Stud Country, a queer line dancing and two-step class from Los Angeles, made a rollicking return to New York on a recent Monday. Eliza Jouin, left, and Hannah Pinson were among the over 300 people who ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Black Southern line dance culture, and a co-sign from Beyoncé, has helped to popularize the song and its fan-snapping moves. By Kia Turner Wagener, ...
Every Wednesday evening, some of the smoothest conversationalists in the city convene at the KC Juke House on 18th and Vine to speak a language that requires no words. As the toils of hump day come to ...
It was 4:30 on a Saturday afternoon and sophomore Tamir Poindexter was demonstrating two line dances he hadn’t planned on teaching to a room full of Tufts students. By this point, the group had ...
A dance floor is a place of joy, where people have a chance to do more than listen to music — they can really experience it, adding their own creativity to the infectious beats that fill the air ...
The best LGBT country-western dance club in the world. Two-step, line dance, waltz, swing, or just hang out. If you don't know how to dance, don't worry: we'll teach you with our beginning lessons ...
Learning how to two-step is a rite of passage in Austin, where locals can practice boot scootin’ at a different honky-tonk every night of the week. The basic moves are simple—two quick steps followed ...