Dance across Texas - Betty Casey

Dance across Texas

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
146 Seiten
1985
University of Texas Press (Verlag)
978-0-292-71551-6 (ISBN)
27,40 inkl. MwSt
Internationally known dance instructor and writer Betty Casey takes an informal look at the history of Texas dancing and tells how to do more than twenty traditional Texas dances.
Generations of Texans have believed that “to dance is to live.” At rustic “play parties” and elegant cotillions, in tiny family dance halls and expansive urban honky-tonks, from historic beginnings to next Saturday night, Texans have waltzed, polkaed, schottisched, and shuffled their way across the state.

In Dance across Texas, internationally known dance instructor and writer Betty Casey takes an informal look at the history of Texas dancing and, in clear diagrams, photos, and detailed instructions, tells “how to” do more than twenty Texas dances.

Previously, little had been recorded about the history of dancing on the frontier. Journal and diary entries, letters, and newspaper clippings preserve enticing, if sketchy, descriptions of the types of dances that were popular. Casey uses a variety of sources, including interviews and previously unpublished historical materials, such as dance cards, invitations, and photographs, to give us a delightful look at the social context of dance. The importance of dance to early Texans is documented through colorful descriptions of clothing worn to the dances, of the various locations where dances were held, ranging from a formal hall to a wagon sheet spread on the ground, and of the hardships endured to get to a dance.

Also included in the historical section of Dance across Texas are notes on the “morality” of dance, the influence of country music on modern dance forms, and the popularity of such Texas dance halls and clubs as Crider’s and Gilley’s.

The instruction section of the book diagrams twenty-two Texas dances, including standard waltzes and two-steps as well as the Cotton-Eyed Joe, Put Your Little Foot, Herr Schmidt, the Western Schottische, and such “whistle’” or mixer dances as Paul Jones, Popcorn, and Snowball. Clear and detailed directions for each dance, along with suggested musical selections, accompany the diagrams and photos. Dance and physical education teachers and students will find this section invaluable, and aspiring urban cowboys can follow the easy-to-read diagrammed footsteps to a satisfying spin around the honky-tonk floor. Anyone interested in dance or in the history of social customs in Texas will find much to enjoy in this refreshing and often amusing look at a Texas “national” pastime.

Betty Casey (1916–2001), author of The Complete Book of Square Dancing (and Round Dancing) and International Folk Dancing, U.S.A., was a noted teacher of square and folk dancing.

Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One. Background of Texas Dances

1. Overview of Texas Dancing
2. Early Texas Dancing
3. Music and Musicians
4. Homespuns and Satins, Buckskins and Boughten Suits
5. Dancing Was Lively despite Obstacles
6. Country Music Influence
7. The Honky-Tonk
8. Texas Dance Halls and Clubs


Part Two. How to Do Texas Dances

9. General Information
10. Texas Dances

Cotton-eyed Joe
Cowboy Polka (Jessie Polka)
Double Shuffle
Garden Waltz
Freeze
Four Corners
Heel-and-Toe Polka
Herr Schmidt
Mexican Polka
Mixer Dances
One-Step
Seven-Step Polka
Put Your Little Foot (New Shoes, Varsouviana)
Ten Pretty Girls
Texas Shuffle Step
Two-Step, Polka Two-Step
Waltz across Texas, Spoke-Line Waltz
Waltz, Couple
Western Schottische
Western Swing




Bibliography
Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 1.8.1985
Verlagsort Austin, TX
Sprache englisch
Maße 178 x 254 mm
Gewicht 454 g
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Sport Tanzen / Tanzsport
ISBN-10 0-292-71551-X / 029271551X
ISBN-13 978-0-292-71551-6 / 9780292715516
Zustand Neuware
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