Meredith & Harold

ROUND DANCING — CHOREOGRAPHED BALLROOM

EDUCATIONAL ARTICLES

by Harold & Meredith Sears
Some of our essays are long. If you are interested in a specific topic, use the "find" or "search" function in your browser. Next, try the master index to all figures and actions or a site search. If you can't find the answer you need, if a description is unclear, or if you have any comment or question, please let me know. I'll be glad to help.
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WHAT IS ROUND DANCING?

Round dancing is choreographed and cued ballroom dancing.  We dance most of the popular ballroom rhythms, such as foxtrot and waltz, cha-cha and rumba, and many others listed in the navigation bar to the left.  This is a pretty long list. There is certainly no need to get bored with round dancing.

The exciting difference between round dancing and free-style ballroom dancing is that each round dance has been fully choreographed ahead of time.  A beautiful piece of music is selected, and the different steps or figures are chosen to fit the music exactly.  If the music swells and pauses briefly, then a dance step that rises and stretches is put into that place.  If there is a little syncopation in another part of the song, then a quick little step is inserted.  The creation of a piece of choreography is like engineering a machine, with every gear and lever in just the right place to give smooth and flowing motion.  The step-by-step instructions on how to dance this choreography is written out in what is called a "cue sheet."

Secondly, there is a cuer or leader at the front of the ballroom who tells the dancers what steps to do.  As the music plays, and just ahead of the beat, so the dancers have time to respond, the cuer names each dance figure in the choreography.  The cueing lets us dance lots and lots of dances without having to memorize the choreography.  You may recognize that this is the way square dancing is done, with a caller telling the couples what to do:  “swing your partner, do-si-do.” In round dancing, the cuer might say: "open telemark, pick up, and diamond turn."

But compare this round dancing with free-style ballroom.  In ballroom dancing, the man has to think of what figures he wants to do to this music and then he has to lead the woman to do those figures.  Most men just aren’t that sharp—to do at least three things at the same time: think up the choreography, make his feet do what he has thought up, and lead the lady to do it with him.  When I ballroom dance, I can usually think of maybe a half-dozen different things to do, and then we do them over and over.  Meredith whispers, “let’s do something different,” but my mind is a blank.

So, for the man, the round dance cuer is a savior.  Someone else has thought up what steps should be done to this particular piece of music.  The choreographer has carefully studied the music ahead of time and has selected just the steps that best fit each measure of music, and the cuer reminds us of what we should do as we dance.  Instead of only 6 or 8 different steps, that I could think of myself, a round dance might easily have 30 or 40 different figures.  No, we certainly don’t get bored doing the same steps, over and over again.

And then the next dance of the evening will contain a different selection of figures, arranged in still different sequences.  Literally thousands of round dances have been choreographed over the years, and every one is unique.  What other hobby provides such richness, such mental and physical challenge, and at the same time allows you to hold a beautiful (or handsome) partner in your arms all the while?

Some Other Views—

A Ballroom Dancer's First Look at Round Dancing -- Licht

What Is Round Dancing? -- Prufer

What Is Round Dancing -- Cronkite

What Is Round Dancing? -- Cantrell

What Is Round Dancing -- Norton

What Is This Thing Called Round Dancing -- Burke

What Is Round Dancing -- Waguespack

What Is Round Dancing -- Eum




If you would like to read other articles on dance position, technique, styling, and specific dance rhythms, you may visit the article TOC.

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Page last revised 12/1/07