Quickstep. Music for ballroom dancing.




Quickstep music listened to online




QUICK STEP

As mentioned above, the quick-step is a kind of foxtrot. The elements of the dance are sliding steps, a variety of rhythmic pattern, as well as jumps and turns. This gives the dance life and energizing spark. Unusual dance requires experience, but if you show patience, good luck will not keep you waiting.

Music for ballroom dancing Quickstep

QUICKSTEP MUSIC FOR BALLROOM DANCING ONLINE - uk-ballroom.co.uk/music/

If you have always wondered what is the lightest, most lively, funniest dance, then remember - this dance is called the quickstep. Its serenity together with incendiary nature is created by characteristic for this dance light jumps and various turns. Interest is given by the change of rhythm quick and slow, which makes the audience admire the performance of the quickstep.

This dance has no age restrictions: children, as a rule, dance the quickstep brilliantly, young people give all their energy to the performance, increasing the nobility of this dance, and adults give a huge range of nuances of quickstep: difficult figures, unassailable turns with unique movements and, of course, jumps.

The lightness and mobility of the performers are the foundations of the quickstep, or rather the fast foxtrot, which became famous in England in the 30's. In addition, the quickstep is the basis of standard dances, a kind of pocket grammar, the fastest and most famous of all American and European dances.

The origins of the quickstep can be traced back to the American comedian Harry Fox. One day he danced a funny dance. His performance was so beloved by everyone that his name became the name of the dance movement and music - foxtrot, which means "Fox's step", consisting of both slow steps on the 2nd and 4th beat of the music, and fast ones. It originally had 32 bars, but they had to be lowered so as not to confuse the audience's perception and to dance without fuss.

The emergence of jazz after World War I changed the music of the foxtrot: its tempo became 50 beats per minute. This elusive tempo gave birth to the Charleston dance in 1925. The Charleston was able to exist together with the fast foxtrot, but, having undergone changes, it received undoubted distinctions, setting the boundaries between the Charleston and the new dance, namely the quickstep, which consists of a set of steps with jumps, of course, together with features of the Charleston and polka, but is performed only to fast music.

Quickstep music was originally performed by an orchestra, which played the swing, then musicians, inspired by the incendiary energy of the dancers, have created a unique melody specifically for this dance, but for this had to reduce the tempo from 54-56 beats per minute to 48-50 beats per minute, which made it more convenient. But even with a decrease in rhythm quickstep retained its ease, ease of mind.

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