Dancing Lessons Belfast

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Dancing Lessons Belfast Area

Video: Your Chance to Dance! Learn the basic rhythm.

Can you offer Belfast Dancing Lessons?  To place your learn to dance class details here contact Dancing Lessons.

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This is an excellent website devoted to dancing with some excellent information for beginners who want to learn to dance. Basic membership is FREE, and it enables you to view more dances and videos. Members can also post classified ads and post messages to the message boards.

When it comes to Dancing Lessons there is very little choice nowadays.  It has to be said though, that what there is offers a better opportunity for you to learn to dance.  Although you probably found that the minute you searched for Dancing Lessons Belfast, nothing comes up in your area?  We’ll do our best to change that.

Can you offer Dancing Lessons in Belfast?  To place your Dancing Lessons details here contact us.

Our apologies. There are currently no listings for Dancing Lessons in the Belfast area. It may be worth contacting nearby locations They usually know who teaches locally. This page covers.Antrim, Armagh, Augher, Aughnacloy, Ballycastle, Ballyclare, Ballymena, Ballymoney, Ballynahinch, Banbridge, Bangor, Belfast, Bushmills, Caledon, Carrickfergus, Castlederg, Castlewellan, Chapeltown, Clogher, Coleraine, Cookstown, Craigavon, Crumlin, Donaghadee, Downpatrick, Dromore, Dungannon, Enniskillen, Fivemiletown, Hillsborough, Holywood, Larne, Limavady, Lisburn, Londonderry, Lurgan, Maghera, Magherafelt, Moira, Newcastle, Newry, Newtownabbey, Newtownards, Omagh, Portadown, Portrush, Portstewart, Strabane

Dancing Lessons for Beginners

Dancing Lessons with Anton

We really need some listings here for Dancing Lessons Belfast so when you find Dancing Lessons for Belfast please let us know.


Quickstep: Light-hearted and fast movement, powerful forms and syncopations, represent the core style characteristics of the Quickstep, one of the most popular ballroom dances today in the world. Originally developed in the 1920s dance scene of New York and the Caribbean, as the combination of the dances such as Charleston, a slow variation of Foxtrot, Peabody, shag, and one-step. The smooth and glamorous version of quickstep that is danced today across the world to 4/4 music beat of 48-52 measures per minute was standardized in 1927.

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