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Street dance, Street Dance or StreetDance may also refer to: StreetDance 3D, a British dance film also known as StreetDance in its non-3D version; Street Dance (song), a 1984 hit single by the American hip hop act Break Machine "Street dancing", a Philippine English term for parades in the festivals in the Philippines with dancers in elaborate ...
Afro-American vernacular dance. Black Bottom; Blues dance; Boogie-woogie; Boogaloo (funk dance) Breakaway; Cabbage Patch; Cakewalk; Charleston; Chicago stepping
It is a non-categorized, index list of specific dances. It may also include dances which could either be considered specific dances or a family of related dances. For example, ballet, ballroom dance and folk dance can be single dance styles or families of related dances. See following for categorized lists: List of dance style categories
Breaking in the street, 2013 A breakdancer standing on his head in Cologne, Germany, 2017. Breakdancing or breaking, also called b-boying (when performed by men) or b-girling (women), is a style of street dance originated by African Americans and Puerto Ricans in the Bronx borough of New York City.
Liquid and digits is a type of gestural, interpretive, rave and urban street dance that sometimes involve aspects of pantomime.The term invokes the word liquid to describe the fluid-like motion of the dancer's body and appendages and digits to refer to illusions constructed with the dancer's fingers.
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Krumping is a global culture that evolved through African-American street dancing popularized in the United States during the early 2000s, characterized by free, expressive, exaggerated, and highly energetic movement. [1] The people who originated krumping saw the dance as a means for them to escape gang life. [2]
Hip-hop dance is a fusion dance genre with influences from older street dance styles created in the 1970s. These include uprock, breaking, and the funk styles. [1] Breaking was created in The Bronx, New York, in the early 1970s. [2] In its earliest form, it began as elaborations on James Brown's "Good Foot" dance, which debuted in 1972.