The Lindy Hop is Swingin'


Starting Monday, January 14, Leach hopes to host a series of dances at Shakti Yoga on Lexington Avenue. With a $3 door charge to help cover space rental, Leach and his dance partner Arlette will instruct attendees in the lindy style from 8 to 8:30, followed by dancing. "You have a lot of West Coast swing dancers in Buffalo," Leach said, referring to the style of swing that is more erect. "But Lindy is low and down to the floor."
Leach has done his best to meld with the local dancers, but said that often, when he tells people he dances Lindy, "They baulk and scoff, saying, 'I can't dance with you.'" To complicate matters further, Leach said that Dean Collins, who trained many a Hollywood dance troupe, picked up Savoy Ballroom swing, and morphed it into Hollywood swing, which was popularized in the movies. But the various distinctions between the many different styles of swing explain why, when Collins was asked what style he danced, he simplified it by answering, "It's all swing."
Leach got hooked on swing while watching the famous GAP ad back in 1998, in which khaki-clad teens danced to "Sing, Sing, Sing". Later, Leach went to a dance with a blind date and said that he and his date "just didn't get it". However, when he went back the next week and danced with someone else, it all clicked.
"It's all in the posture, the energy," Leach said. He's going around town, putting up fliers for the 14th. "I'm not sure I can entice the UB Swing Club off campus, but I'm hoping that people who don't know what it is but think it might be fun will show up."
Lindy Fix
Monday Jan 14, 8-?
Shakti Yoga
220 Lexington, Buffalo, NY
Beginners Needed! No partner necessary.
Free Lesson 8-8:30
swingbuffalo.com
Wear shoes that slide (or apply duct tape or moleskin to the bottom of those that don't).
The following is a letter Rob sent after I'd written up his event, and it's offers a complete and interesting backstory to this form of dance.
A little more history for you...
Lindy hop is a style of swing dance which evolved from the marrying of African beats and movement with the structure of european formal dancing. It's danced into the ground, with your butt sticking out and your weight over your toes.
The name Lindy Hop was a term coined by "Shorty" George, a renown dancer at the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem with a sense of humor who'd jokingly answered a reporter's question "What dance are you doing?" by drawing from the headlines of the day: Charles Lindberg's "hop" across the Atlantic. The father of modern lindy hop is Frankie Manning, currently alive & kicking at 94 years old. He, among other original Savoy ballroom dancers were tracked down during the swing resurgence in the mid-late 90s. Frankie still teaches lindy workshops to this day all over the world and is scheduled for a workshop in Rochester this year (I think in August) which I plan to attend.
Dean Collins has also majorly impacted modern lindy style because two dancers (both named Sylvia): Sylvia Sykes and Sylvia Skylar had been watching old hollywood movie clips of various lindy hop dancers and decided to track them down. Among others who did the same hunting down of other swing legends, they found Dean Collins and he taught them the style he danced in the movies first hand.
Dean refused to categorize the style or give it a name. When asked, he would always respond "It's all swing!", so Sylvia Skylar dubbed it "Hollywood Style". Sylvia Sykes latched onto another form of swing called Balboa which developed on the west coast the same time lindy was being developed on the east coast. Balboa is a very close and fast dancer's dance (because the moves are so small, it's not much of a spectator's dance) however it has evolved into a merged form called "Bal-Swing" which is more eye-catching. Two of the main contributors to modern balboa are Maxi Dorf and Willie Desatoff, both deceased.
Balboa's origins go back to the Balboa Pavilion and the Rendezvous Ballroom in Newport Beach, CA, where the dance floors were so crowded, people were forced to dance closer together. In fact, it's reported that, back in the 30s, if anyone danced in open position (not chest to chest) at either of these ballrooms, they were kicked out. Arlette and I are the only two balboa dancers in Buffalo, and I think the closest group of bal dancers outside of Buffalo are a group of students in Ithaca who do it as well. Lindy hop and balboa are danced in most major cities and dozens of countries and is picking up momentum every year.
I try to attend 3 or 4 national lindy and balboa events every year, including Camp Hollywood, All Balboa Weekend, Lindy Focus, Balboa Rendezvous, and many exchanges. I intend to bring Buffalo into this trend by developing a lindy and bal scene here. In fact, I took a scene-building class at an event I attended in Asheville, NC over new year's called "Lindy Focus".
An exchange (or "Lindy Exchange") is a phenomenon unique to swing dancing and reflects the unique social atmosphere you find at lindy and balboa dances. A host city invites people from all over the world to come and dance with them for a weekend. Local lindy hoppers open up their homes to visiting dancers and spend the whole weekend social dancing and "exchanging" moves and tips. There are no formal lessons at an exchange. This has allowed lindy and balboa to evolve quickly over the past decade. It's also considered rude to say no to the offer of a dance (with few exceptions) and it's considered to be optimal to hone your skills by dancing with as many different partners as possible so that you don't get married to one particular style.
"There are no wrong moves in traditional swing, only new ones" - a quote from the president of the UB Swing Dance Club: Brian Connor. Lindy hop and balboa are both considered to be dances focused on pure fun and excitement. It doesn't take much to become addicted.
Rob

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Comment Options
al-alo
aaaaaaaaawww. i thought swing buffalo mean something completely different!
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ECB
Oh, Al. What tipped you off, the half hour lesson or the need for dance shoes?
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al-alo
no, the half hour and dance shoes seemed pretty much right to me
:)
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RisingDamp666
Who do we blame for the logo?
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hepcat
I made the logo. I've gotten lots of compliments on it, actually.
BTW, the lesson will be jitterbug (a pre-requisite of lindy hop). Lindy's too difficult to cover in one half-hour class. I will be offering private lessons for those interested. Arlette and I will probably do a demo of both lindy and bal.
Rob
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hepcat
Also, a couple extra details... The UB swing dance club has been around a little while before I moved back here, so I'm not "starting" the scene per se. The club became an official temporary club mid-2007 and an official permanent club just recently at UB, so they've been around since before I got here, though not long. They're doing an awesome job on campus and my hope is to expand the scene off campus as well.
The Savoy Ballroom in Harlem was the birthplace of what's often called "Savoy Stye"-"Lindy Hop". "Hollywood Style"-"Lindy Hop" is a more recently named style and there's a lot of differing opinions as to the differences between the two styles. I think the most popular notion is the hollywood style has a more pronounced slot and savoy style is more circular. Hollywood style is also considered smoother. I believe that West Coast Swing and Hollywood Style Lindy Hop are very similar, mainly because they were both inspired by Dean Collins. Lots of people in this region believe that lindy hop is inherently a fast dance and that's not true. Yes, you can dance it fast, but lindy hoppers today dance all speeds and many prefer the slow groovy/bluesy music over big band. If you take that to an extreme, you get into a fairly new style called "Lindy Groove". However, since lindy evolves on the dance floor, you will find many differences of opinion on what lindy is, what each move is called, what constitutes good style, etc. and it varies a lot by region. There's a really great lindy scene in Rochester and I've noticed marked differences in lots of different aspects of the dance, including what people feel the difference is between hollywood and savoy styles.
There are also a number of people in Rochester who know balboa, which is closer than Ithaca, but from what I've witnessed, they hardly ever do it. The students in Ithaca however are addicted to it as much as I am and practice it regularly.
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hepcat
The first Lindy Fix was a great success!!! There was excitement in the air. The atmosphere was really up-beat! People thought the venue and turnout were great. The beginner lesson filled the studio. Everyone danced with everyone. I couldn't have asked for more. We got compliments all around for putting on the dance, having done a good job spreading the work, having given a good lesson, having done a good DJ set, and of course for the dances we had with everyone. Multiple people signed up for the email list and expressed interest in private lessons and soon to be organized classes in lindy hop and even balboa. I now even have volunteers to help out with organizing the next Lindy Fix.
The next Lindy Fix is in 2 weeks on Monday, January 28th. After that, I've made arrangements for Lindy Fix to be a weekly event.
The thing which made my night was a round of comments I received at the end of the dance. There were about a half dozen or so people who stayed 'til the very end. For this, I rewarded them by handing out a few free passes to the next Lindy Fix for them to hand out to their friends. The president of the UB Swing Dance Club, Brian Conner, exclaimed upon receiving the passes: "Wow! I don't know why, but for some reason this makes me feel SO COOL!". Others immediately commented that it made them feel like insiders who will be looked up to when they hand out the free passes.
I have some free passes left over. They will be attached to a few fliers which I will be putting up on the Elmwood strip (and possibly in other random places) so be on the lookout. This is the only place they will be available (other than the ones distributed at the dance).
Rob
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