Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Meanings Of "Bucking", "Stands", "Ace", "Tail" & Some Other Historically Black Colleges & Universities (HBCU) Majorette Dance Squads Terms

Edited by Azizi Powell

Latest revision: June 14, 2024 [Title change]

This pancocojams post presents a list of Historically Black Colleges And Universities (HBCU) majorette dance squads terms and their meanings.

I've compiled this list from reading a number of HBCU majorette dance squad video discussion threads, reading other online articles on HBCU majorette dance lines, and reading other internet articles and blog discussion threads.

The content of this post is presented for historical and cultural purpose.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who have been or are now involved in HBCU majorette dance squads. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this post.

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DISCLAIMER: 
I'm an African American community folklorist who is interested in documenting and sharing information about HBCU majorette dance squads. I'm interested in this subject because HBCU dance lines are a part of African American culture which isn't well documented on the internet and may also not be well documented outside of the internet.

By no means do I consider myself an expert on HBCU dance line cultures. I really need the help of HBCU majorette dancers and fans to add to and correct this list and improve the way these definitions are phrased.

Some of these terms (such as "ace" and "tail") are also used by historically Black Greek letter organizations with similar meanings..  

The content of this post is presented for cultural and linguistic purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Please share your additions and corrections in the comment section below. Thanks!
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 Click the "HBCU majorette dance squad" tag below to find pancocojams posts about these dance squads.

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LIST OF HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES (HBCU) MAJORETTE DANCE SQUAD TERMS

Pancocojams Editor's note: If you know what these terms mean, please share additions and corrections in the comment section of this post. Thanks! 


Ace (n) - 
The Ace is the dancer that is right behind the captain when they march in. In the stands the ace is at the beginning of the first row (on the left) behind the captain who is in front of the other dancers. The "Ace" position (spot) is usually the shortest dancer in the majorette dance squad/team.

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Battle (v); (n) - a term for the competition that occurs between the dance lines of  two competing universities (and their marching bands) during a football game. Unlike some stomp and shake cheerleading battles, these dance lines don't compete face to face on a field or in the same section of the football stadium bleachers. However, there's still a competition going on, especially among fans of those HBCU dance lines, and fans of other HBCU dance lines that aren't performing in a particular football game

Read the comments that I wrote regarding "stand battle" in the second entry for "stands"

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Buck (v) - a dance movement that is a major element in many HBCU majorette dance lines, but every HBCU majorette dance line does not buck. "Bucking" refers to performing pelvic thrusts (pelvic contractions) in time to the music; "bucking" in HBCU majorette dance lines isn't the same as the African American originated fast foot work known as "buck dancing" and "buck jumping" that are precursors of tap dancing (buck and a wing), flatfooting, and clogging

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Bucking arrangements (n) - a referent for music that sounds like it would be good for bucking (because of that music's percussive nature)

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Buck down (v) - to buck real hard (real good)

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Captain (n) - the leader of the dance line; the captain stands in front of the other dancers during performance; the captain throws (i.e. "calls") counts, and often choreographs dance routines, the captain is a strong dancer who shows leadership abilities and who is chosen by the director of that majorette dance line; in some dance line, the captain must be a junior or a senior

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Catch-on = the call and response pattern in which the captain, standing facing forward in front on the stands (bleachers), "throws" a count (movement) and it is then performed by the dancers standing behind her

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Counts (n)- a reference for a HBCU dance performance; the term "counts" is used in many other dance genres; here's a quote from http://www.ehow.com/facts_7194768_8-count-mean-dancing_.html
"Significance

When learning or practicing dance, most songs are broken up into segments or units called 8-counts. Each of these segments is measured in counts of eight beats, or how long it would take to count out "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8" in a rhythmic fashion. Once the count of eight is reached, dancers start over from one and a new segment begins.

Function
Dancers and choreographers use 8-counts on a regular basis to learn and teach dancing because most popular dance forms are based on 8-counts, which are essentially two 4-count measures back-to-back.

Fun Fact
Even though the majority of dance styles are based around 8-count divisions, the number of counts in each segment can vary. Certain styles of dance can feature 3-count, 6-count, and even 12-count segments."
-end of quote-
Some commenters in HBCU dance line discussion threads referred to 16 count routines.

In HBCU dance line culture, "counts" are also known as "cadences", and "stands". In HBCU dance lines, each count is known by a specific name, new counts are choreographed each season, but a dance line may perform certain count routines for decades or may only slightly revise an older count that was well received by the dance line's fans; although Bring It!, the nationally televised (United States) series on majorette youth dance lines uses the term "stands", it appears from my reading that most HBCU majorette dance lines and fans of those dance lines use the term "counts". Read the definition below for the term "throw counts"

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Crab (n)- a first year member of a HBCU dance line, often a university freshman; according to MACKG, a commenter on http://www.hbcusports.com/forums/threads/whats-a-crab.8534/ "What's a Crab?", May 30, 2002
"..."most Freshmen are known as CRABS. When I was a crab in the band...they said Freshmen wondered* about the campus lost all over the place like a CRAB fresh out of the water. Hence the term CRAB."
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*wondered = a typo for "wandered"

Notice that this term is also used in HBCU marching bands. On a HBCU dance line (and probably also in HBCU marching bands) the opposite of a "crab" is a "vet" (veteran); the term "seasoned vet" may also be used, meaning that dance member knows what she is doing on that dance squad because she has been a member of that squad for two or more years

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Dance Line (n) - a team (group, squad) of HBCU majorette dancers; also known as "dance squad", "dance team"; HBCU majorette dance lines are auxiliaries of their university's marching band and perform to the instrumental music played by that marching band; each year dancers (including previous members) must audition for a spot on that team. For example, click http://www.southerndigest.com/article_674b99ab-a7e5-5f02-b11b-d126a6b56855.html for an article about the requirements to be a member of Southern University's Dancing Dolls.

HBCU dance lines perform during their university's football game competitions, perform off season at their university's basketball games, and also march in university parades and other university events; some HBCU majorette dance lines or members of those dance lines have also performed in other venues such as back-ups in recording stars' videos or live performances including the Superbowl; as of this date, HBCU dance lines only consist of females; unlike HBCU step teams or HBCU cheerleaders, HBCU dance lines are always silent when they perform, the university's dance line has a given name which may be similar to the name of their marching band (for example, Texas Southern University's Marching Band is named "Ocean of Soul" and their dance line is named "Motion of the Ocean".

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Field Show (n) - performances that the HBCU marching band accompanied by its majorette dance line does in the football stadium field during a game's half time

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HBCU (n) = Historical Black Colleges And Universities
From http://sites.ed.gov/whhbcu/one-hundred-and-five-historically-black-colleges-and-universities/ "The Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, defines an HBCU as: “…any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association determined by the Secretary [of Education] to be a reliable authority as to the quality of training offered or is, according to such an agency or association, making reasonable progress toward accreditation.” HBCUs offer all students, regardless of race, an opportunity to develop their skills and talents."...
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Almost all HBCUs are in the southern region of the United States. Click a link on that page for a list of HBCUs.

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Field Show- routines performed by the dance line on the football field during that game's half time; the dance line performed to the live music of their university's band 

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Grandstanding = a term that refers to majorette dance lines performing in the stands (bleachers)

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Jsetting (n) (also given as j-setting)- a term that has become one of the generic references by the general public for the types of dancing that are performed by HBCU majorette dance lines. Howevr, this term may not be used by majorette dance lines themselves. The the term comes from the name of Jackson State University's majorette dance line, the Prancing J-Settes.

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Majorettes (n) - according to http://www.thefreedictionary.com/majorette, the definition of majorette is
"1. A female dancer who twirls a baton, usually in a group and sometimes with a marching band.
2. A drum majorette.
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It should be noted that males also have performed and still perform as majorettes. However, the reason why the all female HBCU dance lines have been referred to as "majorette dance lines" is because historically, majorette dance lines began as twirling baton majorette squads.

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Marching band (n) - a HBCU majorette dance line is an auxiliary of the university's marching band; the band plays instrumental music and the dance line performs with that music; Sometime the name of their majorette dance line is similar to the name of the marching band (for example "The Crimson Pipers is the name of Tuskegee University's marching band and "Piperettes" is the name of that university's dance line.

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Milk (noun); "to milk" (a dance move); "milking" (verb) 
From https://www.b-better.org.uk/the-alternative-directory-of-street-dance-slang/#M
"Milking it – Prolonging a movement as a kind of ‘bridge’ into the next dance move / phrase"

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From teezy.co/posts/dance-terms-dictionary#:~:text=Milking,re%20dragging%20out%20that%20move. 
"Milking:
When you extend movements throughout a portion of the piece or music.

At the end of a move, instead of “putting a period” on it and ending it definitely by stopping the movement, think of it as a “…” – like you’re dragging out that move."
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"Milking" results in a smooth, silky, sensuous style of dancing.

I've read comments in YouTube discussion threads of Historically Black Colleges And University videos about certain majorette dancers "milking that dance" or "serving milk".  For instance, some commenters in discussion threads for Southern University, wrote that Kayla Pittman's dancing was "smooth like milk and honey". Kayla Pittman is a former captain of Southern University's Fabulous Dancing Dolls.

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Ramp kick (n) - a custom found in many HBCU dance lines or individual members performing the same high kick when they begin to climb the ramp to their seats in the football stadium

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Routines (dance routines) (n) - a referent for the choreography that is performed by the HBCU majorette dancers

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Singles (n) - a referent for individual count performances that are done one at a time by HBCU majorette dance line members, the last person to perform her count is the tail, who purposely ends with a showy, elongated movement; in some video, the captain is shown raising her right arm straight above her head to signal to the dance line to perform singles

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Stands (n) - a referent for the football stadium bleachers; the HBCU marching bands and their dance line auxiliaries perform in the stands during football games

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Stands (stand routines) (n) - another way of saying "counts", a referent for a HBCU majorette dance lines' performance of counts in the stands of the football stadium; the term "count" is used much more often in the HBCU video comments that I've read than the term "stands", however the term "stands" may be gaining in popularity because it and not "counts" is the term that is used on Bring It!, the national television series about Jackson, Mississippi's Dancing Dolls and other youth j-setting squads.

Note that the term "battle stands" (a face to face competition between two majorette dance squads or the captains of those squads) which has been popularized by the Bring It! television series and which occurs at gay male j-setting team events doesn't appear to be used by HBCU dance lines because that type of face to face competition rarely [never?] occurs. That said, there are some off-season majorette competitions where HBCU dance squads perform one at a time in a gymnasium setting*, but "battle stands" don't occur during those events

*The Asymmetrix Indoor Nationals Competition is an example of majorette dance lines competing against each other. Here's a link for a video of a 2012 competition in which four HBCU university dance lines participated https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRsJX1UuMZw
Essence of Troy danceline from VSU performing at The Asymmetrix Indoor Nationals Competition"
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Update: 8/3/2016: I've found comments about "stand battles" in this discussion thread of HBCU marching band Morris Brown College and Tennessee State University https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2ybU5Zn5TA. "Stand Battle" refers to the marching bands musically competing against each other in the stands (bleachers) of the football field. That definition is different from the definition for "battle stands" that is used in the Bring It! television series.

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Swac (n) - from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwestern_Athletic_Conference
"The Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) is a collegiate athletic conference headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, which is made up of historically black universities (HBCUs) in the Southern United States. It participates in the NCAA's Division I for all sports; in football, it participates in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), still frequently referred to by its former designation of Division I-AA.
The SWAC is widely considered the premier HBCU conference and ranks among the elite in the nation in terms of alumni affiliated with professional sports teams, particularly in football"

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"Tail (noun)- the tail is the Historically Black Colleges And Univesities (HBCU) majorette dance position that is the second most important position in the dance squad (after the captain)

Tailing (verb) - performing the movements of the tail position

Traditionally, the person in the tail position was the tallest dancer. Because the members of the dance line were arranged by height, the tail was the last person in the (horizontal) row of dancers. However, dancers are no longer assigned the position of the tail based on their height. Instead, every dancer on the squad/team- including the captain and the tail - have to compete every year for a position and the Squad's Director decides who has the best skills for that position. A "crab" (first year member of the squad) can be a Tail, but the Captain is almost always an upperclassman. Also, a dancer who was a Tail can advance to the Captain position.

The tail is known to exaggerate her end movements at the end of the squad's dance routines, dancing in slow motion, and performing other motions such as how she sits down at the end of the routine. These exaggerated, slow dance movements attracts attention to her. The dancer is said to be "extra" (in this context, "extra" is a complimentary term that means that the person is doing a lot more than what other people are doing. The person is "over the top". excessive, dramatic, doing a lot). For example, the Tail takes her time sitting down at the end of her majorette squad's routine. Her "tailing" movements are designed to bring attention to her. 
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Added 8/3/2016 - My daughter reminded me that historically Black Greek Letter organizations (BGLOs i.e . fraternities and sororities) also use the term "tail". The tail is (or was?) the tallest person in that fraternity's or sororities' line (of people who are "pledging" or working to join that organization). In BGLO yard shows/step shows, the tail is the last person in a horizontal or vertical row. The tail usually exaggerates his or her movements, moving in slow motion and is "extra". This exaggerated, slow motion movement can especially be seen during a ripple (the movement is done in a staggered manner, each person does the same movement or similar movements, one right after each other).
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Throw Counts -(v) a term which refers to the action by the majorette dance line's captain in designating which count is to be performed; the action of performing counts, (also sometimes given as "throwing stands", or "throwing cadences")

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Uniforms (n) - the outfits that the majorette dance line wears; "costume" is an incorrect referent for these outfits

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9 comments:

  1. IS there an update to this, I am trying to start my own majorette dance team at my University...where should I behin?...and I appreciate this very infomrative page...I was looking for something like this for years and could not find any.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Hello, Tara Neilly.

      Thanks for the compliment about this post.

      I'm sorry. I've not updated this post, but there are some other pancocojams post on Historically Black Colleges And Universities (HBCU) majorette dance lines. Click that tag that is found below this post to find those pancocojams posts.

      What university did you attend?

      Pancocojams only embeds YouTube videos. I hope that there's one or more YouTube video/s of that majorette dance team when you were a member. If so, I may be able to publish that video or videos in a new pancocojams post about university majorette dance teams.

      Delete
  2. Is more than majorette.. You have Milking (The Fabulous Dancing Dolls), Humping (The Golden Girls),and Stinging (The Sensational Stingettes) and them dance team I listed is the some well known Dance teams including the Prancing Jsettes. PS. I came on here to know what an ace was!

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    1. Thanks for your comment, Unknown.

      Please share a definition of (or description for) the terms "milking" [as it relates to The Fabulous Dancing Dolls], humping as it refers to [The Golden Girls] and Stinging [as it refers to The Sensational Stingettes]. I assume these terms refer to some characteristic feature of those majorette squads.

      As indicated in this post under the term "tail", I've read that the "Ace" is the first person in a majorette squad -when that squad lines up. I think that means that the Ace is the Captain of the squad. Is that correct?

      Delete
  3. Here's a comment from the discussion thread of a 2019 Bayou Classic video regarding dancers in majorette squads/team and the captain position [These comments refer to Southern University's Fabulous Dancing Dolls]
    "Labria Kennard, 2019
    "I just wanna say I HOPE cam tries out for captain next year!!! It would be WELL deserved.
    Ps.. GIRL got milk!?"

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    Reply

    KD King, 2019
    "Dolls don't have tryouts for the captain spot. They're chosen by their leaders"


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDpH8SIXd94&ab_channel=SUFabulousDancingDolls "Southern University Fabulous Dancing Dolls 2019 | Bayou Classic Battle of the Bands 2019"

    ReplyDelete
  4. I would love for HBCU’s to be more inclusive to male dancers 😩 I believe anything can be done the right way !

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    Replies
    1. Hello, Anonymous. Thanks for your comment.

      I agree. I also would love to see more HBCU male dancers and male cheerleaders.

      Of course, people's opinions vary about what "the right way" is or what "the right ways" are and what those terms mean with regard to dancing/cheerleading or any other creative movement performance.

      For what it's worth, I don't believe that there's only one "right way".

      Delete
  5. What is a rip exactly? (like 4th rip as captain)

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    1. Hello, Anonymous. I'm sorry. I'm not familiar with the term rip in connection with HBCU majorettes. I'll keep a look out online for that term and perhaps someone else knows it and will answer your question here.

      Delete