When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Quickstep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quickstep

    The quickstep is a light-hearted dance of the standard ballroom dances. The movement of the dance is fast and powerfully flowing and sprinkled with syncopations. The upbeat melodies that quickstep is danced to make it suitable for both formal and informal events. Its origins are in combination of slow foxtrot combined with the Charleston, a ...

  3. Country-western two-step - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Country-western_two-step

    Country-western two-step. The country/western two-step, often called the Texas two-step[2] or simply the two-step, [3] is a country/western dance usually danced to country music in common time. "Traditional [Texas] two-step developed, my theory goes, because it is suited to fiddle and guitar music played two-four time with a firm beat [found in ...

  4. Peabody (dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peabody_(dance)

    Description. The Peabody is a brisk dance that covers a lot of space on the dance floor. Danced to almost any 2/4 or 4/4 ragtime tune of appropriate tempo, it is essentially a fast one-step, with long, gliding strides and a few syncopations. The leader changes sides as he travels around the floor and adds promenades and simple turns as the ...

  5. Ballroom dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballroom_dance

    It is a fast moving dance, so men are allowed to close their feet and the couples move in short syncopated steps. Quickstep includes the walks, runs, chasses, and turns of the original foxtrot dance, with some other fast figures such as locks, hops, run, quick step, jump and skips. Quick step is performed as an International Standard dance.

  6. Cha-cha-cha (dance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cha-cha-cha_(dance)

    Cuba. The cha-cha-cha (also called cha-cha), is a dance of Cuban origin. [1][2] It is danced to the music of the same name introduced by the Cuban composer and violinist Enrique Jorrin in the early 1950s. This rhythm was developed from the danzón-mambo. The name of the dance is an onomatopoeia derived from the shuffling sound of the dancers ...

  7. Lock step (dance move) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lock_step_(dance_move)

    Lock steps are common in the quickstep. Among the basic figures of Argentine tango there is a similar "la cruzada" ("crossing) position of the legs. Ballroom dance figures. There are several dance figures with names involving the words "lock" or "lock step", as well as several figures that use the lock as part of the pattern. Back lock; Forward ...

  8. Sequence dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequence_dance

    Sequence dancing is a form of dance in which a preset pattern of movements is followed, usually to music which is also predetermined. Sequence dancing may include dances of many different styles. The term may include ballroom dances which move round the floor as well as line, square and circle dances. Sequence dancing in general is much older ...

  9. V6 (quickstep) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V6_(Quickstep)

    V6 (quickstep) V6 is a silver level dance pattern of the quickstep International Standard Ballroom dance syllabus. The couple moves diagonally to the center ( DC) and then diagonally to the wall ( DW ), thus sweeping a V-shape on the floor. [ 1]