Jump with your left foot, straighten your right foot, jump with your left foot, and bend your right foot backwards.
Take off with your left foot, lift and straighten your right foot from back to front, land your right foot and lift and straighten your left foot.
The left foot lands, the right foot bends backward, the left foot takes off, and the right foot lifts forward from behind and straightens.
Lift your left foot straight, land your right foot, take off your right foot, and bend your left foot from front to back.
Cross-dressing dance, also known as ghost dance. Originally named Melbourne Shuffle, it originated from some rave parties in Melbourne, Australia.
It belongs to a kind of power dance, a shuffle dance, with fast and powerful movements, powerful music (mainly electronic dance music, mostly trance, hardstyle, house and hardcore), full of dynamic vitality and strong on-site rendering.
There are many styles of shuffling dance, and each style is different in nature. The main styles of shuffling dance are: hardcore, Mas, Aussie, Bass, Mark, Freestyle and so on. (Due to different nationalities and regions, many names of the same paragraph are slightly different).
1992 The names of dances in other overseas areas are confusing. This year, Australians began to call this dance Shuffle, and the name was confirmed. Some underground dance halls rose in Melbourne, Australia in the 1980s. Its unique dance steps, strong music and unique costumes are very attractive.
From June 5438 to February 2002, an Australian newspaper explained this on the front page. This is the first time that Shuffle appeared in the mainstream media, and then spread to Malaysia and Brunei (both countries have Shuffle competitions), and then spread to Britain, Germany and other countries. With the help of the Internet and the media UrbanDance.Cn Choreography Network, it is popular all over the world.
In 2005, a DVD documentary about Melbourne shuffle dance was published.
On September 6th, 2008, the Australian media network 10 reported Shuffle, a hard-core dance. 165438+ 10, the dance program "So you think you can shuffle" was launched on youtube.
In 2009, "So you think you can shuffle" dance performances were held in Australia and Germany.