Dance HistorySwing & Jazz
S-SUnited States · 1930Present

Swing & Jazz

Partner and solo dances rooted in the Lindy Hop, developed in Harlem in the late 1920s and codified during the Swing Era (1935-1945), with later regional variants (East Coast Swing, West Coast Swing) and revival scenes from the 1980s onward.

15 dance styles in this genre

Historical Origins

Swing dancing developed in late-1920s Harlem, New York City, out of African American jazz culture and existing social dance traditions. As jazz tempos accelerated and syncopation grew more pronounced, dancers improvised steps to match. The Lindy Hop, the foundational swing dance, is generally traced to a June 1928 dance marathon at the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem, where George "Shorty" Snowden is credited with naming the step (Stearns interview, 1959; Hubbard & Monaghan 2009). Lindy Hop spread through African American communities through the 1930s and, during the Swing Era (commonly dated 1935-1945), crossed racial lines to become a nationwide social dance. East Coast Swing is a related but distinct form, codified by Arthur Murray studios around 1942 as a simplified syllabus version of Lindy. West Coast Swing developed later, primarily in Southern California in the 1940s-50s. Jive — sometimes confused with East Coast Swing — is a separate, faster competition style now governed under International Latin syllabi.

Cultural Significance

Swing dancing originated in African American communities during the Jim Crow era of legal racial segregation. The Lindy Hop and related swing forms developed in Harlem during the same period as the Harlem Renaissance, and were a primary artistic and social outlet within communities subject to widespread legal and social discrimination. As swing spread to white audiences during the late 1930s, ballrooms such as the Savoy in Harlem were among the few large U.S. venues with integrated dance floors — though full integration was uneven and contested across regions and venues. The swing tradition is one of the documented foundations of American social dance and is preserved today through performance, competition, and revival scenes that trace lineage back to the original Savoy-era dancers.

Musical Characteristics

Swing dances are performed to jazz, with tempos varying by sub-style: East Coast Swing is typically danced at roughly 136-144 BPM (single/double/triple time), Jive at roughly 140-175 BPM, and Lindy Hop is danced across a wide range from medium tempos up to 200+ BPM. The music features syncopated rhythms, brass sections (saxophones, trumpets, trombones), walking bass lines, and an emphasized backbeat. Big-band leaders associated with the swing era include Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Benny Goodman, Chick Webb, and Fletcher Henderson. Call-and-response between horns and rhythm sections, and off-beat syncopation, are common structural features. Later revival and contemporary scenes have incorporated R&B, rockabilly, and electroswing.

Core Movement Principles

Swing movement is characterized by elasticity in the legs, a grounded center of gravity, and improvisation against a syncopated rhythmic frame. Basic patterns are typically built in six- or eight-count units (East Coast Swing uses six-count triple-step or single-step structures; Lindy Hop uses an eight-count basic with the "swing-out" as its signature figure). Footwork emphasizes off-beat weight changes and triple-steps. Hand connection is typically light and elastic, enabling separation, breakaways, and turn patterns while preserving lead-follow contact. Upper body styling varies by sub-style. The defining technical feature is improvisation within a partnered structure, rather than memorized choreography.

Modern Usage

Swing dancing is practiced today in recreational, competitive, social, and performance contexts. Weekly social dances run in most major cities in North America, Europe, and parts of Asia. Competitive swing falls into two largely separate ecosystems: ballroom-style circuits (where East Coast Swing is a syllabus dance, and Jive is part of International Latin) and Lindy Hop-specific events and exchanges that descend from the 1980s-1990s revival (notably the work of Frankie Manning and the original Savoy dancers who returned to teach). Annual events such as the International Lindy Hop Championships and regional exchanges anchor the Lindy scene. Contemporary swing dancers also work with non-traditional music, including electroswing and modern jazz.

Dance Styles

LH

Lindy Hop

Also known as: Lindy, Lindy Swing

Lindy Hop was an African-American swing dance developed in 1920s-1930s Harlem, featuring aerials, swing-outs, and partner exchanges. It became the defining dance of the swing era and influenced all subsequent swing traditions.

Harlem, New York·19271935·4/4 time·160-220 BPM
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WCS

West Coast Swing

Also known as: WCS, California Swing

West Coast Swing emerged from Los Angeles–area Lindy Hop in the late 1930s–1950s. Arthur Murray national dance director Lauré Haile documented the local style as "Western Swing" in 1951, and California organizations led by Skippy Blair renamed it "West Coast Swing" in 1959. The dance is distinguished by a linear slot pattern, an elastic stretch-and-compression connection, and a syncopated triple-step rhythm performed to a wide range of contemporary popular music.

Los Angeles, California·19501960·4/4 time·92–128 BPM social, 112–128 BPM competition (WSDC range; UCWDC historical 102–114 BPM)
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TS

Triple Step Swing

Also known as: Triple Step, Slow Swing

Triple Step Swing is a simpler swing variation with a basic 8-count pattern, making it accessible to beginners while maintaining authentic swing character and musicality.

United States·19401960·4/4 time·80-120 BPM
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SH

Shag

Also known as: Carolina Shag, Beach Shag

Shag is a smooth, low-impact swing dance with syncopated footwork developed in the Carolinas, remaining popular in beach resort communities and contemporary social swing settings.

Carolinas/United States·"origin_year_start": 1939"origin_year_end": null·4/4 time·120-160 BPM
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BO

Boogie-Woogie

Also known as: Swing Boogie

Boogie-Woogie is a partner dance derived from Jitterbug and Lindy Hop and standardised in continental Europe in the second half of the 20th century. It is governed competitively by the World Rock'n'Roll Confederation (WRRC), separately from ballroom federations such as WDSF and WDC.

United States·19401950·4/4 time·140-200 BPM
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JB

Jitterbug

Also known as: Jive Swing, American Jitterbug

Jitterbug is a fast, energetic partner swing dance with aerials and rapid footwork, developed during the 1930s-1940s swing era and popularized through dance competitions and entertainment.

United States·19301950·4/4 time·160-220 BPM
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SS

Slow Swing

Also known as: Slow Swing Style

Slow Swing is a slower, more intimate swing variation allowing for musical interpretation and partner connection, developed as an alternative to faster swing styles.

United States·19501970·4/4 time·80-120 BPM
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BAL

Balboa

Also known as: Bal-Swing, Balboa Swing

Balboa is a close-position swing dance that crystallized in the early 1930s at the Rendezvous Ballroom on the Balboa Peninsula (Newport Beach, California). Dancers kept torsos in contact and let the rhythm travel through the feet, producing rapid eight-count footwork patterns within a small floor footprint.

Southern California·19321940·4/4 time·170-240 BPM typical; slow variants from ~100 BPM; fast variants to ~300 BPM
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DC

Disco Hustle

Also known as: Hustle, NYC Hustle

Disco Hustle is a partner dance originated in the South Bronx in late 1972 by Puerto Rican teenagers and adopted into the wider disco-club scene of the mid-1970s. It is danced to disco music (typically 100-128 BPM) and uses a syncopated &1-2-3 6-beat basic with spins, turns, and partner connection patterns.

New York·19701980·4/4 time·120-160 BPM
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NC2

Nightclub Two-Step

Also known as: NC2S, Two-Step (Nightclub), Buddy Schwimmer Two-Step

Nightclub Two-Step is a smooth, romantic partner dance created by Buddy Schwimmer in the mid-1960s, designed for slow to mid-tempo contemporary music in social dance settings.

United States (Schwimmer based the dance in Costa Mesa, California from 1978)·19651970·4/4 time·72-92 BPM (per dance historian Richard Powers; UCWDC competitive range 54-64 BPM)
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CHS

Contemporary Swing

Also known as: Modern Swing, New Swing

Contemporary swing represents modern innovations in swing dancing, incorporating contemporary music, freestyle movement, and artistic expression within swing traditions.

United States·19902000·4/4 time·varied
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CHL

Charleston

Also known as: 1920s Charleston, Solo Charleston, Partner Charleston, Lindy Charleston

The Charleston entered mainstream American popular culture in October 1923 through the Broadway musical Runnin' Wild and is widely regarded as the signature social dance of the Jazz Age. It is characterised by forward-and-back kicks, turned-in knees, and arms swinging in opposition to the legs.

Charleston, South Carolina, United States·19231923·4/4 time·180-220 BPM
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SSW

Single Swing

Also known as: Single Time Swing, Single Rhythm Swing

Single Swing is a simplified swing dance using single-step timing rather than the triple-step pattern, making it accessible to beginners and practical for very fast tempos where triple steps become difficult.

United States·19401950·4/4 time·140-220 BPM
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DFX

DiscoFox

Also known as: Disco Fox, Discofox, Fox

DiscoFox is a European partner dance blending Foxtrot basics with disco-era freestyle, becoming the most popular social partner dance in Germany and widely danced across Northern Europe.

Germany/Europe·19671975·4/4 time·100-140 BPM
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CSW

Club Swing

Also known as: Club Style Swing, Social Swing

Club Swing is a modern social swing style adapted for contemporary club and social settings, blending swing fundamentals with club dance sensibilities and contemporary music.

United States·19902000·4/4 time·110-150 BPM
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Swing & Jazz FAQs

Partner and solo dances rooted in the Lindy Hop, developed in Harlem in the late 1920s and codified during the Swing Era (1935-1945), with later regional variants (East Coast Swing, West Coast Swing) and revival scenes from the 1980s onward.