It's a simple step. But done to tricky country
rhythm, it's Texas' most dignified dance.
The stars are big and bright. The music is
kicky, with a loping, off-beat cadence. The
dancers press close, embraced in a peculiar
bent-kneed hunch. Across the open-air dance floor they whirl and glide
in a mystical communion, floating in a state of grace, like skaters,
motionless above the waist. Legs intertwined, hips swinging, they step
together ahead of the beat, hesitate as it catches up, rock back on their
heels, turn and turn, and turn. This is Texas country dancing, dancing
unlike any other.
Writing about dancing is a little like trying to show how a guitar sounds
by pointing to the wood and strings. Dancing doesn't work if you think
about it, and good dancers often cannot describe what they do. In
Texas, dances are handed down through generations, with older
children teaching younger children where to put their feet and how to
hold their arms. After decades of weekly practice at community halls,
dancing becomes an instinctive movement, indivisible into parts.
But it's not the steps that make Texas dancing special. There are only a
few basic dance steps in the world. What makes some people dance
differently is the rhythm of their music, thier cultural history, and their
style. The distinctively Texan dances are the relatively modern
country-swing dances--the one-step, the shuffle, and, best known of all,
the dignified and sensual two-step--done to traditional country music.
The Texas two-step is the same step known to ballroom dancers as the international
fox-trot. Except for the one-step, which is just that, most Texas dances are variations of a
two-step, also called a half-step, which is simply a step-close-step. The Texas two-step is
generally done with two long steps and a step-close-step to two-four time. Speeded up,
it's a shuffle or double shuffle, but it's still a two-step. The ever-popular polka, reportedly
invented by a Czechoslovakian peasant in 1830, is a two-step with a hop. The
once-scandalous waltz, as it is done in Texas, is a fancy Bohemian two-step called a
redowa, a name derived from a Czech word meaning to steer or whirl around. And the
jitterbug, or Western swing, is a jazzy descendant of a two-step danced by blacks in the
plantation South.
Those are all couple dances, mysteriously accomplished with a subtle squeeze of the hand,
a cast of the eye, a turn of the shoulder, and a little presure at the waist. Texans also do
line or pattern dances, which are versions of nineteenth-century European folk dances.
They include the bastardized cotton-eyed Joe (it's similar to a Norwegian polka), the
German schottische, the put-your-little-foot, and the John Paul Jones.
Country-swing bands, big bands with as many as fifteen pieces, began in Texas, so
naturally Texans were the first to dance to them. In the early thirties Milton Brown and
Fort Worth fiddler Bob Wills took country string instruments and traditional rhythms of
the Old South, jazzed them up, and created Western swing, the country version of the big
band sound, influencing generations of country-and-western musicians. "What Bob Willis
did was take a heavy-accented two-beat, come in on it slightly early, and lay on the
intricate rhythms in between," says Ted Daffan of Houston, a retired Western swing
bandleader and songwriter. The odd, syncopated phrasing, with all that rhythm, is what
makes good country music unusually danceable, upbeat, exciting, and tricky.
As the music changed over the years, the style of Texas dancing changed too. People tend
to dance straight ahead, in a great counterclockwise mass, instead of in box steps and
more intricate foot patterns. Couples have moved farther apart and have stiffened their
legs and arms. They even pump their arms back and forth in a style that flourished during
the country dancing craze several years back, a curious aping of an action that was once
considered an embarrassingly hick thing to do.
Scholars (yes, even Texas dance has them) have debated the origin of the characteristic
crouch and gait of the Texas dancer. Some speculated that it was inherited from the
spurred and bowlegged cowboy. In fact, the posture is the result of dancing on the ball of
the foot, in boots of course, with a very bent knee. With loose knees the dancer glides and
catches the beat, for in the knees and legs live all the sweet and wild rhythms of the
bluegrass South and the old country, of blues and jazz, of the horse, the train, the wind,
and the West. |