PDA

View Full Version : Hey Chi Town - Stepping has made the NY Times



Leslie
11-18-2003, 01:30 PM
November 18, 2003
Chicago - Born 'Stepping' Gains Following
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 2:11 p.m. ET

CHICAGO (AP) -- It's Tuesday at the 50 Yard Line Bar and Grill and the dance floor is packed with couples twirling and sashaying to the mellow sounds of Barry White, Gerald Levert and other R&B balladeers.

The dancers are cooler than cool, executing intricate moves best described with one word -- smooth. This is stepping -- or, if you will, steppin' -- a distinctive Chicago-bred derivative of swing dancing that is spreading across the country.

Stepping originated in the 1950s as the Bop, taking on its current name around 1990. The dance is a six- or eight-count movement during which partners face each other and clasp hands while alternately moving side-to-side and spinning to the beat.

Those are the basics. But stepping is better defined by the individual and improvisational style on display most nights in Chicago and its suburbs, where the dance has had a cultlike following among blacks for more than four decades.

``Stepping is about more than just dancing. It's a social way of life,'' said Herb Kent, a disc jockey at WVAZ-FM and longtime observer of the scene. ``Stepping was born here. It probably goes back to the days when jazz was hot and the dances like the Lindy Hop and the Jitterbug were so prominent here.''

With help from R&B singer and Chicago native R. Kelly, whose current single and video for ``Step In the Name of Love'' is getting heavy airplay, stepping is gaining devotees from Washington, D.C., to Atlanta to Los Angeles.

``When I first saw it, I fell in love with it,'' said Benjamin Cunningham, an avid ballroom dancer in Detroit, where stepping has joined a list of dances that include the Latin Hustle and salsa. The accountant and part-time dance instructor learned how to step about 18 months ago and now teaches it locally.

``I don't even want to do the other dances anymore,'' Cunningham said.

Stepping's spread doesn't surprise Pete Frazier, a Chicago impresario who has produced a stepping video and plans to complete a ``how to'' DVD later this year.

``It's a dance where you don't have to break a sweat but you can still go out and enjoy yourself because there's a lot of creativity involved,'' said Frazier, 42, a stepper since high school and winner of several contests. ``I teach it at workshops in other cities, but there are not enough hours in the day to get to all of the requests.''

R. Kelly's song, from his current ``Chocolate Factory'' CD, has all the elements of a classic steppers' tune -- sensual lyrics and a smooth, mid-tempo groove.

``Ever since that R. Kelly song, people here have been getting into it,'' said Belinda Haywood, a dance instructor in Cleveland who started teaching stepping in July. She has spent the past year taking lessons in Chicago from James Calvin.

``My students range in age from 18 up to 80,'' said Calvin, adding that his classes are ethnically diverse and attract blue-collar workers as well as doctors, lawyers and other professionals. For those who are ready to test their skills on the dance floor, Calvin offers a caveat: Counting your steps is a no-no!

``The dance is a basic six- or eight-step dance usually, but when you get on the floor and dance you don't ask the lady what step she wants to do,'' Calvin said. ``You just pick up the count and go with the flow.''

Not only might a novice stepper lose some cool points by fixating on function rather than form, he or she also runs the risk of rejection.

``If a stepper thinks you don't know how to step, you might get left out on the dance floor,'' said Clint Mitchell, a 30-year stepper.

For 53-year-old grandmother Patricia Gray, Tuesday ``is my night to step.'' She has been a regular at the 50 Yard Line, located on the city's South Side, for the last five years.

``It's a form of exercise,'' Gray said. ``My family knows not to bother me on Tuesday because they know where I'll be.''

Stepping's exact origins are harder to pinpoint. From dancers to DJs to organizers of steppers sets, confusion abounds. While it is widely viewed as an offshoot of the Bop, its hard to pinpoint how the dance became known as stepping.

``It's like the blues or jazz,'' according to Dan Land, 47, who runs a Web site devoted to all things stepping. ``You can't really specify who created it. It's something that evolved.''

And as other dances (the Jerk, Hustle, Electric Slide) emerged and faded from pop culture, the Bop remained on the Chicago scene. Land added. ``It would always be around and people would keep changing it,'' he said. ``In the '70s it was called the New Bop and, later on, stepping.''

Frazier, whose dance party billed as the ``World's Largest Steppers Set'' drew about 2,000 dancers from Detroit, Atlanta, Milwaukee and elsewhere Labor Day weekend, also hosts an annual convention in Las Vegas. He hopes that stepping will develop a mainstream following the way salsa dancing has -- a view shared by Land.

``That has always been one of my objectives,'' Land said. ``It's a black cultural dance to me and people are beginning to do it all over the country. They may call it Ballin' (in Detroit) or 'Hand Dancing' (in Washington, D.C.), but regardless of what you call it, it all comes from Chicago.''

------

On the Net:

http://steppersexpress.com/


Copyright 2003 The Associated Press | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | Help | Back to Top

Mack-Williams
11-18-2003, 01:44 PM
I haven't gotten into stepping yet. I would have to change my whole wardrope. Loud color suits and gators and matching colored hats to go with my suit. Then I would be a Mack for real.

mdpm99
11-18-2003, 01:47 PM
smile.gif

d

fred da warrior
11-18-2003, 02:04 PM
Originally posted by Mack-Williams:
I haven't gotten into stepping yet. I would have to change my whole wardrope. Loud color suits and gators and matching colored hats to go with my suit. Then I would be a Mack for real. :D graemlins/rofl.gif

D J 1 3 8
11-18-2003, 02:06 PM
Originally posted by Mack-Williams:
I haven't gotten into stepping yet. I would have to change my whole wardrope. Loud color suits and gators and matching colored hats to go with my suit. Then I would be a Mack for real. like Steve Harvey?

Mack-Williams
11-18-2003, 02:08 PM
Originally posted by DJ 138:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Mack-Williams:
I haven't gotten into stepping yet. I would have to change my whole wardrope. Loud color suits and gators and matching colored hats to go with my suit. Then I would be a Mack for real. like Steve Harvey? </font>[/QUOTE]Yes, that is stepper's gear.

fred da warrior
11-18-2003, 02:18 PM
I just saw the "Step in the Name of Love" video on MTV2 recently and the video was smoking hot. If y'all get a chance, check it out if only for the smooth ass moves. His newest cut, "Touched a Dream" is even hotter than Step in the Name of Love in the steppers circuit. I ain't really crazy about Kels' lifestyle choices, but his ass is putting product on the streets, so I'll give him propers for that.

Y'all older heads better get some step moves in your repetoire, y'all tired asses can't be clubbin' wit' these young cats forever......
:D

[ November 18, 2003, 02:19 PM: Message edited by: fred ]

Mack-Williams
11-18-2003, 02:22 PM
Originally posted by fred:


Y'all older heads better get some step moves in your repetoire, y'all tired asses can't be clubbin' wit' these young cats forever......
:D I say this to my roommate all the time. Most of the girls in the clubs now are around 18 - 23. I said we are going to have to get us some gear and go the steppers parties. I use to work at the Hyatt and they have a couple of Steppers parties there every year. The woman are very lovely, and mature there.

MusicFilter
11-18-2003, 02:23 PM
Steppin's okay, but I feel myself aging everytime I go to a stepper party. Sometimes it's just too slow. It's more about style than anything.

What trips me out is people who take steppin' lessons.

Having spun at Steppin' parties I can tell you this, they appreciate your music and show it.

Mocambo
11-18-2003, 02:24 PM
Originally posted by chgodj3:
Having spun at Steppin' parties I can tell you this, they appreciate your music and show it. Yes they do.

'Magic' Juan
11-18-2003, 02:37 PM
Isn't stepping considered an older folks type ritual? Not calling anyone here old or anything, but I remember watching that steppers show on Channel 7 back in the day and most of the participaters had at least +10 years on me.

magic_juan

Mack-Williams
11-18-2003, 02:39 PM
Originally posted by Magic Juan:
Isn't stepping considered an older folks type ritual? Not calling anyone here old or anything, but I remember watching that steppers show on Channel 7 back in the day and most of the participaters had at least +10 years on me.

magic_juan I would say 25 and up. I work a couple and you had different age groups, but I saw some ghetto stuff. Also, met a couple of pimps you see in the videos now. They brought drink tickets from me.

mhd
11-18-2003, 02:40 PM
Juan, if you only knew...

'Magic' Juan
11-18-2003, 02:41 PM
Originally posted by mhd:
Juan, if you only knew... Enlighten me.

magic_juan smile.gif

mhd
11-18-2003, 02:48 PM
Originally posted by Magic Juan:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by mhd:
Juan, if you only knew... Enlighten me.

magic_juan smile.gif </font>[/QUOTE]i think mack just did, nice honeys, all ages

Rom
11-18-2003, 06:53 PM
Back in the day, stepping or 'bopping' was big on the House scene here too. We still get a few old school 'boppers' doing they thang down at Jamies Basement parties.

Erob the One
11-18-2003, 08:45 PM
I go to steppers sets to listen to the music, get my drink on, put on my alligator shoes, and look at the lovely ladies (all ages). Nice mature crowds in most cases.

Erob

Jozana
11-18-2003, 09:31 PM
One time i went to stepper's party at Mr.Rickys on 23rd and i was shocked. Not at the party but at the promotions aspect. I thought the house people were the only ones promoting like that. I walked out of the club with about 15 pluggers in my hand and there were about 20 on my car. Them stepping dude's be promoting their asses off.