Learn Swing Dance with Paté: No Partner Needed!

If you have not been taking swing dance lessons during the week due to your work schedule…you now have a weekend option! 

Starting on the first Sunday in January 2025, dance instructor Paté (Patrice) Nassalang will be teaching 90-minute beginner/intermediate swing dance lessons almost every Sunday at Casa Collective in New Berlin. Both 6-count (“East Coast Swing”) and Lindy Hop are being taught. No experience or partner needed. Details below.

Growing up in Senegal, Paté was surrounded by the joy of rhythm and dancing from birth. There were drums in his house and drums in the neighborhood. Music, drumming, and dancing were an integral part of his culture and childhood. That love for music and movement shaped his entire life. Around 1995, Paté was chosen to be the choreographer for his region in a national televised dance competition similar to So You Think You Can Dance. At this time, he was teaching, dancing, and choreographing traditional African dance along with Hip-Hop, Salsa, and many other dance styles.

He moved to the United States in 1997 and started the weekly African drumming/dancing class at Danceworks in Milwaukee in 2003. He left for a time to work for prestigious dance groups (AADE) African American dance Ensemble of Durham  in North Carolina and Muntu Chicago. When he returned to Milwaukee in 2205, he started a Non-profit  company “Jam Ak Jam Afro Dance Theater”. Through this company he choreographed and taught dance classes throughout Midwest  schools (Milwaukee Public Schools and Universities). He has also performed with the company in some of the biggest theatres around.

Swing music and swing dance may have been created in the United States, but the roots of the sounds and movements originated in Africa. Pate has been motivated to dig deeper in doing research in African American Vernacular jazz dances’ link to traditional authentic African dances. 

The Milwaukee area has a deep and rich swing dance community. Meet new friends and confidently strut your stuff on dancefloors as there are dance events every week in and around Milwaukee. Join Paté on Sundays for the fun, the exercise, and the lifelong skill of dancing.

Location: Casa Collective Dance Studio

Time: 4:00 – 5:30 (see flyer below for dates)

Fee: $10 to $15 per class (see flyer below) 

Facebook event link: https://www.facebook.com/share/wCx1ZztxhLyYcGEU/

New Year’s Dancing

Ring in the New Year with these two fantastic dance options:

The swinging band, The Flat Cats, is playing in West Bend at The Bend Theater’s Gatsby New Years Eve Event. There is dancing opportunity at the stage as The Flat Cats are a renowned dance band. Raffles throughout the night, tasty treats, savory hors d’oeuvres, craft cocktails and champagne at midnight. This is a full-service type event from 8:30 to 12:30 for a ticket price of $35. Read more and purchase tickets here.

The other option is the weekly swing dance at the Falcon Bowl ballroom in Milwaukee. A basic swing dance lesson occurs in the main ballroom and a basic blues dance lesson occurs in the room behind the stage from 8:00 to 9:00. The Jonathan Stout Orchestra from Lindy Focus (a national Lindy Hop dance week) livestreams on a projector from 9:00 to 12:00. At 12:00 the music switches to blues with DJ Hot Jazz Cass. This event is free to enter. Falcon Bowl is a ballroom, bar, and bowling establishment with plenty of fun options for the night. Read more here on Facebook.

Cameron Webb Band to Play ‘Blues Winter’ December 21 Social

Cameron Webb is one of the nations up-and-coming vocalist/bandleaders. His soulful voice and high energy performances has transfixed audiences all over the country. He can be heard weekly serving up Blues and Jazz at Chicago’s hippest speakeasy the Roar, on the Magnificent Mile, and a multitude of other local venues. Bring your jigging shoes for this sensational night of jump blues music including classics from Elmore James, Louis Jordan, Junior Parker, Joe Turner and many more!

Cameron and his band will be playing at Puddler’s Hall on December 21, 2022 as part of the Blues Winter series of blues/jump blues lesson and socials. The entire wood floor event room is used for dance space as dozens of swing and blues dancers converge for this special 4-event series. Now is the perfect time to learn to dance blues.

  • Lesson from 7 to 8 PM
  • Music from 8 to 10:30 PM
  • Cover
    • $12 cover for band night
    • $7 cover for DJ night

Go to Blues Winter for more information.

Balboa Basic Steps

Balboa is a dance developed in the Balboa peninsula of California during the 1910s and 1920s. Check out LindyCircle.com/history/balboa for a more detailed history.

In the Milwaukee area swing scene, it’s the third most common swing dance style behind East Coast Swing and Lindy Hop. Nearly all experienced swing dancers eventually learn Balboa because of two very practical reasons:

  1. It’s best danced at fast beats-per-minute when other dances styles are difficult and
  2. it works really well on crowded floors.

If you dance in Milwaukee, you know that a good event means a crowded floor. You can do some big Lindy moves early and late in the night when the floor is more open. But, there is a decent chunk of time in the middle where you are in survival mode trying not to knock other dancers over. The bands we have also don’t shy away from faster tempos that are near impossible to keep up with doing Lindy or East Coast. This is where dancing Balboa comes in. Being able to dance Balboa basically doubles the amount of songs you can dance.

Beyond the practical reasons to dance Bal, this dance feels really good. It’s a dance that is done in ‘close embrace’. It’s a chest-to-chest dance where you are intimately dancing with both your partner and with the music. With that said, let’s get into the basic steps.

The Basics

There are two different basic steps. One is called “up-hold“, the other “down-hold“. Both basics are an 8-count step, like Lindy Hop. This video shows the foot movement for both basics.

Balboa Basics

The up-hold basic has both the lead and follow holding a foot slightly up on the 3rd and 7th beat. The down-hold basic has a foot held on the floor during the 4th and 8th beat. Technically, the lead and follow can be dancing different basic steps simultaneously. Usually the lead dances up-hold between moves and switches to down-hold prior to initiating a move. Switching between the up and down-hold simply occurs at the start of the 1 beat.

Unlike most other social swing dances, you can dance a whole song doing only the basic step and not feel bored. The suggestion is to take time being able to seamlessly switch between the two basics, then learn turns and fancier footwork.

Where to learn

Sierra Autumn Kane provides private, small group, and large group lessons. She can be contacted through Facebook Messenger.

A slew of Bal dancers use the Facebook Group Swing MKE Social to promote and discuss swing events. Most of these dancers also frequent the Cream City Swing and Jumpin’ Jive Club events. Also check MilwaukeeStomp.com/lessons.

If you want to dance Bal with someone, simply ask them to dance and then as you walk the floor – ask if they Bal. They will either say “yes” or “not yet”.

Traffic Jam!

I recently went to a Traffic Jam! Swing lesson and dance and I was completely impressed. This recurring dance is held at Forteza Fitness in Chicago. The atmosphere of the venue, community, and quality of this event makes it a must for Milwaukee stompers who don’t mind going to bed at 2:00 AM.

About the group

The non-profit group  – Traffic Jam! Swing – started in 2016 in effort to host a regional weekend swing workshop and dance event (which is the Second City Swingout). Turns out hosting events in Chicago is pricey and the team needed a way to raise funds ahead of time. Thus, the recurring Traffic Jam! dance event was created. This group has grown to now providing progressive classes along with the dances and the yearly Second City Swingout.

About the venue

Parking is ridiculously easy and free.

Masking with a quality mask is required and well adhered to by the crowd.

Water is provided, but this is a BYOB event space. People in the crowd did bring canned alcohol beverages and I didn’t see anyone bring bottles or wine. Perhaps there is an unspoken rule against glass containers.

For summer months, do not wear pants and (for us sweaty people) bring extra shirts. They have large doors that open and the place cools nicely when the sun sets. But 100 dancers in a room generates the kind of radiating heat that causes you to sweat even when sitting.

The dance floor is really nice finished laminate wood and…it’s clean! The benefit of this space not being a bar is that the floor isn’t sticky. This may be the best floor I’ve danced on.

More info

Check out Traffic Jam! Swing

Go to the Milwaukee Stomp event calendar to know when and where to dance.