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Modern Jive is a dance style derived from swing, Lindy Hop, rock and roll, salsa and various other dance styles, the main difference being the simplification of footwork by removing syncopation such as chasse. The term "French Jive" is occasionally used instead, reflecting the origins of the style, as is the term "Smooth Jive".
LeRoc is a form of Modern Jive, a dance style that evolved in the 1980s out of dances including Swing, Lindy Hop and Rock and Roll.The main innovation was to simplify the footwork, making LeRoc very adaptable to different types of music in a 4-beat, fast or slow.
The jive is a dance style that originated in the United States from African Americans in the early 1930s. The name of the dance comes from the name of a form of African-American vernacular slang , popularized in the 1930s by the publication of a dictionary by Cab Calloway , the famous jazz bandleader and singer. [ 1 ]
Skip Jive is a British variant of the Jive, popular in the 1950s and 1960s, danced to trad jazz. Modern Jive (also known as LeRoc and Ceroc©) developed in the 1980s, reputedly from a French form of Jive. Modern Jive is not technically of the Jive family, which typically use a 6-count pattern of various combinations of walking and triple steps ...
Hand jive, a dance particularly associated with music of the 1950s; Jive (dance), a dance style that originated in the United States from African Americans in the early 1930s; Modern Jive, a dance style derived from swing, Lindy Hop, rock and roll, salsa and others; Skip jive, a British dance, descended from the jazz dances of the 1930s and ...
Feliksdal, B (2003) Modern Tap Dance, ISBN 90-807699-2-4 Bekebooks Feliksdal, B (2004) Jazz Dance Syllabus Jazz, Rhythm, Body and Soul . ISBN 90-807699-4-0 Bekebooks.
LeRoc (Modern Jive, Ceroc) Les Lanciers; Letkajenkka (also known as Letkis, Letkajenka, Letkiss, Letka-Enka, Let's Kiss Jenka, La Yenka) Leventikos ; Lezginka (Russian Caucasus Region) Lezim; Likok Pulo; Limbo (dancers pass under horizontal pole) Linđo; Lindy Hop (Swing) Line dance; Lion dance; Lipothymiarikos
In that routine, the Nicholas Brothers leapt exuberantly across the orchestra's music stands and danced on the top of a grand piano in a call and response act with the pianist, to the tune of "Jumpin' Jive". [3] Fred Astaire once told the brothers that this dance number was the greatest number he had ever seen on film. [14]