Sunday, February 7, 2010
History of B-Boying
Breakdancing is a street dance style that evolved as part of the hip hop movement. It was also used among gangsters as a way to settle their differences rather than fighting. Whoever performed the most creative moves in a single or routine dance wins the battle. It Replace actual fighting and turf disputes with a breakdancing battle. The theory was sound, often with the best dancer being the best fighter. This way it solved many gang fighting’s. I went and look up were breakdancing originated from and there were many websites on breakdancing and where it originated from. It was not hard to find where breakdancing originated from because most of the websites has the same information where breakdancing originated from. Some sites featured information about where breakdancing originated from before it started in the U.S. Breakdancing seems so different from all other kinds of dancing that the first question people ask when they see it is: "Where did these kids learn to dance like that?" To many people, this dance seems to have come out of nowhere. But like everything else, Breakdance did come from somewhere, something and someone. In the U.S Breakdancing started in the late 60’s and exploded into the 70’s and 80’s among a large population especially with the youth. According to research, it was introduced among African American communities in South Bronx of New York. Over the years break dancing has borrowed freely from all types of dances and martial arts. In the case of Breakdancing, the someone is the great superstar, James Brown, and the something is the dance, the Good Foot. James Brown, the godfather of break dancing, was quite influential, he changed breakdancing and made it famous. It was his dance style that helped to shape breakdancing and point it in a new direction. He made a huge success with his smash hit “Get on the Good Foot”. Afrika Bambaataa, the legendary DJ, also influenced breakdancing. He was marked as the man most responsible for the successful growth of breakdancing. He popularized breakdancing with various musical changes.
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