Power move

A b-boy doing an air flare at R16 in Seoul, South Korea.

Power moves are moves loosely defined as relying on speed, momentum, and acrobatic elements for performance. They are prominent in B-boying, often the centerpieces of routines featuring the other elements (toprock, downrock, and freezes) that make up breaking. Also, power moves is near to gymnastics more than dancing. B-boys who focus heavily on power moves and execute them as a main part of their routines are often called "power heads". [1] It was discovered by DJ Kool Herc. The definition of B-boying is basically break dancing and gets into the music.[1]

Origin

The float and Headmills aka Power windmills and incorporated flares suicides into breaking then B-boys cut the phrase down in the 90's from powerful moves to power moves with poetic rhythm linguistics Syllable Syllable to make it sound more flashy. Nowadays B-boys are executing more acrobatics now which are the new power moves of the day it has evolved with the new generation to a higher level.

Types

Spins

Handstand Moves

Floats

Floats were one of the first power moves in the 80's. The body is usually in a fixed position while the arms move.

Swipes

Swipes are one of the most recognizable power moves. The b-boy or b-girl leans back, whips his or her arms to one side to touch the ground, and his or her legs follow closely behind, twisting 360 degrees to land on the ground once again.

Shadow Swipes is a variation of the swipe that incorporates the chair freeze to start the swipe. Created by Bboy Kid Shade of Hong Kong, it is one of his signature moves.

Windmills

The headmill is a windmill variant performed without the use of hands for stability, rotating with the head and shoulders as the pivot point. As headmills free the hands, there are many further variations defined by the positioning of the hands.

Major windmill variants:

Flares

Flares are a widely recognized power move borrowed from gymnastics. Major variants:

Air moves

Air moves are often referred to as power moves but are not; they require momentum, balance, and upper body control to execute. These athletic moves are characterized by the dancer's feet not touching the floor for an extended period of time while he or she maintains a sustained spin in the air. Air moves rely heavily on momentum, often achieved by swinging the legs and twisting the torso in a circular motion. The arms usually bear the body's weight while the abdominal and lower back muscles must whip the legs around as needed to spin the body. The lighter you are the more easy it is to execute these moves.

References

  1. 1 2 Okumura, Kozo. "B-boying". Dancers Delight. Retrieved 10 December 2013.

See also

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