

Gareth & Jeryl
Rock 'n' Roll is:
- easy to learn. Most people can do it -
- extremely versatile. It suits a large range of modern and older popular music -
- a great social activity for meeting new friends and partners -
- inexpensive. Anywhere there is suitable music you can dance -
- suitable for young and old -
- well established. Its practised around the world -
- very suitable for amateurs as well as pro dancers. You don't need to be perfect for fear of being laughed at -
- a great fitness activity -
- a socially acceptable way for ladies to show their knickers in public (but gentlemen don't notice!) -
Sandra trusts Trevor
to have a firm grip on things
James and Ann
dance with color and style
Sandy and Annette
strut their stuff!
No butterfingers here!
Hands up those who
love to dance!
George & Sue can step
with the best of them
Sandy & Annette have a
laid back approach
Gareth & Jeryl
What time is it? Time to dance!
Dancing Doubles
Heather, Rod & Leslie
reported by Gareth 20th May 2009


Pretty dancers - Flamingo and Flamengo
This seems like a humorous question, but it's more realistic than you might think.
Birds dance. Human females like to dance. Human females, particularly young or sexually attractive ones, are often referred to as 'birds' or 'chicks', a decidedly avian term. Given the highly colourful costumes they are inclined to wear, the appellation seems accurate. Furthermore, most men will soon confirm how quickly one will 'take flight' if she is approached with the wrong suggestions or in the wrong manner.
As all life apparently originated in the sea as micro-organisms, birds and primates must share a common ancestor. Since they share dance as a common behaviour, it's reasonable to suggest that either an early form of dance may have been common to the intermediate species, or the behavioral tendency out of which dance originated in both birds and humans was shared.
It's hard to imagine the very long-tailed fossil creature recently discovered in Germany wearing a cute little rock 'n' roll skirt, but we can certainly imagine her engaging in a sort of mating ritual similar to a dance during her courtship with a male.
Dance appears to be a primitive behavior. Modern humans have extended it the same way that they have extended most other things.
Of course, animals don't have music. Or do they? Perhaps their heart-beat, thumping loudly inside them during the excitement of courtship, inspires their movements. Perhaps instead they can detect a certain rhythm in the universe that we humans cannot consciously access and are therefore ignorant about. Perhaps we can detect it subconsciously and it is out of that rhythm that our own music springs.
We can't know the answer at this point in our development. But what we can do is theorise that if humans continue to survive, they will ultimately evolve and dance will evolve with them into something so weird and wonderful we can't even begin to imagine what it will look like.
But then again, some of the things I see take place on the dance floor today might be giving me a glimpse into the future....