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Just Dancing Salsa~ Cape Town

~ Feel. Play. Express.

Just Dancing Salsa~ Cape Town

Tag Archives: Just Dancing Salsa

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MASQUERADE SALSA PARTY 2015!

29 Monday Jun 2015

Tags

Buena Vista Eden on the Bay, Cape Town, Cape Town Salsa, Just Dancing Salsa, Masquerade Salsa Party, Mysterious, Salsa, Salsa at Buena Vista, Salsa Party, Sassy, Sexy, where to dance

Masquerade Party flyer

Posted by Lani Strumpfer | Filed under Salsa Classes, Salsa Party

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Salsa Classes!!!

25 Tuesday Feb 2014

Tags

Beginners, Cape Town, Cape Town Salsa, Dancing Tips, good dancers, Just Dancing Salsa, Pointers for Beginners, salsa classes, where to dance, Zula Bar

Just Dancing Salsa Classes (2)

Posted by Lani Strumpfer | Filed under Dancing Tips, salsa, Salsa Classes

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Masquerade Salsa Party!! 22nd Feb!!!

01 Saturday Feb 2014

Tags

Beginners, Cape Town, Cape Town Salsa, Dancing, DJ Taliep, Frank Paco, good dancers, Just Dancing Salsa, Loves, Masquerade Salsa Party, Myserious, Party, Party on Long street, Salsa, salsa dance floor, Salsa Party, Salsa Party at Zula Bar, salsa practice, Sassy, Sexy, where to dance, Zula Bar

Masquerade Party invite2

 

Join the event! 

Posted by Lani Strumpfer | Filed under salsa, Salsa Party, Uncategorized

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Salsa Party at Zula Bar!!

13 Wednesday Nov 2013

Tags

Beginners, Just Dancing Salsa, Party, Salsa Party, Salsa Party at Zula Bar, where to dance, Zula Bar

Salsa Party at Zula Bar

Posted by Lani Strumpfer | Filed under salsa, Salsa Party

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Following and its Intricacies…

10 Monday Jun 2013

Posted by Lani Strumpfer in Dancing Tips, salsa, Uncategorized

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Tags

Beginners, Dancing Tips, good dancers, How to dance, Just Dancing Salsa, L.A. Style, Pointers for Beginners, Salsa, where to dance

Following- some seem to think it is a rather mindless activity. They are wrong. Following involves intricacies unthought-of by many a dancer.

In my experience there are two main goals to following. The first is listening to your partner. This is not listening with your ears, but with everything else in your body. It is your posture.  It is where your weight is placed. It is what you are looking at. It is a state of utter readiness.

Your posture needs to be correct in order to follow correctly. Ever notice that your ability to dance decreases in direct proportion to how tired you are? That is partly because your tiredness means that you are moving and dancing halfheartedly- the first thing you let go is your posture.  What exactly does your posture need to be? Let’s start at the bottom: your toes. on your toes

You need to be on them. If you are standing with your feet together, your heels need to be able to shift from side to side without you having to adjust anything in your weight. Therefore you need to be leaning forward. I have always found the higher my heels are off the ground the better my salsa technique becomes; as the saying goes- Nose over Toes. If you draw a line from your nose perpendicular to the ground, that line should be well past your toes.  This leads to two results. Your technique improves incredibly and you get beautifully shaped calf muscles!

Added to you posture needs to be your core muscles (stomach muscles). These need to be engaged (somewhat clenched). This helps with balance and keeps you centralised. It is rather difficult to be aware of your core muscles in a dance, therefore this needs to become muscle memory. It needs to be practiced. Keep them engaged all day- when you walk, talk, sit and work. 

Moving further up, your chest and shoulders need to be upright and rolled back. When you are standing with your nose over toes, lift your chest as if you are proud of them then role your shoulders back and keep them there. It feels strange at first but later you’ll feel like you’re a dancer!

Why is this posture so important? Without it, you will be unbalanced and your weight will be all over the place and thus you will not be able to follow the steps your partner has in mind.

Another part of listening to your partner is what you are looking at. If you are looking at the people watching you, it is very likely that you are thinking only of yourself. Self-consciousness; be it from pride or from embarrassment will kill the dance.  If you are looking at nothing in particular, it is very likely that your mind is elsewhere, go there or let it go and focus on the dance. Your eyes need to meet your partner’s eyes. This is true for leads and followers. They must meet the eyes of the other as much as is physically possible. Eye contact opens up the lines of communication. It makes you aware of his movements and more aware of his lead, and thus your following improves.  It also leads to smiles, laughs and sometimes even giggles which always perks up a dance!

There are of course those leads who simply refuse to look at you. dont-make-eye-contact-13056

If you find yourself dancing with such a rude creature, you’ll have to make do with focusing on his nose or the center of his chest (depending on his height and yours) as much as possible. This at least will keep you aware of his movements, even though the human connection has been utterly lost!

    The second goal to following is listening to the music. At the most basic level, you need to be on the beat- that is (in LA Style Salsa) your right foot hits 1, your left foot hits 5 and you have your quicks and slows in all the right places. Hopefully your partner is also on this beat. If you are having an unfortunate dance and he is not, it is your unhappy task of finding the beat that he is on. This may mean NOT listening to the music.

Moving away from such sad thoughts let’s focus now on the music. Salsa music is intricate, there is a lot happening in each song. Some people, who heard salsa for the first time, commented that it sounds like noise. If you listen to salsa often enough and become much more intimately acquainted with it, you’ll learn to pick out the different instruments and hear the tunes and beats that each instrument is adding to the song. Part of this is also learning to distinguish the different highlights. These are the “special moments” in the song. They can be one particular beat or note or they can be a pattern repeated once or twice in the song or every so often.  Part of following is being able to “hit” these highlights without it affecting your partners lead in any way. Thus you “hit” them by moving you arms (if they are free) or your hips, legs or feet, shoulders and sometimes even your chest or bum to the rhythm of the highlight. Therefore you use any part of your body which your partner is not using at that time. We call this styling. Styling often happens without the highlights of the music. But it is best and at its most beautiful when the styling and highlights become one and the same. This takes time and practice to perfect.  It takes lots of time and lots of practice, especially because it may not affect your partner’s dance.  

Listening to your partner can only be practiced when you are dancing with someone- in a class or on the social dance floor. This is also best practiced by dancing with many different leads of many different levels. Listening to the music needs first to be practiced off the dance floor. You need to get to know the genre intimately. Listen to it all the time. In the car, in the shower, when cooking, when cleaning (it makes cleaning so much more fun!) when chilling, and if you are able to, when working as well. While you are listening during your daily routine, hit the highlights whenever you can. While soaping up in the shower, hit the highlight with your free hand. While driving, use your shoulders or a chest pop. When you reach the level of highlighting while queuing in the shops, you know you are getting somewhere.  Once you get used to what the highlights are and you start hitting them on your own then start adding them to your dance while following your partner.  Soon you will be doing what I love to call PLAY.

 Dance anywhere!

Till next time,

Play! Feel! Express!

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Our New Venue!!!

15 Friday Feb 2013

Tags

Beginners, Cape Town, Just Dancing Salsa, Salsa, salsa classes, where to dance, Zula Bar

zula salsa eflyer

Posted by Lani Strumpfer | Filed under salsa, Uncategorized

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What is Playful Dancing?

21 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by Lani Strumpfer in Dancing Tips, salsa, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Dancing, Dancing Tips, good dancers, Just Dancing Salsa, Loves, Pointers for Beginners, Salsa, salsa classes, salsa dance floor, salsa practice

What takes a dance from being a series of spins and steps to being that 3-minute-moment you want to repeat over and over again? Is it the song? Is it your partner? Is it your own dancing?

I say, all of the above and more!

There are several aspects for me which takes a dance from just a dance to that dance, the very reason you came out that evening.

The first aspect is the music- when the music strikes its first note within your being and you start moving to it before you hit the dance floor, you know its going to be a very good three+ minutes, but there are several more aspects which come into play.

One is your partner during that song. Is your partner enjoying the music? Do they connect with you by looking you in the eye and smiling? Is there laughter between you when a mistake is made by either of you? Or is he or she too worried about the next step? Or too worried about the people watching so that they are forgetting to enjoy the moment with you? Or too worried about his leading or her following? These things make a huge difference in a dance. Are you overly worried while you’re on the dance floor? Your partner can tell and it is minimising their enjoyment of the dance. The next time you dance with anyone, look them in the eye, allow that connection between you, smile and laugh and enjoy yourself!

But there is another aspect in making the dance that dance. That dance is a dance which includes what I like to call play. Play I will define as spontaneous movement originating from either of the partners, to which the other partner responds spontaneously without either partner taking away from the current step or beat. Therefore play at a simple level could be seen as styling, but it is also so much more than styling. It is dancing! It is styling that involves spontaneity within a four-way connection. It is your connection to the music, your partner’s connection to the music, your connection to your partner and your connection to yourself.

To play in a dance you need to be able to dance with more than your feet and the steps and patterns which you have been taught. You need to dance with your entire body! Play can involve popping or rolling, flicking, combing, twisting and even hopping and so much more!

Play can make a dance, and a lack thereof can break it…

Do you play when you dance?

 

If you’re keen to learn a little more about how to play within a dance, pull in at our BODY MOVEMENT WORKSHOP on SATURDAY 24th November at 3pm at Barbosa Social Café! Contact us to book your place!

Albert Torres was here!

22 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Lani Strumpfer in salsa, Salsa Stories, Uncategorized

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Tags

Albert Torres, Barbosa Social Cafe, Cape Town, Cape Town Salsa Congress 2013, Just Dancing Salsa

Who is Albert?

On the inside Albert is just another guy who loves Salsa, he loves the music and he loves the dance. Because of his love for Salsa and his Puerto Rican heritage he now dedicates his life to promoting Salsa and Latin Music and Dance all around the world.

And he is good at it!!

Albert Torres has organised over 350 Salsa congresses internationally in all kinds of exotic places, including, Dubai, The United Arab Emirates, Japan, Hong Kong, Brazil, Bulgaria, Romania, China, Colombia, Venezuela, Spain, Mexico, Peru, Holland, Hamburg, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden, France, Ecuador, New Zealand, Australia, Puerto Rico, and in numerous cities across America. These congresses happen annually and are attended by thousands of people from the entire globe.

Why was Albert here?

Albert Torres came to Cape Town thanks to the careful planning of our friends Theo (TeddyBear) Mseka and Marcel Stevens. He came with two objectives. One was to visit the Salsa Community of Cape Town and to give a talk on the History of Salsa which happened on the 14th October 2012.

His second objective was to experience Cape Town, South Africa in order to plan the Cape Town Salsa Congress 2013…! Albert must have liked what he saw for the dates for the Cape Town Salsa Congress 2013 are 31 October to 3rd November 2013!!! It already has 2 international acts confirmed and is promising to be an amazing few days!

Albert  also visited Just Dancing Salsa…

On Wednesday 10 October 2012, Albert Torres visited Just Dancing Salsa at Barbosa Social Café!

 The evening started with our usual incredibly fun Improvers and Intermediate classes. With a great turn out, a photographer, and a bar two steps away, the evening rapidly turned into an absolute party. After the classes, the ladies put on some pretty dress and we all joined the awesome Wesley Solomon (from Tren Latino) and the incredibly talented Keith Coxon for some live latin and salsa beats on the deck. Here Albert was having his dinner, but he soon joined in and did his thing on the dance floor along with everyone else.  

With fun spins and foot leads, he lead the salseras  around the floor and shook hands with all the salseros. In this way we all met the man who was under the cap and behind the dark glasses, the man who has put into effect the Cape Town Salsa Congress 2013!!!

 Exciting times!!

Don’t waste the music…

09 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Lani Strumpfer in salsa, Salsa Party, Uncategorized

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Tags

1950s Havana Party, Barbosa Social Cafe, Cape Town, Just Dancing Salsa, Salsa Party, Waterfront, where to dance

4 more sleeps… till…

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Saturday 13 October… Havana 1950s… It’s going to be AWESOME!

What to wear for the 1950s Havana Salsa Party!

04 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by Lani Strumpfer in salsa, Salsa Party

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Tags

1950s Havana Party, Barbosa Social Cafe, Just Dancing Salsa, Salsa Party, Waterfront, What to wear, where to dance

Some of you might be wondering what you can wear for the upcoming 1950s Havana Party. So I decided to give you some ideas:

Men:

What you need to be thinking is Cuba: Cigars, hats, smart shirts, brightly coloured and braces. Much like these:

Ladies:

Your dress (yes, it should be a dress) should be along the lines of a sexy, classic style, cocktail dress- floral or brightly coloured. Flowers in the hair would be a GREAT idea- but make sure you have secured them well- you will be spinning quite a bit! Think ‘Dirty Dancing 2’ and you will be on the right track! Here is some inspiration:

See you all on the 13th October, if not before!!

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