Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Visit the World’s Best Places to Dance

Waltz Vienna. Photo Credited  Lonely Planet

Unwinds the complexity of many traditional and cultural movements around the globe. The Lonely Planet’s Best in Travel 2011 release their new book for the Top Ten  World Best Places to Dance. From Flamengo to Tango to Salsa discover the world’s magnificent places and find out from the professionals in these dwelling towns of high-energy dances. Feel the blistering music and embrace the remarkable  influence of each country of  today's music and dance performance.


FLAMENCO
Andalucia, Spain
Few parts of Europe are as romantic as Andalucia, with its mountains and overwhelmed villages, and the Spanish region is also home to one of the most charming dances. Flamenco conjures up images of olive-skinned beauties swirling to a percussively played guitar, clicking castanets and clapping. In cities such as Seville and Granada, you can learn how to tap your ruffled dress like a proud senorita or stamp your feet like a Cordoban hat-wearing hunk. The schools cater to all levels of interest from flamenco fanatics to travellers who are equally interested in sampling the local jamon (ham).

TANGO  
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Argentina is truly beloved for its mix of Old-World melancholy and Latin passion, and the national dance form is certainly no exception. Tango originated in the working-class neighbourhoods of the Argentine capital, which is a great place to learn some dance steps. With Buenos Aires' porteos (residents) cruising along the city's avenues during the day, most classes take place in the evening. Follow the accordion music to a milonga (tango venue or event) to learn moves including the giro (turn) and ocho (figure eight traced with the feet). There are usually dozens on offer, catering to the throngs of dance-loving milongueros. Buenos Aires' Tango Festival and World Cup takes place in August; the City Dance Championship

BREAKDANCE
New York, US
In the 30-plus years since the Big Apple's b-boys broke out the first hip-hop moves, breakdance has entered the mainstream and courses have started. Many classes are geared towards locals rather than tourists, although the NYC Hip Hop Dance Company welcomes walk-ins at its weekly lessons near Times Square. It takes a lot of practice and press-ups to master the key manoeuvres toprock, downrock, power moves, freezes and suicides but what a city to study the art of breaking. Nightly inspiration is found in the clubs, where you might see legs and arms flying in a breakdance battle. Explore NYC's hip-hop history with a Hush tour or lunch at Queens' Hollis Famous Burgers and Hip Hop Museum.

CAPOEIRA
Bahia, Brazil
Capoeira has broaden around the world from northeast Brazil, where African slaves developed the fusion of dance and martial arts, but Bahia remains its heartland. Workshops run by capoeira mestres (masters) in state capital Salvador da Bahia, are just one way the city is keeping its Afro-Brazilian heritage alive. Capoeira circles form on the plazas at night, and the action intensifies during festivals, when the colonial buildings are a backdrop for frenzied drum circles. If the martial arts feature sounds off-putting, don't worry as the sparring is generally playful and little physical contact is involved. Salvador da Bahia (often shortened to plain old Bahia) is connected to Rio de Janeiro, 1300km southwest, by bus and plane.

HULA
Hawaii, USA
As if anyone needed another reason to go to Hawaii, the home of atolls, coral reefs, beaches and sunworshippers, it's also the birthplace of hula. Popular culture is full of saccharine images of island princesses swaying beneath the palms, but hula began as an accompaniment to chants containing oral history. At a halau hula (school), a kumu hula (teacher) will instruct you in the Polynesian dance form's various moves, which symbolise aspects of Hawaiian life such as ocean voyages and volcanic eruptions. Though many male visitors may be reluctant to wear a loincloth, hula is also performed by men. Hawaiian hula events include the Merrie Monarch Festival in April and the World Invitational Hula Festival in November.

WALTZ
Vienna, Austria
Developed by Austrian and Bavarian peasants and picked up by the Hapsburg royals before spreading to France and beyond, waltz remains important in Vienna during its ball season. If you feel like donning a ballgown or tailcoat and dancing this sensual style of ballroom dance, the season's fixtures include the lavish Opera Ball in the 19th-century Opera House. Fear not, novices don't have to humiliate themselves in front of Austrian society. Schools offer tuition to individuals and couples who want to learn to dance in three-quarter time. The fabulous classrooms include the Pallavicini Palace, where Mozart and Beethoven performed, and a baroque hall. There's a list of dance classes in Vienna at tinyurl.com/yjezwep. The ball season starts on New Year's Eve and runs for three months.

CEILIDH
Edinburgh, Scotland
Many people have a brush with ceilidh dancing at some point in their life; whether the wedding's taking place among the heather in Scotland, or far away in the Celtic culture-loving New World. The partner-swinging dance began at social gatherings in Scotland and Ireland, so what better place for some coaching than the picturesque Scottish capital. There are dance classes and ceilidhs for all levels of experience. In fact, ceilidhs are by definition welcoming, sociable affairs, and even the clumsiest of novices are normally encouraged to try their first reel. Dance Base offers drop-in beginners' classes at the Grassmarket; Visit Scotland has a list of upcoming ceilidhs.

SALSA
Cuba
Salsa, a sizzling mix of Latin and Afro-Caribbean rhythms, perfectly encapsulates sultry, multicultural Cuba. It's a sexy, hip-shaking dance and teachers on the island happily show beginners how to move to the Cuban beat. The internet is awash with two-week, all-inclusive salsa packages, but, if you want some time to cruise in a clapped-out Buick, shorter courses are also available. When it's time to show off your skills, or to pick up some free tips, hit Havana's nightspots with a friend. There are usually half-a-dozen salsa nights happening; ask your hotel concierge or another local. Cuba's alluring spots include Santa Clara, dedicated to all things Che Guevara, Havana's waterfront, and Baracoa, a windswept town on the Atlantic coast.

BELLY DANCE
Istanbul, Turkey
A fun place to learn the shimmying dance is the city where the Middle East meets Europe: Istanbul.
Exuding all the exoticism of the Middle East, belly dance has fascinated the West ever since Turkey was the centre of the Ottoman Empire. Although many performances are touristy, gobek dans (belly dance) goes back centuries in Turkey, where it is more energetic and playful than in countries such as Egypt. Serious instruction is available. There's a list of teachers at www.bellydanceclasses.net/turkey; a recommended company is Les Arts Turcs, which offers private lessons.

MANDINKA DANCE
West Africa
An educational or community centre is a good place to find a teacher who can show you some traditional Mandinka dances, which involve a lot of drama and rituals. Outfits such as Senegal's Jamo Jamo Arts also run dance-focused trips instruments such as the kora (21-stringed harp) and djembe drum, West Africa's griots, the ancestry of court musicians, rightfully sit at the forefront of world music. While visiting the region to see, say, Toumani Diabate play in Bamako, Mali would be remarkable enough, you can also learn to groove like the folk at the clubs and festivals.

Get your LONELY PLANET'S BEST IN TRAVEL 2011 book  and  discover the cultural dance diversity and the best places  to go and things to do all around the globe.

         


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