Posts Tagged ‘beginner ballroom dancers’
The Field Guide to Couples’ Dance Styles
Once you have been dancing awhile, you can spot dancers in a crowd.
You look for the tell-tale swing dancer signs. Wearing dance shoes in public, carrying a shoe bag rather than a hand bag, chewing gum in time to background music, bobbing head and making miniature leading movements… these are all things that separate swing dancers from the non-dancers in a room.
But once you are at the swing dance… That’s when the people watching really starts to get fun!
Leave it to Paul McClure to classify and organize the people you will see out on the dance floor, East Coast Swing dancing or otherwise cutting a rug.
“The following field guide to couples’ dance styles covers dancers regularly encountered on the dance floor at most large dance halls. You may want to take this guide with you dancing, much as you might take your Audubon’s Guide on a bird watching expedition, to see how many species you can spot.
- Bobbers – Nod heads up and down in time to music; rarely out of time; have gift to avoid vertigo; vague kinship to ceramic dogs riding on rear window panels.
- Danceaholics – Drip sweat; dance every dance; never leave the floor… have repertoire of line dances for emergencies.
- Doubletimers – Takes twice as many steps per beat of music as other dancers; [They] look down at floor and don’t bother with turns…
- Flat Footers – Dance well without ever appearing to move their feet; in West Coast [they] look like traffic cops directing cars up and down the street.
- Floor Hogs- Careen around the dance floor with feet, elbows and body parts a’flying; often add excitement with unexpected stops and sudden lurches sideways; observers develop inexplicable desire to play pinball.
- Goat Ropers – [They] proceed straight down line of dance with no change in speed or line; constantly turn ladies, who get to run over and back, up and down and side to side; guys never tire; not so for partners.
- Hand Jobbers- Overflow with fancy turns from strong-armed but ambiguous leads; view dancing as a contest to see if they can catch partners with unfollowable moves; requires a steady supply of polite partners.
- Jigglers- Move entire bodies up and down on each beat of music; have good coordination as many things seem to be happening at once; compare to Bobbers whose heads only go up on the upbeat and down on the down beat.
- Pumpers – Pump hands up and down in time with footwork; extended arms drop down on man’s left step and rise on his right step; few turns since the arms are otherwise occupied.
- Skaters- Dance smoooothly; when the dancers’ feet aren’t visible, their smoothness and constant speed make them appear to be on skates; the most riveting style for spectators to watch
- Wannabe Instructors- offer constant criticism and instruction to partners while dancing, even when total strangers, especially when total strangers; pester more advanced dancers to teach them moves while social dancing in heavy traffic; feelings not easily hurt.
- Wrestlers – Concentrate on developing moves before fundamentals; able to steer wrestle any lady into any position on any foot; boosts liniment sales.
Excerpt from “Paul McClure’s Country Dance Etiquette” by Paul McClure
Wait a minute. Could I be on that list?

Amy and Jason Barnes cutting a rug
As much fun as it is spot the above dancers and their tell-tale signs, we laugh because we see them as true… and inside each and everyone of us. Some of the habits and signs present themselves now in a minimal fashion, but as beginners we were all brimming with them.
It is hard to escape being a “Pumper” or a “Bobber” when you first learn the East Coast Swing. Beginner swing dancers often resemble children acting out “I’m a little tea pot” when tipping from side to side. Trouble with rhythm turns dancers into “Double Timers,” who speed up out of fear of falling behind or ”Flat Footers,” who have given-up on keeping in time to the music or are so worried about getting the arms right, that they stop moving their feet altogether.
Many of the these funny dance styles and habits develop because the dancer is not grounded or centered in the dance. Other habits develop because of a lack of connection and ability to communicate with a dance partner. There is away to learn how to dance that not only teaches you dance steps, but helps you to feel more centered, gounded and connected to your partners. It is called ZeDiamond Dance Method.
Learning to dance is so much more than just knowing a bunch of dance moves or dance steps. Traditional methods of teaching dance are analytical rely on teaching the mind, not the body. With ZeDiamond Dance Method – Learn the East Coast Swing DVD’s, you learn how to feel the rhythm of East Coast Swing and the music though your body. This frees up the mind and allows you to enjoy dancing without thinking about what you are doing. Click here to learn about the history of ZeDiamond Dance Method and how it was developed.
Deborah-Marie Diamond and Zeki Maviyildiz created ZeDiamond Dance Method because of what they saw in thier local ballroom dance community of Asheville, NC. They saw not only beginner ballroom dancers who struggled with rhythm, but people who had been dancing for years that still struggled with rhythm as well.
This got them thinking. As a result, they created a new way to teach dance that taught how to feel the rhythm of the music while teaching easy to learn East Coast Swing dance steps… And ZeDiamond Dance Method was born.
Do you think ZeDiamond Dance Method could be for you? Click here to see if it is right for you. You can also read what other swing and ballroom dancers have said about ZeDiamond Dance Method by clicking here.
This reformed bobber, danceaholic and jiggler (somedays more reformed than others) looks forward to seeing you out on the dance floor.
