Upcoming Gigs

  • Wed, May 23, 2012
    8:15 AM Teaching Swing to 8th Grade Students at St. John's School, SF
  • Thu, May 24, 2012
    9:20 PM DJing along with Alex Fernandez at the 9:20 Special, SF ($8)

Reviews & Testimonials

Nathan was our wedding DJ and dance instructor for our very recent wedding in November and we still can't get over how fun the wedding and our first dance routine were!! Sachiko & Nate
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I hired Nathan (DJ NateDiggity) for my Move to the Groove party at Cafe Cocomo and he exceeded all my expectations. He was the perfect DJ for the party! Jeremy Sutton
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Nathan is awesome... I highly recommend taking his group classes, or hiring him for private lessons if you wish to swing dance at your wedding. Claudine & Danny
(read more)

Lindy Hop Class Music Favorites

Some of my Cat’s Corner Lindy Hop students asked me to share the names of some of the tunes I often play in our classes, and I am happy to oblige! I was lucky enough to find most of them available for MP3 download on Amazon.com, and here are the tracks listed from slowest to fastest:

  1. Things Ain’t What They Used To Be (Charlie Barnet)
  2. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
    (Ella Fitzgerald & Count Basie)
  3. Fine Brown Frame (Nellie Lutcher)
  4. Swingin’ on Nothin’
    (Jonathan Stout & his Campus Five featuring Hilary Alexander)
  5. Ram-Bunk-Shush (Lucky Millinder)
  6. Hungry Man (Troup) (Louis Jordan)
  7. Yes Indeed
    (Sy Oliver)
  8. No Sale
    (Louis Jordan)
  9. Let It Roll Again (Nix-Glover)
    (Lucky Millinder)
  10. Big Fat Mama
    (Lucky Millinder)
  11. I Want A Tall Skinny Papa
    (Lucky Millinder)
  12. Strictly Instrumental
    (Harry James)
  13. Comes Love
    (Ella Fitzgerald)
  14. Sent For You Yesterday (The Mills Brothers)
  15. Hey! Ba-Ba-Re-Bop
    (Lionel Hampton)
  16. Cole Slaw (Stone)
    (Louis Jordan)
  17. Lavender Coffin
    (Lionel Hampton)
  18. Begin the Beguine
    (Artie Shaw)
  19. Shout, Sister, Shout!
    (Lucky Millinder featuring Sister Rosetta Tharpe)
  20. Teardrops From My Eyes
    (Ella Fitzgerald)
  21. Beyond The Sea (LP Version)
    (Bobby Darin)
  22. Hoy Hoy (Little Johnny Jones)
  23. Keep A Knockin’ (But You Can’t Come In)
    (Louis Jordan)
  24. Dig It
    (Doris Day with Les Brown)
  25. Miss Brown To You
    (Billie Holiday)

That should be enough to download and burn yourself a nice little Lindy Hop practice compilation. Enjoy!

What are some of your favorite Beginning Lindy Hop and Swing tunes?

The Mysterious Mechanics of Frame: Part 1

Frame — which refers to a quality of flexible rigidity in one’s body while dancing — is an important concept in Lindy Hop and many other dances, especially partner dances. Dance teachers talk about it all the time and when I started out I remember my teachers explaining it in almost mystical terms. Perfecting the feel of one’s dance frame was like the holy grail of Lindy Hop. This article is intended to shed some light on some of the mysterious aspects of this essential technical concept.

Why is Frame Important?

Frame is important in Lindy Hop and other lead and follow partner dances because it allows partners to communicate movement with each other and thereby execute moves. If two partners hold hands but keep their arms loose and dangling between them, one partner stepping around on the floor will have little or no effect on the other partner. This is dancing without frame. If instead the partners hold hands but stiffen up their arms, then one partner moving will move the other partner. This is dancing with frame. Without frame, you’re really dancing by yourself.

In the historical context of Lindy Hop, frame is a relatively modern addition to the dance most likely borrowed from ballroom dances including West Coast Swing. The first Lindy Hoppers in 1920s-40s Harlem New York City were street dancers which meant that they learned to dance by watching and imitating other social dancers rather than by taking formal classes. These dancers may not have talked about frame in technical terms or had exercises for developing frame but I’m certain that they could intuitively identify in lay terms which dancers felt good and which ones were more difficult to dance with. Lindy Hop faded from prominence in the 1940s and 50s and evolved into West Coast Swing, a dance which did become formalized over the years. It is quite possible that when West Coast Swing dancers began to revisit their Lindy Hop roots and revive the original swing dance in the 1980s, that they helped introduce the modern concept of frame to Lindy Hop.

Some purists may argue that we shouldn’t teach frame as part of the dance since it is a retroactive addition. I prefer to acknowledge this as part of the living history of the dance, and take a functional approach. Being able to define, discuss and practice good frame allows us to do some pretty awesome moves and makes teaching the dance in a group setting a whole lot easier. Furthermore, when asked what he thought about the modern evolution of Lindy Hop compared to its roots, I remember swing dance legend Frankie Manning answered that he was impressed with modern Lindy Hoppers and amazed with the things they could do these day, things he couldn’t do himself…and that he was happy to watch and steal their new moves!

Developing Frame

1) The Basics

As a simple solo exercise in frame , you can extend both your arms out in front of your chest as if grasping a large box (or beach ball…stay tuned for Part 2). Your arms and body form a letter “C” in the horizontal plane.  Stiffen up your arms, so that you maintain the position of your arms relative to your body even as you walk around the room in different directions or twist from your hips.  This is a first approximation of good frame.

2) Qualities of Frame

It is useful to think of frame as having a range of rigidity from loose, floppy or “spaghetti” arms (no frame) to solidly-stiff, immovable arms (lots of frame). Various partner dances have different characteristic amounts of frame. Salsa dancers, for example, tend to have looser more flowing arms, while Lindy Hoppers tend to have a stiffer base frame. Still, even at a given base stiffness, one’s arms should have a flexibility to them. Think of your arms and chest as being made of wire coat hanger. They maintain their shape but they can still bend and flex. My teaching partner Cat likes to say that the arms should be like al dente pasta…not too hard and not too soft. Another teaching partner, Audrey, likes to say that the arms are like Barbie doll arms.

3) Frame and Partner Dance Connection

A very basic partner frame exercise is for you to hold hands with your partner and extend arms between yourselves, engaging your frame by stiffening up both of your arms a bit. Next, the leader can lean toward the follower letting the weight of their body press toward their partner through their arms. The follower should match this inward compression with equal and opposite force. The hands stay in the same position as your bodies flex inwards toward your hands in the center. You should both feel as though you’re pressing against an invisible wall, the wall that you are both creating for each other. Next, the leader can start to stretch and lean away from the follower, and the follower should match this stretch away again with equal and opposite force, counterbalancing his weight. You can practice transitioning from inward compression to outward stretch and, regardless of speed, the transition should be gradual and continuous, rather than an abrupt change.

Advancing the exercise a bit, you can use your frame to move your partner forward or backward. To move forward from the leader’s perspective, the leader should first compress toward the follower and wait for her to respond. Once that connection is established, the leader can walk forward pushing through his partner’s hands and toward their center of mass. The leader will have to overcome the follower’s inertia to get them moving. Maintaining the compression during the walk allows the follower to physically feel how fast the leader is moving and thereby move as a single unit. The leader will feel as though he is pushing through the follower.

To walk the partnership backward, the leader should first transition into counterbalance with his partner. Once the stretch away is established, the slightest step backward for the leader should pull the partnership over the tipping point and compel the follower to walk forward as the leader walks back. Again, maintaining the resistive counterbalance while the leader moves backward will allow the partnership to travel as a single unit.

I think it’s interesting from a physics standpoint that the partners maintain compression while moving forward or counterbalance when moving backward relative to the leader, because it means that the follower must maintain a forward lean while she walks backward and a backward lean while she walks forward. It sounds a little counterintuitive, but try it out and you’ll see how it allows you to maintain connection with your partner.

The last little note on this exercise is about transitioning directions. To make the changing directions (walking forward to walking backward or vice versa) as smooth as possible, the leader should gradually slow down in the direction he is travelling and release the compression or counterbalance and engage in the opposite force before walking in the other direction. This would be the cycle to walk forward and then backward and forward:

  1. engage basic frame with your partner
  2. leader compresses inward and follower responds
  3. leader walks forward pushing through follower; follower responds by walking backward
  4. leader eventually slows down forward walk
  5. leader releases compression and transitions into counterbalance, follower responds
  6. leader walks backward pulling follower along; follower responds by walking forward
  7. leader eventually slows down backward walk
  8. leader releases counterbalance and transitions into compression, follower reponds
  9. return to step 3

I’ve described these exercises from a leader-centric perspective, but in reality both partners share the responsibility for matching the amount of frame, compression and counterbalance. The leader just happens to initiate the movement. Practice both roles if you have a chance…it’s both fun and instructive!

Okay, that’s it for now…stay tuned for Part 2 and more frame exercises!

Jimmie Lunceford – Harlem Shout

Every Lindy Hopper should be familiar with at least one song by Jimmy Lunceford and his Orchestra: Tain’t What You Do (it’s the way that you do it!) That’s because it’s the song to which people around the world dance  the Shim Sham Shimmy, the classic swing line dance popularized by Frankie Manning. Fortunately for us, that’s not the only great piece of swing music by Mr. Lunceford’s band.

Jimmy Lunceford was the leader of one of the most famous black Big Bands of the swing era. The band was famous for its moderate tempo music (great for dancing) and Lunceford’s rhythmic innovation of a half bar accent on the first and third beat in the classic four beat swing. The band was most popular in the 30s playing musical arrangments by Sy Oliver. Lunceford was a perfectionist, and much of the band’s success could be attributed to their tight and almost-perfect collective performance.

A great album by Jimmy Lunceford is Lunceford Special: 1939-1940 and here are some of my favorite tracks:

  • Tain’t What You Do (naturally!)
  • Le Jazz Hot (smooth and buttery)
  • Baby Won’t You Please Come Home (I love the jolly interaction of the horns with the oom-pah of the bass)
  • Dinah, part 1 (great for Charleston)
  • Lunceford Special (a nice fast tune)
  • Blues in the Groove (another nice fast one with horns that will steamroll you)

Can you hear the “Lunceford Two-Beat” in any of the music?

Lucky Millinder & His Orchestra

Can you believe that one of my favorite swing artists to DJ from was a bandleader who couldn’t read music or even play an instrument? Lucky Millinder — his real name was Lucius — was a big band leader popular in the 1940s. He began his career hanging around the theaters and dancehalls of Chicago, where he learned the basics of stagecraft, lighting and music. After leading several bands in New York City on the guidance of music publisher Irving Mills, he eventually formed his own band in late 1940: Lucky Millinder and his Orchestra. Lucky was lucky to have a variety of top vocal talent sing with his band at various times including gospel singer Sister Rosetta Tharpe, saxaphonist/vocalist Bullmoose Jackson as well as rockin’ R&B singer Wynonie Harris.

Apollo Jump, the 2-disc set on the Proper Label is a good compilation of Lucky’s work and is jam packed with songs that I love to DJ from as well as use in my lindy hop classes. Here are some of my favorite tracks:

  1. Big Fat Mama
  2. Shout, Sister Shout (featuring Sister Rosetta Tharpe)
  3. Apollo Jump (this one is on my list of DJ’s greatest hits…song that Lindy Hop DJs always play)
  4. Hey, Huss!
  5. Let Me Off Uptown
  6. I Want A Tall Skinny Papa (featuring Sister Rosetta Tharpe, seemingly an answer to Big Fat Mama?)
  7. Mason Flyer (this song is full of hard-hitting rhythm that will steamroll right over you)
  8. Savoy (a classic lindy hopper’s delight, featured song for the Frankie 95 worldwide choreography)
  9. Who Threw the Whiskey in the Well (featuring Wynonie Harris)
  10. Shorty’s Got to Go (I just love this one in a minor key)
  11. Let it Roll Again (the high energy horns will fool you into thinking this song is faster than it it…I love DJing this for my beginning lindy classes, when they’re just learning to swing out.

Swing Dance Music for Practicing

A frequent question among my beginning swing and lindy hop dance students is: “Where can I get swing music for practicing at home?” Here are some of my favorite recommendations, and links for purchasing them online:

Another great way to discover some swing dance favorites of your own is to use an online music site like Pandora Internet Radio which ask you to enter the name of an initial artist or song title and then finds music that is similar in genre, instrumentation, rhythm and feel. Try entering a song or artist from one of the compilations above and see what you get!

What are your favorite CD and music recommendations for beginner dancers?

Count Basie: The Complete Decca Recordings

Count Basie is easily one of my all-time favorite big band swing artists. One of the first swing CD Box Sets I ever purchased was The Complete Decca Recordings, and oh man, it was so worth it every penny. I picked up the box set right around the time I was delving into practicing my fast swingouts and the 3-CD set provided ample music to work up a sweat. The tracks included are some of Basie’s earlier recordings, what is often called “Old Testament” Basie, which you can identify not only by the old-style recording sound quality, but also by the staccato and jankier feel of the music. Later “New Testament” recordings tend to have what I like to call a smoother and more buttery sound.

The Wikipedia claims that Basie’s signature tracks are the One O’Clock Jump and April in Paris, but my guess is that is from a listening standpoint. Any real lindy hopper knows that Basie’s real anthem of swing is….piano roll please: Jumpin’ at the Woodside!

Some of my other fast lindy favorites in no particular order from the Decca Recordings are:

  1. Swingin’ the Blues
  2. Shorty George
  3. Doggin’ Around
  4. Every Tub
  5. Honeysuckle Rose
  6. Exactly Like You
  7. Swingin’ at the Daisy Chain
  8. John’s Idea
  9. Topsy

And if you prefer a more mid-tempo sound, here are my recommended tracks:

  1. Georgianna
  2. Boogie Woogie (I may be wrong)
  3. Pennies from Heaven
  4. One O’Clock Jump
  5. Sent for You Yesterday

…really though, the entire set is awesome, so I would heartily recommend purchasing the whole box set instead of individual tracks. The Amazon.com links above are for purchasing the physical 3-CD Set vs. the equivalent MP3 Album. If you’re interested in music history, then you’ll want the former…since it’s got great liner notes to read.

From the Wikipedia:

William “Count” Basie (March 24, 1904 – April 26, 1984) was an American jazz pianist, organist, bandleader, and composer. Widely regarded as one of the most important jazz bandleaders of his time, Basie led his popular Count Basie Orchestra for almost 50 years. Many notable musicians came to prominence under his direction, including tenor saxophonists Lester Young and Herschel Evans, trumpeters Buck Clayton and Harry “Sweets” Edison and singers Jimmy Rushing and Joe Williams. Basie’s theme songs were “One O’Clock Jump” and “April In Paris“.

Now THAT was a fun gig!

Woo-wee! I am still reeling a bit from all the fun I had at one of my biggest Swing or Nothing! gigs to date: Bay Splash Blues!

Bay Splash Blues was a fund raising event and party to benefit Bay High School in the Presidio. The party had a blues and boogie-woogie theme, and included dinner, live music, dancing, a silent auction and a live auction hosted by news anchor Jan Yanahiro. Wow, you wouldn’t believe how much money they raised!

Alison Matoon, the co-chair of the event, contacted me about the gig back in January. She and her husband had taken a single private dance lesson with me about a year ago, completely on a whim, and so she had me in mind to help provide live music and dance entertainment for the event.

Hearing the Blues & Boogie Woogie theme, I knew that one of my favorite bands — the Jelly Roll Souls — would be perfect for the gig. Alison and her co-chair soon agreed after coming to hear the band play one week at Cat’s Corner. I also recommended that we have 3 couples worth of “atmosphere” dancers to social dance and help set the mood.

It was great to step into Herbst International Exhibition Hall on the evening of the performance and and see the stage, lighting and elegant dinner tables being set up. My right-hand-man and all-round awesome sound guy, Gary Hobish, was already there making sure that the band’s tech requirements were met. With that going on, I was free to worry about the status of my dancers. Once they had trickled in, we went over the schedule for the evening and our role in the show.

We all enjoyed a quick dinner service back stage and then changed into our costumes. I think we all looked sharp and sexy in our semi-formal black & solid color costumes…but you can see for yourself.

The idea was for the guys to wear black suits with solid colored shirts and for the ladies to wear black skirts with colored tops to match the guys. Our couples were:

Dave & Shirley (the RED couple)

Mara & Riccardo (the BLUE couple)

Me (Nathan) & Yon (the Orange Couple)

The Jelly Roll Souls have always had a knock-out and dance-irresistible sound, and this night was no exception. There was a small wooden dance floor set up in front of the band stand, with two round tables and chairs in the corners of the floor. Awash in red & blue lighting, the idea was to recreate a smoky blues club atmosphere.

I had so much fun dancing! I pretty much forgot that I was “working” a gig…and that is a great feeling. I mean, I think there is a certain enjoyment that one gets at the end of the performance, to have completed a major goal or task you’ve worked toward…but then there is also another whole different feeling to actually be enjoying the gig in the moment, to be able to sort of step back within your own mind, and see yourself smiling so big and glowing so heartfelt, because you’re truly and unequivocally enjoying what you’re doing. That’s what it was like on Saturday.

I think the energy of the band and dancers reverberated throughout the auditorium. Were every gig like this one, I would surely be a happy man.

Cheers and HUGE THANKS to all who made this gig possible!

Free Private Lessons Contest Winners!

Congratulations to all 10 of the Free Private Lesson Contest winners! Each of these contestants correctly identified the name of the song that I first started swing dancing to, Crazy Little Thing Called Love by Queen.

  1. John Delois
  2. Carol Peebles
  3. Tomoko Takeda
  4. Lisa Buchanan
  5. Kali C.
  6. Frank Thorne
  7. Reba Brinkley
  8. Mike Fauteux
  9. Kimetha Vanderveen
  10. Shirley Yap

For those of you who didn’t make it to the Top 10, you can still take advantage of a $10 discount on private lessons that I’m offering for the month of April.

Here are the original contest rules.

Free Private Lessons Contest!

Dear Friends,

Sunday, April 5th is my birthday and to celebrate I’d actually like to give away the presents this year: free private dance lessons!

Yeah. That’s right. Free.

The first 10 individuals or couples who can answer the personal trivia question at the end of this message may each claim a free 1-hour private dance lesson.

Lesson Details:

  • 1-hour private lesson w/ Nathan Dias
  • taught at Nathan’s home dance studio in the Inner Sunset, SF
  • lesson times available on Tuesday, Friday and Sunday evenings + weekdays during the day
  • limit 1 lesson per individual or couple

Use this opportunity to:

  • learn the basics in a private setting
  • refine & improve your technique w/ individual feedback
  • learn new moves, footwork, styling and more
  • practice class material with an experienced partner
  • learn to dance for your wedding or special event

I’m also offering a $10 discount on private lessons for the month of April, in case you miss being one of the lucky 10.

And now for the personal trivia question:

What is the name of the song that Nathan first started swing dancing to?

(Hint: you can find the answer somewhere on my website)

Email me, call me or come and talk to me at a dance with the answer to claim your lesson.

Cheers and happy dancing…oh, and Happy Birthday to all the other Aries/April Birthday people out there ;)

24-Hour Cancer Dance-A-Thon!

On March 14-15, 2009, I participated in the 24-Hour Cancer Dance-A-Thon in Irving, CA, dancing on a team of San Francisco Lindy Hoppers — The Hot Bloods. The Dance-a-thon is a 24 hour swing dance fundraiser, with a mission to raise money for cancer research and treatment at City of Hope Hospital. The event is like a walk-a-thon except that instead of walking, participants raise money by swing dancing! All participants, DJs, bands and instructors at the event are volunteers.

This cause is especially dear to me because my mom, Eulalia Rego, passed away from ovarian cancer on January 2, 2009. All of my fundraising efforts are dedicated to her memory.

Post-Dance-A-Thon Wrap-Up (3/20/09)

Believe it or not, it was a lot of fun to be cooped up in gym with 200-300 other dancers, moving and grooving to great swing bands, DJs, taking dance lessons and more…all in the name of raising money for cancer research and treatment.

Here are some of the exciting final statistics:

  1. The Dance-A-Thon raised a grand total of $130,453.11! 100% of that goes to the City of Hope Hospital!
  2. My Hot Bloods teammates and I were the 5th highest fund-raising team, bringing in a total of $7791. Not bad for our first appearance at the dance-a-thon!
  3. I was the 8th highest fundraiser, raising $1670!
  4. 45 people sponsored me with an average donation of $37.11!
  5. 32 of my sponsors were from the swing dance community, and 13 were friends and family.
  6. 6 of my sponsors were “gold” sponsors, in that they donated $100 or more.

Every little bit adds up, so thank you to ALL my sponsors for your generous contributions. The Hot Bloods team, still recovering from sleep deprivation and all the dancing, has already started exchanging emails about planning for next year’s dance-a-thon. We hope you will be a part of it when the time comes, but in the meantime, here are some photos from the event.

Some of my favorite moments from the dance-a-thon were:

  • dancing with my Hot Bloods teammates
  • leading a swingout line where all we did was swingout for the entire song
  • dancing in the jack and jill contest and seeing the sign that my teammates made to cheer me on
  • the delirious drive back after the event, waking up to find that Charlie had taken a 2 hour detour onto Highway 99 instead of Highway 5! Yikes!