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Cajun jitterbug dancing instructions: >> http://lhm.cloudz.pw/download?file=cajun+jitterbug+dancing+instructions << (Download)
Cajun jitterbug dancing instructions: >> http://lhm.cloudz.pw/read?file=cajun+jitterbug+dancing+instructions << (Read Online)
These are written cajun and zydeco dance steps and instructions on the web. This is located at www.cajunradio.org/dancesteps.html. The following are web sites that have written down the steps involved in Cajun and Zydeco dancing. Link Cajun Two-Step - by Jim Porter Link Mamou Jitterbug - by Erica Weiss & Nate
Cajun Two Step is a style of Cajun dancing, also with two variations, and is arguably the most traditional. It is very similar to the country western two-step. The traditional Cajun two-step doesn't have as many fancy turns and spins as their country western cousin. Some Cajun dance moves are initiated from one of two basic
13 Jul 2015
20 Sep 2015 One of the basic dances done in the Cajun dance tradition from Louisiana. The Cajuns are a French-speaking people descended from Acadians who moved to Louisiana from New Brunswick. Their music is a unique blend of French Canadian, Country and the blues. There are two main styles of jitterbug.
23 Sep 2008
6 May 2015 Cajun dance steps Dominick Cross. Of course, there are versions of those dances like the Mamou Two-Step and the Whiskey River Two-Step, Whiskey River Jitterbug, the Cajun Jig. At the same time, these dances are liberally sprinkled with frills, steps and moves and names, too, such as The Sweetheart,
13 Sep 2016
The Two Basic Positions. The Cajun two-step is an improvisational couple dance. Since it is not planned out in advance, one person (the leader) assumes responsibility for deciding which move to do next, and the other person follows (guess what this person is called?). Traditionally, the man has been the leader, but as we
Zydeco as a dance style has its roots in a form of folk dance that corresponds to the heavily syncopated zydeco music, originated in the beginning of the 20th century among the Francophone Creole peoples of Acadiana (south-west Louisiana). It is a partner dance that has been primarily danced socially and sometimes in
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