Arts & Culture

ONE NIGHT back in 2015, I was walking home from work when I heard a hum coming from the corner of Ann and Fleet streets. I poked my head inside the brick building, the American Legion, Post Number 95, and found the small room packed with a five-piece band and several dozen dancers of all ages, swinging and spinning and dipping in time with the music’s swift tempo, as they did most Wednesdays.

The sight was mesmerizing, as if I had stumbled upon a secret society and, in many ways, I had. After all, one doesn’t usually think of the mid-aughts as one of America’s iconic dance eras—we tend to think of 1920s swing, 1970s disco, or even the techno, house, and Baltimore Club waves of the 1990s, when it was a part of everyday life.

And yet there in Fells Point, in the early 21st century, both stresses and smartphones were cast aside to partake in this deeply human pastime. A moment of uninhibited movement. Of rug-cutting abandon. Of connection and community. And for a brief spin, even bliss.

Undoubtedly, we could all use a bit of those feelings as we brave the ongoing winter and weather this new year. And luckily, as that fateful weeknight foreshadowed, it turns out that this city is full of dancing. On any given evening, Baltimoreans are two-stepping, lindy-hopping, crazy-legging, and moshpitting their way around town at a range of recurring dance nights, dance parties, and even dance classes.

And anyone can join them. As Alex Lacquement, host of the monthly Baltimore Honky-Tonk once told us, “I always tell people, if you can move your feet back and forth, and if you’re having fun, you’re dancing,”

Below, turn up the volume on our playlist—curated by Version DJ Kotic Couture—and feel the rhythm of the local scene. Then, whether you’ve got minimal skills or serious moves, find your own way to one of these very dance floors, too. —LW

Above: Version, a monthly queer and trans dance party, at The Compound. Opener: From left, Rocking out to disco-punk at the Ottobar; the Deep Sugar house-music dance party with DJ Ultra Naté at Club 1722; Background: DJs and disco ball on weekends at The Royal Blue.
Above: Scenes from the Ottobar, which hosts myriad dance nights, including Metal Monday moshpits; Version DJ Kotic Couture; DJ Rob Macy spins during the monthly Save Your Soul vinyl dance party at Lithuanian Hall; Version; The Royal Blue; Deep Sugar; Dancing beneath the disco ball on a recent winter night at The Royal Blue.
Above: Scenes from the weekly Lindy Hop at Mobtown Ballroom, which starts with a lesson for beginners; Boot scooting during the monthly Baltimore Honky-Tonk at Waverly Brewing; Showing off swing moves at Mobtown; The dance floor at Lithuanian Hall.
Above: Indie Sleaze Night at the Ottobar; the stacks at Save Your Soul; into the groove at Deep Sugar, which takes place on the Lord Baltimore Hotel rooftop during the summer; on the ones and twos with vintage 45s at Save Your Soul; spinning at Save Your Soul.
Into the wee hours of the night.

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