of the depression turned into the manic, tense bee-bop, and most people the dancer's ages lost their youth to the war. Swing dances were not near as popular as swing music had changed and all the dancers were old enough to start families and get careers.
Many of the original Bal and swing dancers danced every-now-and-then, but not regularly. Then, in the 1980s, Marge Talkier got together many of the original dancers at the So-Cal family restaurant Bobby McGees, which is sort of like a Shoney's on acid. Twice a month they'd get together to dance, drink, and wear mu-mus. They met until the chain closed in 2009.
There, the once-energetic-and-crazy swing dancers showed a different, more mature side of the dance, as years of refinement, relaxation, and bad joints had created a smooth hybrid of swing dances that most people now would probably call "Bal-Swing."
The invention of the camcorder is probably the most important thing to happen to Balboa. Years of taping at Bobby McGees have been instrumental in breaking down the dance as we know it.
Thankfully, there were a few people who refused to let the dance die an unknown death in California in the 1980s. The dancers Sylvia Sykes, Jonathan Bixby, and historian Dwight Lupardus, among a few others, took it upon themselves to save Balboa. Because of them, people like Joel Plys and Valerie Salstrom learned Balboa, and decided to possibly go bankrupt holding a weekend that had only Balboa classes and dances. In 2001, they held the very first All Balboa Weekend.
Today, Balboa and Bal-Swing are thriving dance forms, sucking more and more people out of Lindy Hop, Tango and Slavic Folk dancing, to learn this beautiful, subtle partner dance. And, I think am unbiased in saying the event that first had complete faith in Balboa's power was the very first All Balboa Weekend.
So, sadly, that is your rough history of Balboa. Words can attempt to describe the essence of Balboa, but are clumsy at doing so, and often give no better explanation than a demonstration by a clumsy dancer who keeps tripping and bumping into things.
I can say "we classify Bal-Swing as a swing dance that mainly uses the "out and in", rotational torque, or floppy hair to accomplish its moves and figures", but that's not the same as seeing the "Start Cheering" or Venice Beach Clip.
We could be more abstract, of course ("Balboa is a poem, you see? Say, what are you doing tonight? Would like to come to my room and look at some etchings?") but that is only helpful to those who already know what you're talking about.
So, perhaps the best history of Balboa is found in its dancers; the old ones are passing away at an alarming rate, the new ones are evolving the dance, and many of them without ever having had the chance to talk to an Old Timer.
In this case, if you want to know the real history of Balboa, Swing, and Bal-Swing, then learn to say these phrases: "Hi, you're an original dancer, aren't you? Would you mind talking about it?" and "Would you like to dance?" If you keep at it, there might be a time when you yourself will be qualified to sit in a chair all night, smile and say "That's not Balboa!"

May 19th, 2010 at 9:20 am
To whom it might concern:
First of all I want to say that I really support what you're doing and that you're bringing back some good music to DC. I know that your lessons are really cheap and some of then are for free. However, I live in the building next to the Josephine Butler Parks Center, where you have your events every Tuesday. I'll like to point out that this is a residential area and as many of the neighbors I work early in the morning. I know that tolerance is really important so all I ask is a peaceful moment after a long day while you have fun and enjoy the music. In this regard, I ask you, in the most respectful way, to tone down the volume of the music a little bit more and close the windows so the sound cannot spread all over the neighborhood that easily. Its ok to have fun, but you also have to be consider of the ones that are around trying to relax. I hope you take under consideration my plea.