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August 31st, 2010

No one kippers better than Betsy Kipperman can

DJ Betsy Kipperman's last DC set (for a year)

This week, our NEW BEGINNER LINDY HOP SERIES BEGINS! Also, sadly, the incredible Betsy Kipperman leaves us for a year, to follow some dream or something or other.

Solo Charleston and Jazz workshop with Bobby (This Sunday, Sept 5!)

Two classes on solo jazz and Charleston back-to-back for intermediate and advanced dancers. First, at 1 p.m, there will be "Fundamentals of Solo Jazz," an in-depth look at…well…the fundamentals of dancing solo jazz. Following that, "Al vs. Leon" where we break down several standard solo moves and show how Al did them versus Leon. Leaders AND followers can get a lot by understanding their two different but inspiring takes on solo jazz dance.

September Inter/adv series: BALBOA

Next month we're going to have a 4-week beginner Balboa series. For those who don't know, Balboa is a classic sibling of Lindy Hop, complete with its own moves, styling, and connection. Learn how to lead awesome stuff that can even help you in your Lindy. Taught by international Balboa champions Bobby and Kate.

October Series: Aerials!

Need we say more? Partners required. Helmets optional.

Swing Memories: Building a College Swing Club

Fall, 1998.

Sewanee University, Monteagle, Tennessee

Before I had fallen in love with swing dancing, I had accepted my application to a college on a mountain in the middle of nowhere, Tennessee.

Sewanee, originally known as the University of the South (but, for obvious reasons, we tended just to call it the much prettier and less Confederate-y "Sewanee"), is a small liberal arts college with about 1400 people, best known for its writing programs and, in conjunction with such programs, its heavy drinking. (One year, when a publication listed the top ten drinking schools, Sewanee wasn't on the list. There was a note at the bottom, however, that said: "Sorry Sewanee, list doesn't include professionals.")

One of the reasons for the heavy drinking is the fact that Sewanee is the only thing of interested for many, many miles, unless you don't get tired of watching the locals yell at each other in the local Walmart. (Though, I should note, this is an activity that's just as easily done drunk. And, slightly less depressing that way. At least, at the time.) The nearest cities are Chattanooga, which is 50 minutes from Sewanee, and Nashville, which is an hour and a half in the other direction.

In almost all aspects, this school was a great fit for me. It's like someone had mysteriously stolen a few buildings from Oxford and hid them in a forest. It's literature program was of the hook, and it's theater program was funded by the royalties of Tennessee Williams. The only problem was that I quickly found out that I was the person there who knew the most about swing dancing, out of the three people who knew any at all. And I had only recently discovered Lindy Hop, and had no idea how I was going to be able to learn it.

I first became a swing dance teacher out of necessity. In order for there to be a place to dance, I had to make dancers. In order to get better, I had to get some followers that I could single-handedly break down Lindy Hop from A Day at the Races with. (I was a very confident youngster.) Within two weeks, I had put up fliers for a free class I would teach with Leah, a girl who also knew some swing dancing and had the added bonus of being charming as hell. Someone told me we should charge $5 or $10 a head. I thought they were insane until around 200 people showed up. (This was still Gap commercial times, remember.)

With roughly a seventh of the campus in front of a freshman who had never taught a group class before, I proceeded to them almost every single thing I knew. Anyone who has ever taught a college class to people who have only seen the Gap commercial knows what happened next; they stopped me soon after learning the basic because they really REALLY wanted to learn an aerial.

I imagine colleges already have pretty hefty insurance bills, particularly colleges known for heavy drinking. Perhaps when they offered me the space to teach in, they didn't consider that 200 students would be throwing around each other based on instructions given to them from a person who had absolutely zero professional training and was often described as "spacey; a day dreamer."

Somehow, amazingly, everything turned out fine and no one got hurt. Based on the success of the class, I decided to hold a series of lessons, a four-week thing. The first week had about a hundred people in it, the second week, about half that, and the final weeks left about a dozen or so people in the class. This is when I learned a very valuable lesson about college: holding onto a college student is like holding onto a Ferrel cat covered in bacon lard.

If you're in college, you've got tons of homework, tons of things you are already passionate about like sports or recreational drug use taking up your time, and tons of fraternities, sororities, clubs, rehearsals and whatnot–so why should you add to that yet another thing that requires a lot of hard work and time and commitment, especially when the major college dancing song seems to be "Brickhouse"? What's also rough for college clubs is that, in the long run, college comes with a built-in turnover. Every year you lose a forth of your scene, and it's hard work to keep reinvigorating it.

Though I learned the lesson, it took awhile to sink in (four years, to be exact). I soon started the Sewanee Swing Society, which is the good thing to know about a school known for heavy drinking: The dean of student activities is willing to put small fortunes into any innocent sources of campus entertainment they can tell parents about: "There's plenty of things to do on the mountain. Why, one sixth of the campus regularly swing dances."

Thinking first and foremost of education, I took a small portion of the money and supplied the library with almost EVERY SINGLE video instruction tape known to man. One of the library managers complained to me, "No-one will rent these tapes. Trust me." But he didn't know what it was like being me. A new lover of Lindy Hop knowing he was going to spend four years in a place that didn't know what it was. Sure, they might only get rented once or twice in the years ahead. But I took consolation in the fact that if there did ever come after me someone in my same position, all they'd have to do is go to the library, and they'd be able to learn from Frankie Manning himself.

Looking back, I worked a great deal on my dancing during my times at college. I went to Nashville dance nights many times a semester, I created group choreographies each year with lots of aerials that also somehow amazingly went alright (I'll try to digitalize some and put it up here someday), and I held monthly dances with only the finest neo-swing music.

However, by the end of the fourth year, I think I had given up on trying to get others involved as passionately as I was, and was pretty much just doing a lot of it for my own happiness. I taught classes because I loved to teach, and found that I got better as a dancer when I taught. I held dances because I wanted to swing dance. I still put up fliers, and was always willing to teach anyone anything, but looking back, perhaps it was all a big chicken and the egg situation–by the end, did people see that I was running everything for myself, and so they didn't feel there was a place for anyone else? I'd like to think not. But maybe I'm wrong.

By my senior year, a few people approached me about continuing the Sewanee Swing Society after I left. The Bobby they knew was a cynical, abrasive man with the light out of his eyes. I might have thrown a Jack Daniels bottle at them, I can't recall much about that time.

By that point, the society mainly only gave occasional one-hour lessons based solely on making sure leaders lead girls comfortably when they were drunk. (Which actually, was a great service to the campus.) But, the freshmen seemed really passionate about swing dancing, and seeing the look in their eyes, I remembered a time when I must have looked just like that, a stranger in a new world, preparing for that very first class, nervous and at the same time, giddy.

I happily allowed them to take over the club, and a few years later, when I was strutting around campus with some old friends I was visiting, I happened to hear swing music coming out of the same place I taught that first lesson. I went in, and saw the people who had taken over the club. They had a live band, a few dozen people, and I had some dances. People gathered around and watched. Noticing this and hoping to inspire them, I began to try, desperately, to show them everything I knew.

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