Tag Archives: Dancing Styles

Dance Schools Of Utah

Salt Lake Area

University of Utah School of Dance  Salt Lake

Ballet West Academy  50 W 200 S #200, Salt Lake

SLC Ballet  1116 E 3300 S, Salt Lake

Tanner Dance  University of Utah, Salt Lake

Ballroom Utah Dance Studio  3030 S Main St #200, Salt Lake

DF Dance Company  2978 State St B, South Salt Lake

Desert Journey School Of Dance  1367 Major St E, Salt Lake

Elite Dance Studio  4026 S 2700 E, Salt Lake

Starz Unlimited Dance Studio  3390 W 1987 S Ste. A, Salt Lake

Arthur Murray Dance Studio  389 W 1830 S Suite 500, Salt Lake

School of Dance  Suite #232 1400 S, Foothill Dr, Salt Lake

Silhouette Dance Studio  4110 S Highland Dr, Salt Lake

Tutu School Holladay  6215 Highland Dr, Salt Lake

Utah Dance Institute  799 E Winchester Street, Murray

Ballet Centra  4907 Poplar St, Murray

Studio 56 Dance Center  170 W Winchester St, Murray

Expressions Dance 3381 US-89, Bountiful

Body Logic Dance  783 East Fort Union Blvd, Midvale

The Dance Project SLC  2477 Fort Union Blvd # 105, Cottonwood Heights

Jennifer Hansen’s Premier Dance Academy  1441 E 9400 S, Sandy

Scariff School of Irish Dance  9854 S 700 E, Sandy

Bliss Dance Academy  9844 S 1300 E, Sandy

Dance Concepts  9492 S Union Square, Sandy

Utah Dance Arts Center  9150 S 1300 E, Sandy

Linda Fenton Dance Studio  8715 S 700 E, Sandy

Utah Artists School of Ballet  9333 S 1300 E, Sandy

South Valley Creative Dance Studio  747 E 9400 S, Sandy

Kaleidoscope Dance Studio  10510 S 1300 E B, Sandy

Ladu Dance Studio  10600 South 57 West, Sandy

Utah Punjabi Arts Academy  1887 Rio Way, Sandy

En Pointe School of Ballet  7504 Center View Ct, West Jordan

Utah Dance Artists  11021 S Redwood Rd, South Jordan

Kickin’it Dance Co  10578 S 700 E, Sandy

Local Motion Dance Studio  3668 S Skye Dr C-1, South Jordan

C & C Ballet Academy  10128 S Redwood Rd STE G, South Jordan

Danceology Studio  112 W 13100 S, Draper

American Expression of Dance  11503 S 700 E, Draper

Utah Dance Artists  12896 Pony Express Rd #50, Draper

Jazz Dancer Studio  1101 E, Draper Pkwy, Draper, UT

Wasatch Arts Center  11968 S Redwood Rd, Riverton

Park City

Dance Tech Studios  786 Division St, Park City

Ballet West Academy  6554 Creekside Ln, Park City

Lehi

The Dance Academy  27 E Main St, Lehi

Innovations Dance Academy  61 W 3200 N b, Lehi

Move Dance Studio  870 N 100 E #103, Lehi

Elevate Dance Academy  3397 N 1200 E #107, Lehi

Jazz’n Place Dance Studio 400 South Millpond Dr C, Lehi

Aspire Dance Academy  61 W State Rd #106, Lehi

DelGrosso Dance  1879 N 1475 E, Lehi

Ultimate Dance Etc 1657 N Guardian Dr, Saratoga Springs

United Dance Center  1513 Exchange Dr, Saratoga Springs

Ballet West Academy

Provo

BYU Department of Dance  Brigham Young University, Provo

The Dance Club  983 N State St, Orem

Jive Dance Studio  1752 S State St, Orem

Heart N Soul Dance  3527 N Main St, Spanish Fork

Wasatch Ballet Conservatory  139 S State St Ste 3, Lindon

Ogden

Jacqueline’s School of Ballet  493 N 1030 W, Lindon

Imagine Ballet Theatre School  2432 Washington Blvd, Ogden

Julie Moffitt Ballet School  2625 N 1000 W, Ogden

Logan

Cache Valley School of Ballet  290 N 400 E, Logan

Tueller School of Dance  521 1/2 N Main St, Logan

Dance Styles

Flamenco
Belly Dancing
Highland Dancing

Belly Dancing

Utah Belly Dancing

Fat Chance Belly Dance with Candace Baker
Tuesdays, 5:30–6:30 pm
Eccles Community Art Center, Ogden

Performances

Utah Summer Dance Festival 
August 6, 2022, 11 am–9 pm 
Liberty Park, Salt Lake

Dancers

  • Desert Journey Dance Company
  • Desert Orchid
  • Eastern Arts
  • Shahravar

Belly Dancing Schools

  • SLCbellydance
  • Desert Journey School of Dance
  • Desert Orchid
  • Eastern Arts

Highland Dancing

Highland | Scottish | Celtic | Irish

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Dance Schools

Scariff School of Irish Dance  9854 S 700 E, Sandy

Dance Companies

Musicians

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The term Highland dance or Highland dancing is used today to refer to a style of athletic solo dancing which developed in the Gaelic Highlands of Scotland. Highland dance evolved into its current form during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the context of competitions at public events (namely Highland games), where it is often performed to the accompaniment of Highland bagpipe music. Highland dancers wear specialized shoes called ghillies.

Highland dance has been subject to many influences from outside the Highlands. For example, it has been heavily influenced by the urban aesthetics of the patrons and judges of dance competitions since the nineteenth century. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License – Wikipedia

Flamenco

Flamenco is a style of music and dance which is native to several regions of southern Spain.

Flamenco Dancing, Dancers, Spain, Latin Dancing, Dance Lessons, Learn to Dance, Ballroom Along with its Romani origins, Spanish, Byzantine, Sephardic and Moorish elements have often been cited as influences in the development of flamenco. It has frequently been asserted that these influences coalesced near the end of the reconquista, in the 15th century. The origins of the word flamenco are unclear. It was not recorded until the late 18th century.

Flamenco is popularly depicted as being the music of Andulusian gitanos (gypsies) but historically its roots are in mainstream Andalusian society, in the latter half of the 18th century. Other regions, notably Extremadura and Murcia, have also contributed to the development of flamenco, and many flamenco artists have been born outside the gitano community. Latin American and especially Cuban influences have also contributed, as evidenced in the dances of “Ida y Vuelta”.

On November 16, 2010, UNESCO declared Flamenco one of the Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity.

Flamenco Today

Traditional flamenco artists never received any formal training: they learned by listening and watching relatives, friends and neighbors. Some artists are still self-taught, but nowadays, it is more usual for dancers and guitarists (and sometimes even singers) to be professionally trained. Some guitarists can even read music and study others styles like classical guitar or jazz, and many dancers take courses in contemporary dance or ballet as well as flamenco.

Flamenco occurs in three settings – the traditional juerga, in small-scale cabaret or concert venues and in the theatre.

The juerga is an informal, spontaneous gitano gathering (rather like a jazz “jam session”). This can include dancing, singing, palmas (hand clapping), or simply pounding in rhythm on an old orange crate or a table. Flamenco, in this context, is organic and dynamic: it adapts to the local talent, instrumentation, and mood of the audience. This context invites comparison with that other creation of a dispossessed class, the blues. Flamenco has been referred to as The Gypsy Blues, or even the European Blues as a means of providing a frame of reference to those new to the genre.

One tradition remains firmly in place: the cantaores(singers) are the heart and soul of the performance. A Peña Flamenca is a meeting place or grouping of Flamenco musicians or artists. There are also “tablaos”, establishments that developed during the 1960s throughout Spain replacing the “café cantante”. The tablaos may have their own company of performers for each show. Many internationally renowned artists have started their careers in “tablaos flamencos”, like the famous singer Miguel Poveda who began in El Cordobés, Barcelona.

The professional concert is more formal. A traditional singing performance has only a singer and one guitar, while a dance concert usually includes two or three guitars, one or more singers (singing in turns, as flamenco cantaors sing solo), and one or more dancers. One of the singers may play the cajon if there is no dedicated cajon player, and all performers will play palmas even if there are dedicated palmeros. The so-called Nuevo Flamenco New flamenco may include flutes or saxophones, piano or other keyboards, or even the bass guitar and the electric guitar. Camarón de la Isla was one artist who popularized this style. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License – Wikipedia

Finally there is the theatrical presentation of flamenco, which uses flamenco technique and music but is closer in presentation to a ballet performance.

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