DDEX Data Dictionary for Allowed Value Sets, 2019-09-16
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avs:DanceAndRhythmStyle
A dance and rhythm style.
Relationships      
Belongs to Class AllowedValueSet A Set of allowed values.
AVS Members AcroDance [missing definition]
  Ballet [missing definition]
  Ballroom [missing definition]
  Barcarolle Traditional Italian folk song sung by Venetian gondoliers. It is typically in 6/8 or 12/8 at a moderate tempo, with rhythm reminiscent of a gondolier's stroke.
  Blues Blues, a musical form that developed in the United States around the end of the 19th century. Child: BoogieWoogie
  Bolero Slow-tempo Spanish ballroom dance and accompanying musical form that originated in the late 18th century. It is in 3/4 time.
  BoogieWoogie Boogie-woogie, a musical genre that developed in African-American communities in the 1870s. Parent: Blues
  Breakdance [missing definition]
  Breakdown [missing definition]
  Bump [missing definition]
  Cakewalk [missing definition]
  Calypso A style of Afro-Caribbean music that originated in Trinidad and Tobago during the early to mid-19th century. It features a characteristic syncopated rhythm.
  CanCan Lively French dance of obscure origin. It became a popular music hall dance in the 1840s. Fast and in 2/4, the Can-Can was initially danced to music written for the galop and for its likely progenitor, the quadrille. Music written specifically for the Can-Can began to emerge in the mid-19th century.
  ChaCha Cha-cha(-cha), a dance of Cuban origin.
  Charleston [missing definition]
  CongaLine [missing definition]
  Contradance [missing definition]
  Cumbia A Columbian dance music which features vocals singing of the national resistance. The genre originated in the 1820s.
  Dansband [missing definition]
  Disco Dance music style that originated in the United States in the early to late 1970s that fuses R&B, Funk & Soul music. Unlike the simpler four-piece band sound of the funk & soul of the late 1960s, disco music often included vocalists, with several chordal instruments (guitar, keyboards, synthesizer), several drum or percussion instruments (drumkit, Latin percussion, electronic drums), a horn section, a string orchestra, and a variety of 'classical' solo instruments. Not coincidentally Disco was generally a producer led genre rather than as centered as much around the artists as other genres. As a genre that introduced dj's, dance clubs, extended mixes and remixes, Disco is the true beginning and basis for all dance music
  Dougie [missing definition]
  Flamenco Traditional music of Andalusian Romani. Flamenco was thought to have started with the migration of Indian gypsies traveling through the middle east and eventually settling in Spain and therefore has many middle eastern and Spanish influences. The music has endured much political backlash throughout its history. Flamenco is characterized by its unique virtuosic singing and guitar playing. The instruments used are the voice, guitar and palmas (hand clapping), as those were the instruments that the Romani gypsies could bring on their travels. Flamenco dancing is a fundamental Flamenco genre and culture, and Flamenco music often accompanies dancing.
  Forro [missing definition]
  Foxtrot Foxtrot, a dance characterized by long, continuous flowing movements.
  HandJive [missing definition]
  Hustle [missing definition]
  Interpretive [missing definition]
  Jig [missing definition]
  Jitterbug [missing definition]
  Jive Jive, a Latin dance style from the 1940s.
  LindyHop [missing definition]
  LineDance [missing definition]
  Locking [missing definition]
  Mambo Mambo, a Latin dance of Cuba.
  Mazurka A Polish folk dance in triple meter, at a lively tempo and with strong accents frequently placed on the second or third beat.
  Merengue A fast dance genre with fast arrangements and a 2/4 beat. The traditional instrumentation for a conjunto típico (traditional band), the usual performing group of folk merengue, is a diatonic accordion, a two–sided drum, called a tambora, held on the lap, and a güira.
  Pasodoble [missing definition]
  Polonaise Triple meter dance of Polish origin.
  Popping [missing definition]
  Quickstep Quickstep, a standard ballroom dance.
  Robot [missing definition]
  RockAndRoll Rock and roll, a musical genre that originated in the United States during the late 1940s.
  Rumba Rumba, also spelled rhumba, an American genre of ballroom music and dance that appeared during the 1930s.
  Salsa Salsa, a dance that originated in the Caribbean.
  Samba Samba, a Brazilian dance style.
  SquareDance [missing definition]
  Stepping [missing definition]
  Swing A group of dances that developed with the swing style of jazz music in the 1920s–1940s.
  Tango Tango, a dance which originated in the 1880s in Argentina.
  TapDancing [missing definition]
  Tejano German immigrants living in Texas around the time of the Mexican Revolution combined traditional German music with traditional Mexican music to form Tejano music.
  TheTwist [missing definition]
  Turfing [missing definition]
  UserDefined A Type of an Entity which is defined by a sender of a DdexMessage in a manner acceptable to its recipient.
  Waltz Waltz, a ballroom and folk dance.
  Watusi [missing definition]
  WesternSwing [missing definition]
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