Breakdancing
Breakdancing
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Breakdancing

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Breakdancing
GenreHip-hop dance
InventorStreet dancers
Year1970s
OriginThe Bronx, New York City
Breaking in the street, 2013
A breakdancer standing on his head in Cologne, Germany, 2017

Breakdancing or breaking, also called b-boying (when performed by men) or b-girling (women), is a style of street dance originated by African Americans and Puerto Ricans in The Bronx borough of New York City.[1][2][3][4]

Breakdancing consists mainly of four kinds of movement—toprock, footwork, power moves, and freezes—and is typically set to songs containing drum breaks, especially in funk, soul, and hip-hop. Its modern dance elements originated among the poor youth of New York during the 1970s and early 1980s.[5] It is tied to the birth of hip-hop, whose DJs played songs featuring rhythmic breaks for dancers.[6]

The dance form has expanded globally, with an array of organizations and independent competitions supporting its growth. Breaking became an Olympic sport at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris,[7] as per a December 7, 2020 decision by the International Olympic Committee, after a proposal by the World DanceSport Federation.[8]

Terminology

[edit]

Breaking has interchangeably been called "breaking", "b-boying", "b-girling", and "breakdancing", but many in the culture prefer not to use "breakdancing." They argue that the original practitioners of the dance used breaking, and that breakdancing was used by the media to commercialize the dance.[9][10][11]: 27  Breakdancing is also inaccurately used as an umbrella term to describe other funk styles like popping or locking.[12][13][11]: 23  Major competitions like The Olympics, Red Bull BC One, and World Breaking Classic use the term "breaking".

Some enthusiasts consider breakdancing to be an ignorant, and even pejorative, term.[14][13]: 58  Others use it to derogatorily refer to studio-trained dancers who can perform the moves but who do not live a "b-boy lifestyle" or to disparage those who learn the dance for personal gain rather than for commitment to the culture.[13]: 61 Many accuse the media of presenting a simplified[15] version of the dance that focuses on "tricks" instead of culture.[16] However, many still use the term "breakdancing" due to its popularity.[17]

There are several contradictory explanations of where the term "breaking" came from. One of the most common is that it refers to the drum "breaks" in songs that are commonly looped in breaking music. However, early practitioners say that 'breaking' came from a slang term used by African Americans in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In The Freshest Kids, DJ Kool Herc says:

"It didn't come from 'breaks' on the record. It came from, this man 'broke'. He went to ... the breaking point. You understand? So, we just used that exaggeration of that term to the dancing."

Several other original breakers support this origin of the term.[18]: 52–55 [10]

The terms "b-boy" and "b-girl" were coined by DJ Kool Herc to describe dancers who came to his parties. These terms that would later spread to describe breakers in general and eventually to describe people influenced by hip hop culture.[18]: 93–96 

History

[edit]
A breaker practicing downrock at a studio in Moscow

Influences

[edit]

Many elements developed into breaking long before the 1970s. Michael Holman writes that West African dances performed by slaves, such as Juba, introduced the cipher — a circle of dancers where each dancer takes a turn to dance — and an enduring element of competition into early African American dance. After Irish immigrants started arriving in the United States in the 1850s, African Americans combined Juba dance with the Irish Jig to develop Tap Dance. According to Holman, Tap dance has "connections with all the other dances that eventually did evolve into breaking."[19]

According to dance researcher Harri Heinilä, "It has been clear that the 'Breakdance' and other Hip Hop-related dances at the very least resemble or even were inherited from earlier African American dances, which have been collectively called jazz dance since this term appeared by 1917 and was established by the end of the 1920s."[3] The jazz/tap connection is corroborated by The Legendary Twins, early breakers who directly cite jazz dance figures like the Nicholas Brothers as inspiration for their developments and popularized jazz movements like the sweep.[18]: 84–86 [10]

When many of the early Bronx breakers were asked to name the first bboy, they responded with "James Brown" [18]: 34 [10] Brown's music and dance were the embodiment of black pride, self-expression, and individuality which stood out to pioneers like Kool Herc. In interviews, Herc said "I was listening to American music in Jamaica and my favorite artist was James Brown, " [18]: 35 

Capoeira and breaking share several moves. Some claim that capoeira and breaking share a common African origin, while others claim a direct connection. However, several early breakers deny the possibility of direct influence. Since capoeira was present in New York around this time, the connection remains unclear.[20] [21]

Early breakers Richard "Crazy Legs" Colon and Kenneth "Ken Swift" Gabbert cite James Brown and Kung Fu films (notably Bruce Lee films) as influences. Many of the acrobatic moves, such as the flare, show clear connections to gymnastics.

Kool Herc and Early Breaking

[edit]

Clive "Kool Herc" Campbell is often credited as the founder of hip hop, and while people were breaking before his parties, he was a central figure in the early development of the dance, and he is credited with taking breaking out of the underground and into public spaces.

Before Kool Herc was a DJ he regularly went dancing at local clubs, house parties, and community centers in the Bronx that were predominantly attended by African American teens.[18]: 36 [13]: 64  One of the most popular of these clubs was the Plaza Tunnel, in the basement of the Concourse Plaza Hotel. Young dancers would dance irreverently at parties like these in ways that were called "freestyling", "going off", "burning", or "breaking".[18]: 38–39 [13]: 58 

These parties also introduced key breaking moves like the "pin drop" or "knee drop", and emphasized core values of uniqueness and individuality that are still prized in breaking. They included burning, a competitive dance that both males and females would take part in where they acted out insults or attacks towards each other. This part of the dance would later be known as battling.[18]: 42 

Herc's approach to DJing was based in his background as a dancer at these parties. He wanted to improve upon the mixes other DJ's would play in ways that would make people more excited to dance. This commitment to playing music for breakers spawned innovations in music choice and turntable techniques that would make his events popular.[18]: 50 

On August 11, 1973 Cindy Campbell threw a back to school party to raise money to buy schoolclothes. She asked Kool Herc, her older brother, to DJ. The location was the rec room of an apartment building on 1520 Sedgewick Avenue in the Bronx, which is now sometimes called the "birthplace of hip hop".[18]: 49–57 [22]

This party was such a success that the siblings continued renting out the room on an almost monthly basis, eventually filling up the courtyard. By 1975, the parties had grown so big that Herc had to rent out local dance halls instead.[18]: 60 

As Herc's parties continued, he noticed that the breakers were waiting until the percussive drum breaks in the songs to do their most exciting moves. After about two years of throwing parties, Herc took several records with these drum fills and played them back to back, creating an extended section of the party just for breakers filled with songs like "Apache" by the Incredible Bongo Band, "The Mexican" by Babe Ruth, and "Yellow Sunshine" by Yellow Sunshine. This section of the party was a hit, and people started coming just to see the dancers.[18]: 69–71 

Several core movements from breaking developed at this time: The two step toprock was developed at Herc's parties as a way of making space before starting to break. The Legendary Twins also developed the first uses of extended footwork at these parties, taking breaking to the floor, while Cholly Rock and Pow Wow built on this footwork by doing fast rotations on the hands and feet now called "Zulu Spins".[18]: 54, 87 

Cultural Expansion, Rock Steady Crew, and Mainstream Adoption

[edit]

In the late 1970s, DJs like Grandmaster Flash had begun looping just the breaks in the songs, spurring a new style of breaking where dancers emphasized more acrobatic moves and extended floor work as top rocking became less important and receded into the background.[18]: 132 [22]

It was around this time when Latinos, especially Puerto Ricans, started learning the dance from its African American practitioners after breaking parties started being held outside.[23]: 81–83 [18]: 127–160  At this time, a lot of the original African American practitioners were ageing out of the dance or moving onto other dances. The formation of Rock Steady Crew was a good example of the racial integration and generational changes of this era. It formed when Jimmy Dee, an African American bboy, and Jimmy Lee, a Latino bboy formed a crew to keep the Rock (the dance) steady (alive).[10][18]: 152 

Rock Steady Crew was soon passed down to Richard "Crazy Legs" Colon, who moved to Manhattan and expanded the crew by battling others in the area. Rock Steady Crew met photographer Henry Chalfant, who was interested in breaking through its connections to graffiti. He started running events with Rock Steady performing, and in 1981, invited Rock Steady to battle the Dynamic Rockers at Lincoln Center, which garnered major attention from major news sources like ABC News and the New York Times.[10]

Soon after, Michael Holman started regularly inviting Rock Steady to battle the New York City Breakers at his hip hop nightclub, the Negril, where they danced alongside celebrities and built city wide reputation. In 1982, Rock Steady Crew got a part dancing in the movie Flashdance, which propelled breaking and Rock Steady to worldwide fame.[10][24]

Breaking "hit the West Coast with a fury in '82" after Flashdance. Crews like the Shake City Rockers and Air Force crew emerged. These West Coast crews innovated spinning and power moves to their more modern forms. Many of the first LA breakers started at the Radiotron community center, which became a hub for west coast hip hop. Breaking would become so popular, it was featured at performances like the 1984 LA Olympics, providing people worldwide with their first experience of breaking.[10] [25]

Uprock

[edit]

Breaking started as toprock, footwork-oriented dance moves performed standing up, but as dance crews began to experiment, breaking took moves and rhythm from uprock, a dance that developed in the 1960s.[26] Uprock, also known as Brooklyn uprock, is a more aggressive dance style commonly performed between two partners that feature intricate footwork and hitting motions, mimicking a fight.[22] As a separate dance style, it never gained the same widespread popularity as breaking, except for some specific moves adopted by breakers who use it as a variation for their toprock.[22] Uprock is also stated to have roots in gangs, as an expressive medium used to settle turf disputes, with the winner deciding the location of a future battle.[26] Although some disagree that breaking ever played a part in mediating gang rivalry, the early growth of breaking still primarily served to assist the poor youth of The Bronx to stray away from gang violence and rather expend their time and energy towards an artistic dance.[5] One example is former gang leader Afrika Bambaataa, who hosted hip-hop parties and vowed to specifically use hip-hop to support children away from gang violence. He would eventually form the Universal Zulu Nation to further his message.[5]

Some breakers argue that because uprock was originally a separate dance style it should never be mixed with breaking and that the uprock moves performed by breakers today are not the original moves but imitations that only show a small part of the original uprock style.[27]

Worldwide expansion

[edit]

Australia

[edit]

By the early 1990s, "Australia was a world leading power move country", according to 2020s award-winning breaker Kid Tek. Stars of the time included B-Boy All Stars from Brisbane, who appeared on the American talent show Star Search in 1992. During the 2000s, the style evolved from focussing on power moves back to foundational styles. Influential Bronx breaker Alien Ness visited Melbourne to judge a competition, who influenced local breakers to adopt this shift in style. Notable crews of that time were Fresh Sox from Melbourne and SKB (aka Street Kulture Breakerz), from Western Sydney, who recruited Korean breakers B-Boy Blond and B-Boy Blue. SKB were continuing to compete as of 2023.[28]

The breaking scene was peaking around 2010, but dipped between 2013 and 2017. After it was announced that breakdancing was going to be included as a sport in the 2024 Olympics, its popularity surged again. Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020–21, because of social distancing measures, breakers started doing battle online, via Zoom or Instagram. Australian breakers started developing more creative and innovative styles, and "pushing international barriers", according to Kid Tek.[28] The qualifying Australian entrants to the Olympics were b-girl Raygun (36-year-old university lecturer Rachael Gunn), and 16-year-old b-boy Jeff "J Attack" Dunne.[29][30] Neither made it out of the round-robin stage, and Raygun was widely mocked online for her creative "kangaroo hop" moves, with a video clip of her performance going viral, as well as discussed in the press.[31][32] Both entrants chose to wear their team tracksuit rather than street clothes.[33]

Brazil

[edit]

Ismael Toledo was one of the first breakers in Brazil.[34] In 1984, he moved to the United States to study dance.[34] While in the U.S. he discovered breakdancing and ended up meeting breaker Crazy Legs who personally mentored him for the four years that followed.[34] After becoming proficient in breakdancing, he moved back to São Paulo and started to organize crews and enter international competitions.[34] He eventually opened a hip-hop dance studio called the Hip-Hop Street College.[34]

Cambodia

[edit]

Born in Thailand and raised in the United States, Tuy "KK" Sobil started a community center called Tiny Toones in Phnom Penh, Cambodia in 2005 where he uses dancing, hip-hop music, and art to teach Cambodian youth language skills, computer skills, and life skills (hygiene, sex education, counseling). His organization helps roughly 5,000 youths each year, among whom is Diamond, deemed to be Cambodia's first b-girl.[35][36]

Canada

[edit]
Ottawa Youth breakdancing during Canada 150 Celebrations

There are several ways breakdancing came to Canada. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, films such as Breakin' (1984), Beat Street (1984), and the immigration of people from Chicago, New York, Detroit, Seattle, and Los Angeles introduced dance styles from the United States. Breakdancing expanded in Canada from there, with crews like Canadian Floormasters taking over the 80's scene, and New Energy opening for James Brown in 1984 at the Paladium in Montreal. Leading into the 90's, crews like Bag of Trix, Rakunz, Intrikit, Contents Under Pressure, Supernaturalz, Boogie Brats, and Red Power Squad, led the scene throughout the rest of the past two decades and counting.

In the 2024 Paris Olympics men's gold medal showdown, Canada's Philip "Phil Wizard" Kim swept 3 rounds against France's Danis "Danny Dan" Civil with judges voting 23–4.[37]

China

[edit]

Although social media such as YouTube cannot be used in China, breakdancing in China has been popular. Many people copy breakdancing videos from abroad and distribute them back to the mainland. Although it is still an underground culture in China because of some restrictions, breakdancing was reported to be a growing presence in 2013.[38]

France

[edit]

Breakdancing took off in France in the early 1980s with the creation of groups such as the Paris City Breakers (who styled themselves after the well-known New York City Breakers). In 1984, France became the first country in the world to have a regularly and nationally broadcast television show about Hip Hop—hosted by Sidney Duteil—with a focus on Hip Hop dance.[39] This show led to the explosion of Hip Hop dance in France, with many new crews appearing on the scene.[40]

Japan

[edit]

Breakdancing in Japan was introduced in 1983 following the release of the movie Wild Style. The release of the movie was accompanied by a tour by the Rock Steady Crew and many Japanese were captivated. Other movies such as Flashdance followed and furthered the breakdance craze. Crazy-A, the leader of the Tokyo chapter of the Rock Steady Crew,[41] was dragged to see Flashdance by his then girlfriend and walked out captivated by the dance form and became one its earliest and one of the most influential breakers in Japanese history. Groups began to spring up as well, with early groups such as Tokyo B-Boys, Dynamic Rock Force (American kids from Yokota AB), B-5 Crew, and Mystic Movers popping up in Harajuku. The breakdancing community in Japan found a home in Tokyo's Yoyogi Park[41] in Harajuku, which still remains an active area for breakdancers and hip-hop enthusiasts. As hip-hop continued to grow in Japan, so did breakdancing and the breakdancing communities. Following the introduction of international breakdancing competitions, Japan began to compete and were praised for their agility and precision, yet they were criticized in the beginning for lacking originality.[citation needed]

The Japanese began to truly flourish on the international stage following the breakdancing career of Taisuke Nonaka, known simply as Taisuke. Taisuke began to dominate the international scene and led the Japanese team Floorriorz to win the BOTY in 2015 against crew Kienjuice from Belarus. Despite Taisuke's successful career in group competitions, he failed to win the solo Red Bull BC One competition, an individual breakdancing championship that had continued to evade Japanese b-boys. The first Japanese to win the BC One competition became B-Boy Issei in 2016. B-girls are also prevalent in Japan: following the introduction of a female BC One competition in 2018, Japanese b-girl Ami Yuasa became the first female champion. Notable Japanese b-boy crews include FoundNation and Floorriorz; notable Japanese b-girl crews include Queen of Queens and Nishikasai. Body Carnival is a notable mixed-sex crew (comprising both b-boys and -girls).[citation needed]

Japanese b-girl Ami won the first-ever Olympic gold medal for breakdancing at the Paris 2024 Olympics.[42]

South Korea

[edit]

Breakdancing was first introduced to South Korea by American soldiers shortly after its surge of popularity in the U.S. during the 1980s, but it was not until the late 1990s that the culture and dance took hold.[43] 1997 is known as the "Year Zero of Korean breaking".[12] A Korean-American hip hop promoter named John Jay Chon was visiting his family in Seoul and while he was there, he met a crew named Expression Crew in a club. He gave them a VHS tape of a Los Angeles breakdancing competition called Radiotron.[44] A year later when he returned, Chon found that his video and others like his had been copied and dubbed numerous times, and were feeding an ever-growing breaker community.

In 2002, Korea's Expression Crew won the prestigious international breakdancing competition Battle of the Year, exposing the skill of the country's breakers to the rest of the world. Since then, the Korean government has capitalized on the popularity of the dance and has promoted it alongside Korean culture. R-16 Korea is the most well-known government-sponsored breakdancing event, and is hosted by the Korea Tourism Organization and supported by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism.

Famous breakdancing crews from Korea include Morning of Owl, Jinjo Crew, Rivers Crew and Gamblerz.

Soviet Union

[edit]

In the 1980s the Soviet Union was in a state of the Cold War with the countries of the Western Bloc. Soviet people lived behind the Iron Curtain, so they usually learned the new fashion trends emerging in the capitalist countries with some delay. The Soviet Union first learned of breakdancing in 1984, when videotapes of the films Breakin', Breakin' 2 and Beat Street got into the country. In the USSR these movies were not released officially. They were brought home by Soviet citizens who had the opportunity to travel to Western countries (for example, by diplomats). Originally, the dance became popular in big cities: Moscow and Leningrad, as well as in the Baltic republics (some citizens of these Soviet republics had the opportunity to watch Western television). The attitude of the authorities to the new dance that came from the West was negative.[45]

Breakdancing performance in Riga, Latvian SSR, 1986

The situation changed in 1985 with Mikhail Gorbachev who came to power and with the beginning of the Perestroika policy. The first to legalize the new dance were dancers from the Baltic republics. They presented this dance as the "protest against the arbitrariness of the capitalists", explaining that the dance was invented by Black Americans from poor neighborhoods. In 1985 the performance of Czech Jiří Korn was shown in the program "Morning Post", and became one of the first official demonstrations of breakdancing on Soviet television. With the support of the Leninist Young Communist League in 1986 breakdance festivals were held in the cities of the Baltic republics (Tallinn, Palanga, Riga). The next step was the spreading of the similar festivals to other Soviet republics. Festivals were held in Donetsk (Ukraine), Vitebsk (Belarus), Gorky (Russia). Breakdancing could be seen in Soviet cinema: Dancing on the Roof (1985), Courier (1986), Publication (1988). By the end of the decade the dance became almost ubiquitous. At almost any disco or school dance one could see a person dancing in the "robot" style.[45]

In the early 1990s, the country experienced a severe economic and political crisis. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the breakdance craze was over and breakdancing became dated. The next wave of interest in breakdancing in Russia would only occur in the late 90s.[45]

Dance elements

[edit]
Gravity Benders crew showcasing the four elements of breakdancing — toprock, footwork, freezes, and power moves – some crew choreography, and a short battle

There are four primary elements that form breakdancing: toprock, footwork, power moves, and freezes.[46]

  • Toprock generally refers to any string of steps performed from a standing position. It is usually the first and foremost opening display of style, though dancers often transition from other aspects of breakdancing to toprock and back. Toprock has a variety of steps which can each be varied according to the dancer's expression (i.e. aggressive, calm, excited). A great deal of freedom is allowed in the definition of toprock: as long as the dancer maintains cleanliness, form, and attitude, theoretically anything can be toprock. Toprock can draw upon many other dance styles such as popping, locking, tap dance, Lindy hop, or house dance. Transitions from toprock to footwork and power moves are called "drops".[47]
  • Footwork (also known as "downrock" or "floorwork") is used to describe any movement on the floor with the hands supporting the dancer as much as the feet. Footwork includes moves such as the foundational 6-step, its variants such as the 3-step, and other moves such as CCs and kickouts. The most basic of footwork is done entirely on feet and hands but more complex variations can involve the knees and elbows when threading limbs through each other.
  • Power moves are acrobatic moves that require momentum, speed, endurance, strength, flexibility, and control to execute. The breaker is generally supported by his upper body while the rest of his body creates circular momentum. Some examples are the windmill, swipe, back spin, and head spin. Some power moves are borrowed from gymnastics and martial arts. An example of a power move taken from gymnastics is the Thomas Flair which is shortened and spelled flare in breakdancing.
  • Freezes are stylish poses that require the breaker to suspend himself or herself off the ground using upper body strength in poses such as the pike. They are used to emphasize strong beats in the music and often signal the end of a set. Freezes can be linked into chains or "stacks" where breakers go from freeze to freeze to freeze in order to hit the beats of the music, which displays musicality and physical strength.

Styles

[edit]
B-boys performing on San Francisco's Powell Street in 2008

Many dancers combine different dances, movements, and ideas with breaking moves in order to create their own unique and individual style of breaking. These individual styles can generally be categorized into broader styles, including:

  • Power: This style is what most members of the general public associate with the term "breakdancing". Power moves comprise full-body spins and rotations that give the illusion of defying gravity. Examples of power moves include head spins, backspins, windmills, flares, air tracks/air flares, 1990s, 2000s, jackhammers, crickets, turtles, hand glides, halos, and elbow spins. Those breakers who use "power moves" almost exclusively in their sets are referred to as "power heads".
  • Abstract: A very broad style which may include the incorporation of "threading" footwork, freestyle movement to hit beats, house dance, and "circus" styles (tricks, contortion, etc.).
  • Blow-up: A style which focuses on the "wow factor" of certain power moves, freezes, and circus styles. Blowups consist of performing a sequence of as many difficult trick combinations in as quick succession as possible in order to "smack" or exceed the virtuosity of the other breaker's performance. The names of some of these moves are air baby, hollow backs, solar eclipse, and reverse air baby, among others. The main goal in blow-up style is the rapid transition through a sequence of power moves, ending in a skillful freeze or "suicide". Like freezes, a suicide is used to emphasize a strong beat in the music and signal the end to a routine. While freezes draw attention to a controlled final position, suicides draw attention to the motion of falling or losing control. B-boys or b-girls will make it appear that they have lost control and fall onto their backs, stomachs, etc. The more painful the suicide appears, the more impressive it is, but breakers execute them in a way to minimize pain.
  • Flavor: A style that is based more on elaborate toprock, footwork, and/or freezes. This style is focused more on the beat and musicality of the song than having to rely on power moves. Breakers who base their dance on "flavor" or style are known as "style heads".

Styles have historically varied from between regions and between generations, with different regions emphasizing and innovating different parts of the dance.

However, with many new breakers learning breaking from the internet, some people such as Jacob "Kujo" Lyons criticize how the internet makes individual and regional styles more homogeneous. In a 2012 interview with B-Boy Magazine he expressed his frustration:

… because everybody watches the same videos online, everybody ends up looking very similar. The differences between individual b-boys, between crews, between cities/states/countries/continents, have largely disappeared. It used to be that you could tell what city a b-boy was from by the way he danced. Not anymore. But I've been saying these things for almost a decade, and most people don't listen, but continue watching the same videos and dancing the same way. It's what I call the "international style", or the "Youtube style".[48]

Luis "Alien Ness" Martinez, the president of Mighty Zulu Kings, expressed a similar frustration in a 2009 interview. [49]

Music

[edit]

The musical selection for breakdancing is not restricted to hip-hop music as long as the tempo and beat pattern conditions are met. Breakdancing can be readily adapted to different music genres with the aid of remixing. The original songs that popularized the dance form borrow significantly from progressive genres of funk, soul, disco, electro, and jazz funk. A musical canon of these traditional b-boy songs have since developed, songs that were once expected to be played at every b-boying event.[26] As the dance form grew, this standardization of classic songs prompted innovation of dance moves and break beats that reimagined the standard melodies. These songs include "Give It Up or Turn It a Loose" by James Brown, "Apache" by the Incredible Bongo Band, and "The Mexican" by Babe Ruth to name a few.[26][50]

The most common feature of breakdance music exists in musical breaks, or compilations formed from samples taken from different songs which are then looped and chained together by the DJ. The tempo generally ranges between 110 and 135 beats per minute with shuffled sixteenth and quarter beats in the percussive pattern. History credits DJ Kool Herc for the invention of this concept[22] later termed the break beat.

Major competitions

[edit]
  • Battle of the Year (BOTY) was founded in 1990 by Thomas Hergenröther in Germany.[51] It is the first and largest international breakdancing competition for breakdance crews.[52] BOTY holds regional qualifying tournaments in several countries such as Zimbabwe, Japan, Israel, Algeria, Indonesia, and the Balkans. Crews who win these tournaments go on to compete in the final championship in Montpellier, France.[51] BOTY was featured in the independent documentary Planet B-Boy (2007) that filmed five dance crews training for the 2005 championship. A 3D film Battle of the Year was released in January 2013. It was directed by Benson Lee who also directed Planet B-Boy.[53]
  • The Notorious IBE is a Dutch-based breakdancing competition founded in 1998.[54] IBE (International Breakdance Event) is not a traditional competition because there are not any stages or judges. Instead, there are timed competitive events that take place in large multitiered ciphers—circular dance spaces surrounded by observers—where the winners are determined by audience approval.[54] There are several kinds of events such as the b-girl crew battle, the Seven 2 Smoke battle (eight top ranked breakers battle each other to determine the overall winner), the All vs. All continental battle (all the American breakers vs. all the European breakers vs. the Asian breakers vs. Mexican/Brazilian breakers), and the Circle Prinz IBE.[54] The Circle Prinz IBE is a knockout tournament that takes place in multiple smaller cipher battles until the last standing breaker is declared the winner.[54] IBE also hosts the European finals for the UK B-Boy Championships.[55]
  • Chelles Battle Pro was created in 2001 and it is held every year in Chelles, France. There are two competitions. One is a kids competition for solo breakers who are 12 years old or younger. The other competition is a knock-out tournament for eight breaker crews. Some crews have to qualify at their country's local tournament; others are invited straight to the finale.[56]
  • Red Bull BC One was created in 2004 by Red Bull and is hosted in a different country every year.[57] The competition brings together the top 16 breakers from around the world.[57] Six spots are earned through six regional qualifying tournaments. The other 10 spots are reserved for last year's winner, wild card selections, and recommendations from an international panel of experts. A past participant of the competition is world record holder Mauro "Cico" (pronounced CHEE-co) Peruzzi. B-boy Cico holds the world record in the 1990s. A 1990 is a move in which a breaker spins continuously on one hand—a hand spin rather than a head spin. Cico broke the record by spinning 27 times.[58][59] A documentary based on the competition called Turn It Loose (2009) profiled six breakdancers' training for the 2007 championship in Johannesburg.[60] Two of these breakdancers were Ali "Lilou" Ramdani from Pockémon Crew and Omar "Roxrite" Delgado from Squadron.
A breakdancer does an air-flare in a cypher at R16 Korea 2014
  • R16 Korea is a South Korean breakdancing competition founded in 2007 by Asian Americans Charlie Shin and John Jay Chon.[61] Like BOTY and Red Bull BC One put together, Respect16 is a competition for the top 16 ranked crews in the world.[62] What sets it apart from other competitions is that it is sponsored by the government and broadcast live on Korean television and in several countries in Europe.[61] In 2011, R16 instituted a new judging system that was created to eliminate bias and set a unified and fair standard for the way breakdance battles should be judged.[63] With the new system, breakers are judged against five criteria: foundation, dynamics (power moves), battle, originality, and execution. There is one judge for each category and the scores are shown on a large screen during battles so that the audience can see who is winning at any given moment.[64]
  • The Youth Olympic Games incorporated breakdancing as part of its programme, starting with the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires. Breakdancing is eligible for inclusion as it is a discipline of dancesport, which is recognised by the International Olympic Committee. The competition featured men's, women's and mixed-team events in a one-on-one battle format.[65]
  • The 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris saw the debut of breaking as an Olympic sport. 16 male and 16 female breakers – according to Olympic terminology – competed in head-to-head matches.[66][67] IOC President Thomas Bach said that breaking was added to draw more interest from young people in the Olympics.[68] Ami Yuasa won the gold medal for Japan in the women's event,[69] and Philip Kim took home gold for Canada in the men's.[70] It will not be included in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, but may return for the 2032 Olympics in Brisbane, Australia.[71]

Female presence

[edit]
A woman who has black hair tied back and a green T-shirt is swinging herself sideways onto one arm, both feet off the ground.
A female breaker performs in São Paulo, Brazil.

Similar to other hip-hop subcultures, such as graffiti writing, rapping, and DJing, breakers are predominantly male, but this is not to say that women breakers, b-girls, are invisible or nonexistent. Female participants, such as Daisy Castro (also known as Baby Love of Rock Steady Crew), attest that females have been breakdancing since its inception.[72] Critics argue that it is unfair to make a sweeping generalization about these inequalities because women have begun to play a larger role in the breakdancing scene.[73][74]

Some people have pointed to a lack of promotion as a barrier, as full-time b-girl Firefly stated in a BBC piece: "It's getting more popular. There are a lot more girls involved. The problem is that promoters are not putting on enough female-only battles."[75][76] Growing interest is being shown in changing the traditional image of females in hip-hop culture (and by extension, breakdance culture) to a more positive, empowered role in the modern hip-hop scene.[77][78][79]

In 2018, Japan's B-Girl Ami became the first B-Girl world champion of Red Bull BC One.[80] Although B-Girl Ayumi had been invited as a competitor for the 2017 championship, it was only until 2018 that a 16 B-Girl bracket was featured as part of the main event.

Media exposure

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Film

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In the past 50 years, various films have depicted the dance. In the early 1980s, several films depicted breakdancing including Fame, Wild Style, Flashdance, Breakin', Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo, Delivery Boys, Krush Groove, and Beat Street. In 1985, at the height of breakdancing's popularity, Donnie Yen starred in a Hong Kong film called Mismatched Couples in which he performed various breaking moves.

The 2000s saw a resurgence of films and television series featuring breakdancing that continued into the early 2010s:


Several documentary films have been made about breakdancing:

  • The 1983 PBS documentary Style Wars chronicled New York graffiti artists, but also includes some breakdancing.
  • The 2007 documentary Planet B-Boy follows five crews from around the world in their journey to the international breakdancing competition Battle of the Year. The Planet B-Boy documentary was the inspiration for the 2013 American 3D dance film Battle of the Year, a drama about the competition of the same name.
  • The 2010 German documentary Neukölln Unlimited depicts the life of two breakdancing brothers in Berlin that try to use their dancing talents to secure a livelihood. Breakdancing moves are sometimes incorporated into the choreography of films featuring martial arts. This is due to the visually pleasing aspect of the dance, no matter how ridiculous or useless it would be in an actual fight.

Television

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In the United States, Breakdancing is widely referred to in TV advertising, as well as news, travelogue, and documentary segments, as an indicator of youth/street culture.[citation needed] From a production point of view the style is visually arresting, instantly recognizable, and conducive to fast-editing, while the ethos is multi ethnic, energetic, and edgy, but free from the gangster-laden overtones of much rap-culture imagery. Its usability as a visual cliché benefits sponsorship, despite the relatively small following of the genre itself.

The dance shows So You Think You Can Dance and America's Best Dance Crew arguably brought breakdancing back to the forefront of pop culture in the United States, similar to the popularity it had enjoyed in the 1980s. The American drama television series Step Up: High Water, a series focused on breakdancing and other forms of hip-hop dance, premiered on March 20, 2019.

Since breakdancing's popularity surge in South Korea, it has been featured in various TV dramas and commercials. Break is a 2006 South Korean miniseries about a breakdancing competition. Over the Rainbow is a 2006 South Korean drama series centered on different characters who are brought together by breakdancing. Showdown, a breakdancing competition game show hosted by Jay Park, premiered in South Korea on March 18, 2022.[81][82][83]

Literature

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  • In 1997, Kim Soo Yong began serialization of the first breakdancing themed comic, Hip Hop. The comic sold over 1.5 million books and it helped to introduce breakdancing and hip-hop culture to Korean youth.
  • The first breakdancing themed novel, Kid B, was published by Houghton Mifflin in 2006. The author, Linden Dalecki, was an amateur breaker in high school and directed a short documentary film about Texas breakdancing culture before writing the novel. The novel was inspired by Dalecki's short story The B-Boys of Beaumont, which won the 2004 Austin Chronicle short story contest.
  • Breakin' the city, a photo book by Nicolaus Schmidt, portrays breakers from The Bronx and Brooklyn wheeling around on subway cars, in city plazas, and on sidewalks in New York City.[84] Published in 2011, it features six New York based breakdance crews photographed between 2007 and 2009.[85]
  • Breakdancing: Mr. Fresh and the Supreme Rockers Show You How (Avon Books, 1984) was an introductory reference for newcomers to the "breakin'" style of dance as it evolved in North America in the 1970s and 1980s.

Video gaming

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A few video games feature breaking, including:

  • Break Dance is an 8-bit computer game by Epyx released in 1984 at the height of breakdancing's popularity.
  • Break Street is a computer game in which the player receives points for performing complex dance moves using the joystick without exhausting the player character's remaining energy.[86] It was released for the Commodore 64 in October 1984 at the height of breakdancing's popularity.
  • Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix has Mario and Luigi breakdancing to numerous songs – some based after the Super Mario series, and others based on real life. It released on October 24, 2005, on the Nintendo GameCube.
  • B-boy is a 2006 console game released for PS2 and PSP which aims at an unadulterated depiction of breakdancing.[87]
  • Bust a Groove is a video game franchise whose character "Heat" specializes in breakdancing.
  • Pump It Up is a Korean game that requires physical movement of the feet. The game involves breakdancing and people can accomplish this feat by memorizing the steps and creating dance moves to hit the arrows on time.
  • Breakdance Champion Red Bull BC One is an iOS and Android rhythm game that focuses on the actual breakdancing competition Red Bull BC One.[88]
  • Floor Kids is a Nintendo Switch game released in 2017 that scores your performance based on its musicality, originality, and style.[89] It received praise for its innovative controls and the Kid Koala soundtrack.[90][91]
  • In the long-running Yakuza video game franchise, Goro Majima's Breaker fighting style heavily relies on movements and techniques derived from break dancing.

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Breaking, also known as breakdancing, b-boying, or b-girling, is an improvisational athletic street dance style that originated in the early 1970s among working-class African American and Latino youth in the Bronx borough of New York City, emerging as a core element of hip-hop culture alongside DJing, MCing, and graffiti.[1][2] The dance features foundational elements including toprock (upright rhythmic steps), downrock or footwork (floor-based patterns like the 6-step), power moves (continuous rotational acrobatics such as windmills and headspins), and freezes (statuesque poses), all executed to the percussive "breaks" in funk, soul, and later hip-hop tracks.[3][4] Practitioners, termed b-boys and b-girls, compete in circular cyphers or judged battles emphasizing creativity, musicality, and physical prowess over scripted routines.[5] From its roots as an expressive outlet for marginalized urban youth amid socioeconomic hardship, breaking spread globally through media exposure and cultural exchange, evolving into organized competitions while retaining improvisational essence.[6] Pioneered by figures like DJ Kool Herc, who extended drum breaks to prolong dance sessions, it gained mainstream visibility via films like Wild Style (1983) and crews such as the Rock Steady Crew, fostering international scenes in Europe, Asia, and beyond.[1] A landmark achievement came with its Olympic debut as "breaking" at the 2024 Paris Games, where Japan's Ami Yuasa claimed gold in the women's event, marking the first inclusion of a hip-hop discipline despite debates over formalizing a traditionally freestyle art.[4] Controversies persist regarding breaking's "sportification," with purists critiquing institutional oversight by bodies like World DanceSport Federation for prioritizing athleticism over cultural authenticity and risking commercialization that dilutes street origins.[7] Its exclusion from the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics underscores challenges in sustaining Olympic appeal, as organizers cited insufficient global growth post-Paris to justify return, highlighting tensions between preservation of grassroots improvisation and broader institutional integration.[8]

Terminology

Definitions and Etymology

Breaking, also known as b-boying or b-girling, is an improvisational street dance style characterized by athletic maneuvers such as footwork, spins, power moves on the hands or head, and dynamic freezes, typically performed in competitive battles or cyphers to the rhythmic breaks of hip-hop, funk, or electronic music.[1] [9] The dance emphasizes creativity, musicality, and physical precision, often involving solo or crew-based performances where dancers alternate moves in response to opponents or the beat.[1] Practitioners, termed b-boys (for males) and b-girls (for females), execute these elements in a cultural context rooted in hip-hop's four pillars: DJing, MCing, graffiti, and breaking itself.[10] The term "b-boy" and "b-girl" originated in the early 1970s Bronx party scene, coined by Jamaican-American DJ Kool Herc to describe those who danced energetically during the isolated "breaks"—percussive instrumental segments—of songs, which he extended via turntable techniques to prolong the dancing interval.[11] [12] Herc's innovation of looping these breaks, drawn from funk records like those by James Brown, directly inspired the dance's name and style, as dancers filled the rhythmic gaps with acrobatic flair before the vocal parts resumed.[13] [10] Within the community, "breaking" remains the preferred designation, reflecting its ties to these musical breaks and organic evolution, whereas "breakdancing" (or "break-dancing") was a later media invention, reportedly popularized around 1981 by figures like Rock Steady Crew manager Richard Colón to appeal to mainstream audiences during the dance's commercial surge.[14] [1] Many original practitioners reject "breakdancing" as an external, commercializing label that dilutes the form's street authenticity and battle-oriented essence, insisting on "breaking" to honor its foundational hip-hop roots.[14] [10]

Distinction from Breaking

Breaking, the original term used by practitioners since its emergence in the Bronx during the early 1970s, derives from dancers performing acrobatic and rhythmic movements during the "breaks"—instrumental sections of funk and soul records emphasized by DJs like Kool Herc. This nomenclature reflects the dance's roots in hip-hop's foundational elements, where "breaking" also connoted energetic improvisation or disruption in slang of the era.[15] In contrast, "breakdancing" was introduced by mainstream media outlets and films in the early 1980s, such as the 1983 movie Flashdance and the 1984 film Breakin', which portrayed the style to broader audiences but often blended it with other dance forms like popping, leading to perceptions of dilution.[14] Members of the breaking community, including pioneers and contemporary B-boys and B-girls, overwhelmingly favor "breaking" to preserve cultural integrity and distance the practice from commercial stereotypes that equated it with fleeting trends or inauthentic performances on linoleum or cardboard.[2] This preference underscores a commitment to the dance's competitive "battles," stylistic originality, and ties to hip-hop's Bronx origins, rather than the generalized, spectator-oriented framing implied by "breakdancing."[16] Official bodies echo this stance; the International Olympic Committee designated the event as "breaking" for its debut at the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics, aligning with athlete terminology where participants are termed B-boys or B-girls, not breakdancers.[17]

Historical Origins

Early Influences and Precursors

The "Good Foot" dance, popularized by James Brown's October 1972 single "Get on the Good Foot," served as a direct precursor through its acrobatic footwork, side-to-side leg isolations, drops to the floor, and spins, which early breakers in New York emulated during funk music performances.[18][9] DJ Afrika Bambaataa explicitly credited Brown's routine in the song as initiating the foundational freestyle elements of breaking, predating the Bronx parties where the style coalesced.[9][19] Uprock, emerging in Brooklyn's Puerto Rican and African American gang communities around 1969, functioned as an aggressive, mimetic partner dance mimicking fighting stances and punches to up-tempo records, establishing the competitive "battle" format later central to breaking.[10] This style drew from earlier street confrontations ritualized through movement, providing a non-violent outlet that influenced transitional poses and rhythmic footwork in Bronx adaptations.[10] Broader African American vernacular dances from the early 20th century, including the lindy-hop, jitterbug, Charleston, cakewalk, and double Dutch jump rope games, contributed improvisational flair, syncopated rhythms, and body isolations that echoed in breaking's foundational grooves.[18] These forms, rooted in Black social dance traditions, emphasized call-and-response dynamics and athletic expression amid limited resources, setting a cultural precedent for youth improvisation in urban environments.[18] Gymnastic maneuvers such as backflips, aerials, and rotational spins, alongside martial arts techniques from kung fu (e.g., sweeps and rises from the ground), supplied the mechanical basis for later power moves like windmills and headspins, with breakers adapting these for floor-based endurance rather than sport or combat utility.[20][18] Claims of capoeira's direct influence via 1970s New York demonstrations by masters like Jelon Vieira persist among some observers, citing shared inverted spins and fluid evasions, though primary accounts from pioneers prioritize local funk derivations over Brazilian imports, with no documented transmission chains predating the style's emergence.[21][22]

Emergence in the Bronx (1970s)

Breakdancing, also known as breaking, originated among African-American and Latino youth in the South Bronx neighborhood of New York City during the early 1970s, amid economic decline and social challenges including high unemployment, arson, and gang activity.[23][1] The style developed as part of the emerging hip-hop culture, where disc jockeys extended instrumental "breaks" in funk and soul records to create continuous rhythmic segments for dancing, replacing verbal toasts or singing with physical performance.[24][1] Jamaican-born DJ Clive Campbell, known as Kool Herc, pioneered this breakbeat technique after immigrating to the Bronx in 1967 and adapting elements from Jamaican sound system parties.[25][26] A seminal event occurred on August 11, 1973, when 18-year-old Kool Herc deejayed his sister Cindy's back-to-school party in the recreation room of their apartment building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.[25][26] Using two turntables and a mixer, Herc isolated and looped the percussive breaks—such as those in tracks by James Brown, The Incredible Bongo Band's "Apache," and Kraftwerk—extending them beyond their original short durations to energize approximately 300 attendees.[27][28] During these loops, crowds of dancers, soon termed "b-boys" and "b-girls," improvised energetic, acrobatic footwork and floor-based maneuvers, marking the initial crystallization of breaking as a competitive, improvisational form distinct from earlier social dances.[24][1] By the mid-1970s, breaking evolved through block parties and community centers in the Bronx, where b-boys formed informal crews to engage in non-violent "battles" that substituted for gang confrontations, emphasizing skill in uprock (aggressive standing footwork mimicking fighting), footwork, and early power moves like headspins.[23] Herc's crew, including early MCs like Coke La Rock, promoted these gatherings, which drew from 200 to 500 participants and spread the style via word-of-mouth among youth aged 14 to 20.[25][27] The practice remained localized to Bronx housing projects and parks until the late 1970s, fostering a merit-based culture where proficiency in freezes (sudden poses) and transitions between moves determined status in cyphers—circular jams around performing dancers.[1][23]

Key Pioneers and Evolution

DJ Kool Herc, born Clive Campbell in Jamaica, pioneered the technique of isolating and extending the "break" sections of funk records during block parties in the Bronx starting in 1973, creating extended rhythmic segments that encouraged competitive dancing among participants known as b-boys and b-girls.[25] His debut event on August 11, 1973, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue drew crowds where dancers from his crew, the Magnificent Force, showcased athletic footwork and acrobatics synced to these breaks, laying the foundation for breaking as a distinct element of emerging hip-hop culture.[28] This innovation shifted focus from full songs to percussive loops, typically 10-15 seconds long but looped for minutes, enabling sustained performances that emphasized improvisation and physical prowess over partnered dancing.[24] Early breaking crews formalized around these parties, with groups like the Zulu Kings—affiliated with Afrika Bambaataa's Universal Zulu Nation, formed circa 1973—engaging in turf battles that refined competitive formats.[29] By 1977, the Rock Steady Crew emerged in the Bronx, founded by b-boys Jo Jo (Jose Rodriguez) and Jimmy D (Jimmy Dee) as the Untouchable Four B-Boys, comprising initial members Joe-Joe, Easy-Mike, Jimmy-Dee, and P.Body from the 170th Street area.[30] Under leaders like Crazy Legs (Richard Colón), who joined soon after and innovated complex footwork variations, the crew elevated breaking through rigorous street cyphers—circular jams where dancers took turns "battling" via sequences of moves—prioritizing originality, musicality, and endurance over aggression.[31] Breaking's evolution in the late 1970s transitioned from spontaneous party displays to structured crew rivalries across Bronx neighborhoods, fostering stylistic diversity: foundational toprock (upright footwork mimicking James Brown-inspired steps) gave way to downrock (floor-based spins and sweeps) and nascent power moves (continuous rotations like headspins).[32] These developments occurred organically in outdoor venues such as schoolyards and handball courts, where over 100 documented crews by 1979 iterated on techniques through trial-and-error, with innovations like the turtle freeze credited to figures such as Trac 2 of the Dynamic Rockers.[33] This era's causal dynamic—driven by peer competition amid socioeconomic challenges in the South Bronx—prioritized verifiable skill hierarchies via battle outcomes, distinguishing breaking from mere acrobatics by integrating musical response and narrative flair.[29]

1980s Mainstream Exposure and Decline

Breakdancing achieved significant mainstream exposure in the early 1980s through cinematic portrayals that introduced its dynamic style to broad audiences. The 1983 film Flashdance prominently featured members of the Rock Steady Crew, including Crazy Legs, who doubled for lead actress Jennifer Beals in breakdancing sequences, marking one of the first major Hollywood integrations of the dance form.[34] This was followed by a surge of dedicated breakdancing movies in 1984, such as Breakin', which grossed $38.6 million domestically and ranked as the 17th highest-grossing film of the year, and Beat Street, which depicted a notable battle between the Rock Steady Crew and New York City Breakers.[35] [34] Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo also capitalized on the trend, earning substantial returns despite signs of emerging audience fatigue.[35] Prominent crews like the Rock Steady Crew and New York City Breakers amplified visibility through international performances, including appearances before the Queen of England and at venues like Lincoln Center, alongside television spots such as the 1984 pilot of Graffiti Rock.[34] These media integrations, often under the popularized term "breakdancing," propelled the style into global pop culture, with events and competitions drawing widespread participation and commercial interest by mid-decade.[36] However, this rapid commercialization contributed to a perception of breakdancing as a fleeting fad, leading to a decline in mainstream appeal by the late 1980s.[36] Overexposure through films and merchandise diluted its street authenticity in the eyes of purists and audiences, while subsequent productions like Rappin' (1985) saw diminishing box office returns, signaling waning interest.[35] Concurrent media reports highlighted health risks, including severe injuries from untrained attempts at complex maneuvers; for instance, a June 1984 New York Times article cited cases of neck fractures and other traumas, such as 25-year-old Efrain Arreola's broken neck from an unpracticed stunt.[37] Doctors warned of torn ligaments, broken bones, and spinal cord damage, coining terms like "break-dancing neck" for such incidents, which fueled parental concerns and regulatory scrutiny.[38] These factors, combined with hip-hop's evolving emphasis on MCing and production over dance, reduced public engagement, though underground practitioners persisted.[34]

Revival in the 1990s and Beyond

Following the mainstream fade of the 1980s, breaking persisted through underground dedication by original practitioners and emerging youth, preventing its extinction and laying groundwork for renewed growth by the decade's end.[34] Levels of technical proficiency advanced rapidly as participation increased globally, with practitioners refining acrobatic and power elements in local cyphers.[39] The 1990 launch of Battle of the Year (BOTY) in Germany represented a pivotal event, establishing the format for crew-based international competitions that drew participants from Europe, North America, and beyond, thereby institutionalizing judging criteria focused on musicality, creativity, and battle dynamics.[34] European crews like Aktuel Force from France, Battle Squad from Germany, and Flying Steps from Germany dominated early editions, showcasing stylistic innovations that influenced subsequent generations.[39] By the early 2000s, breaking's international footprint expanded markedly, with large-scale battles proliferating in Asia, Europe, and the Americas, driven by accessible media like DVDs and early online videos that disseminated footage of high-level performances.[39] Events such as Red Bull's Lords of the Floor in 2001 and BC One starting in 2004 elevated individual b-boy battles to professional status, attracting sponsors and audiences while emphasizing one-on-one confrontations rooted in hip-hop's competitive ethos.[40] South Korea emerged as a powerhouse, with dense training academies producing technically precise dancers who integrated rapid footwork and dynamic freezes, contributing to the style's evolution.[10] The 2010s saw further mainstream integration via youth programs and cultural exports, including breaking's inclusion in the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires, where mixed-team battles highlighted global talent and introduced standardized scoring to broader audiences.[1] This culminated in breaking's Olympic debut at the 2024 Paris Games on August 9-10, featuring 36 qualifiers in solo events judged on technique, vocabulary, execution, musicality, and originality, with Japan's B-Girl Ami winning gold in the women's category amid events held outdoors near the Seine.[15] Despite boosting visibility—evidenced by millions of viewers and subsequent youth enrollment spikes—the Olympic format sparked debate within the community over commercialization versus preservation of street authenticity, leading to its exclusion from the 2028 Los Angeles program.[41][42] Post-2024, independent circuits like BOTY and Red Bull BC One continue to thrive, sustaining breaking's core as a freestyle battle art form adapted to contemporary contexts.[40]

Core Dance Elements

Toprock and Footwork

Toprock consists of upright dance movements performed while standing, serving as the initial phase of a breaking routine to establish a dancer's style, rhythm, and attitude before transitioning to floorwork.[1][32] These steps originated in the early 1970s among African-American and Latino youth in the Bronx, New York, as part of the emerging hip-hop culture, drawing influences from earlier street dances like the hustle and James Brown's energetic footwork.[43][44] Common foundational toprock variations include the Indian step, which involves alternating foot crosses mimicking Native American-inspired motions, and the cross step, a simple alternating leg weave that emphasizes timing with the beat.[1] Dancers prioritize cleanliness (precise execution), form (body alignment), and attitude (personal flair), allowing creative improvisation within these constraints, though toprock is incomplete without a drop to the floor in traditional contexts.[45] Footwork, also known as downrock or foundational floor patterns, encompasses intricate leg and foot maneuvers executed on the hands and feet after a toprock transition, forming the rhythmic base of breaking routines.[46][47] Emerging alongside toprock in the Bronx during the 1970s, footwork evolved as breakers adapted acrobatic and circular motions to hip-hop breakbeats, with pioneers emphasizing circular flows to maintain momentum and evade opponents in battles.[43] Key techniques include the 6-step, a foundational circular pattern tracing six points around the body using one hand as a pivot, often performed to build speed and incorporate variations like hooks or underarms; the 3-step, a condensed version using three points for tighter spaces; and linear moves such as shuffles (rapid knee slides) and kick-outs (explosive leg extensions).[47][48] Advanced footwork may integrate CCs (coffee grinders, circling one leg around the other) or threads (weaving limbs through the body), demanding upper-body strength for support and lower-body agility for complexity, typically sustained for 10-20 seconds per sequence in competitive settings.[46][49] Both elements interconnect seamlessly in performance, with toprock drops—such as knee drops or baby freezes—leading into footwork to create continuous flow, reflecting breaking's emphasis on musicality and battle dynamics over isolated tricks.[50] In battles, footwork often counters opponents by invading space or matching energy, while toprock signals entry with cultural nods like salute steps honoring hip-hop roots.[47] Training focuses on endurance, as sustained footwork requires core stability to prevent fatigue, with practitioners recommending 15-30 minute drills on smooth surfaces to refine precision.[51]

Downrock and Floor Moves

Downrock, also referred to as footwork or floorwork, constitutes the foundational ground-based component of breaking, involving intricate movements executed close to the floor with the hands and feet providing primary support. This element emphasizes rhythmic foot patterns, body control, and creativity, typically following a transition from standing toprock via a drop. Dancers maintain a low center of gravity, often in a handstand-like or crouched position, to facilitate fluid transitions and variations that showcase agility and precision.[46][50][52] Common downrock moves include the six-step, a circular footwork pattern where the dancer weaves their legs around the supporting hands in six counts, forming the basis for more complex variations; the three-step, a condensed version emphasizing speed and tightness; and CCs (coffee grinders), which involve sweeping leg motions around the body while balanced on one hand. Other techniques encompass shuffles, rapid directional changes using knee slides, and kick-outs, explosive leg extensions that propel the body across the floor. These moves, originating in the 1970s Bronx street scenes, prioritize endurance and synchronization with breakbeats, allowing breakers to build combos that transition into power moves or freezes.[3][46][50] Floor moves extend downrock by incorporating foundational rocks and threads, such as the back rock—a supine oscillation using the upper body—or sitting threads, where the dancer threads limbs through a seated position for stylistic flair. Advanced practitioners innovate by chaining these into longer sequences, adapting to battle dynamics where judges evaluate musicality, originality, and difficulty under systems like those used in World DanceSport Federation events since breaking's inclusion in the 2018 Youth Olympics. Unlike acrobatic power moves, downrock demands sustained contact with the surface, fostering a raw, improvisational style rooted in hip-hop's communal ciphers rather than theatrical performance.[46][52][50]

Power Moves

Power moves constitute a category of acrobatic techniques in breaking characterized by continuous rotational momentum, often executed with the body supported by the upper extremities while the legs trace circular paths or maintain aerial positions. These maneuvers demand exceptional core strength, cardiovascular endurance, and precise control to sustain rotations without interruption, distinguishing them from static freezes or linear footwork.[53] They emerged as breakers sought to amplify visual impact through dynamic displays of athleticism, frequently incorporating elements of gymnastics and capoeira for propulsion and balance.[50] The foundational power moves originated in the mid-1970s Bronx breaking scene, evolving directly from extensions of downrock footwork and freeze positions as pioneers experimented with prolonged spins to outmaneuver opponents in cyphers and battles.[53] By 1976, crews such as the Zulus had incorporated headspins, where dancers generate centrifugal force via arm-driven momentum while balancing on the crown of the head, marking an early milestone in rotational innovation.[54] Backspins and swipes, involving sweeps onto the upper back or continuous sweeps with one leg, similarly transitioned from freeze escapes around this period, laying the groundwork for more complex variations.[53] Key exemplars include the windmill, pioneered by Richard "Crazy Legs" Colón of the Rock Steady Crew in the late 1970s through an inadvertent overshoot during a circular kick attempt, which evolved into alternating arm-supported leg sweeps completing full body revolutions.[55] Headspins gained prominence through Brooklyn b-boy "Kid Freeze," who popularized continuous iterations in the early 1980s, inspiring widespread adoption and variations like elbow-supported or one-handed spins.[56] Flares, drawing from gymnastic pommel horse techniques, involve scissor-like leg alternations while rotating on extended arms, with air flares—fully inverted rotations—emerging later in the 1990s as breakers like those in Japanese crews advanced rotational height and speed.[3] Subsequent innovations, such as the 1990s (elbow spins with leg threads) and 2000s (continuous headspin variations with leg flares), reflect iterative refinements prioritizing endurance and creativity, often showcased in battles where sustained sets of 20–50 repetitions demonstrate mastery.[57] These moves underscore breaking's emphasis on physical prowess, with practitioners mitigating risks like scalp abrasions—documented in cases requiring medical intervention after decades of friction—from protective gear such as padded caps.[58] Despite their spectacle, power moves integrate sparingly into routines to preserve musicality and originality, avoiding overreliance that could detract from holistic battle dynamics.[59]

Freezes and Transitions

Freezes in breakdancing consist of static body positions held motionless, typically executed abruptly to align with musical beats and emphasize the conclusion of a movement sequence or round.[60] These poses demand upper-body strength, core stability, and balance, often supporting the dancer's weight on hands, elbows, or head while elevating the lower body.[61] Common examples include the baby freeze, where the dancer balances on one hand, elbow, and the side of the head with legs tucked or extended; the shoulder freeze, utilizing the shoulder and arms for support; and the air freeze, which involves a handstand-like hold with legs stylized in the air.[62] Advanced variations, such as the headstall or forearm freeze, require precise weight distribution to maintain immobility for several seconds, preventing collapse under gravitational strain.[63] Transitions serve as the connective maneuvers in breakdancing routines, enabling seamless shifts between elements like toprock, footwork, power moves, and freezes to create cohesive sets.[3] These include go-downs, stylized drops from standing to floor level, such as knee drops or sweeps, which facilitate entry into downrock without disrupting flow.[64] In freeze combinations, transitions involve controlled rolls, swings, or pivots— for instance, rotating from a baby freeze into a shoulder freeze via elbow shifts—to build complexity and musical responsiveness.[65] Effective transitions prioritize smoothness and creativity, often incorporating footwork steps like the 6-step to bridge power moves and poses, enhancing overall dynamism judged in competitions.[3] Mastery of these elements, as demonstrated in battles since breaking's Bronx origins in the 1970s, distinguishes proficient breakers by integrating freezes as punctuation with fluid transitions for uninterrupted performance.[4]

Styles and Variations

Traditional Styles

Traditional styles of breaking, as developed by African-American and Latino youth in New York's South Bronx during the mid-1970s, emphasize rhythmic precision, musical interpretation, and foundational footwork over acrobatic dominance, reflecting the dance's origins in competitive "breaks" at block parties hosted by DJs like Kool Herc. These styles integrate uprock—a precursor from late-1960s Brooklyn involving combative shuffles, hand slaps, and angular poses to simulate aggression—into toprock sequences that set the battle's tone with upright, expressive steps.[1][66] Downrock, the core of traditional floor-based movement, relies on cyclical patterns such as the six-step—a foundational maneuver circling the body in six counts to build momentum and sync with breakbeats—along with variations like the three-step and coffee grinder for fluid, grounded transitions.[3][48] Pioneering crews like the Rock Steady Crew, formed around 1977, showcased this approach through sharp execution and "style-head" focus on clean fundamentals rather than continuous spins or flares.[1] Influences from non-hip-hop traditions shaped these early forms, including capoeira's inverted kicks and ginga sway for dynamic entries into downrock, and Russian folk dance's high upkicks (inspired by Tropak) for explosive footwork accents, as adapted by Bronx breakers experimenting at parties.[67] Freezes—abrupt, held poses like the baby freeze or chair freeze—punctuate sets for emphasis, prioritizing creative flair and crowd connection over endurance, distinguishing traditional breaking's narrative battles from later power-centric evolutions.[50] This foundational emphasis on musicality and personal expression persists in old-school practitioners, who critique modern variants for diluting battle authenticity with over-reliance on gymnastics.[34]

Regional and Contemporary Adaptations

Breaking styles have incorporated elements from local traditional dances in various regions, creating distinct adaptations while maintaining core hip-hop foundations. In Brazil, capoeira's rhythmic ginga and acrobatic flows influenced breakers like Pelezinho and Neguin, who integrated these into power moves and transitions for a fluid, martial arts-inspired dynamism showcased in crews such as Tsunami All-Stars.[67] Similarly, Russian breakers adopted Cossack dance's high kicks and squats, as exemplified by Yan The Shrimp, adding explosive legwork to freezes and footwork that distinguishes Eastern European variations.[67] In South Africa, pantsula's sharp footwork and storytelling narrative fused with breaking through dancers like Vouks, emphasizing expressive, community-rooted performances amid regional linguistic and musical diversity.[67] European scenes developed unique emphases, with French breaking prioritizing creative character and battle improvisation, while German styles favored technical precision and structured power moves, though these regional markers have blurred since the 2010s due to global internet exposure and emulation of top competitors.[67] In Asia, South Korean breakers honed endurance and complexity through rigorous training academies, producing dominant figures like Wing, who excelled in international events such as the 2023 Asian Games with high-risk combinations of downrock and freezes.[68] Japanese adaptations stress cultural reverence for b-boy history alongside innovative footwork, as seen in senior groups like Ara Style, inspired by breaking's 2024 Olympic inclusion.[69] Contemporary adaptations extend breaking into theatrical and interdisciplinary realms, fusing it with ballet and modern dance for narrative-driven performances. Productions like BBoy Ballet, emerging around 2017, blend breaking's acrobatics with ballet's poise and contemporary's emotional expression, creating hybrid routines that unify street authenticity with concert stage artistry.[70] European examples include collaborations such as the Semperoper Ballet's 2015 fusion with breakers Robby "Easy One" Schabs and Philip "Lehmi" Lehmann, incorporating downrock into classical sequences to explore movement vocabulary overlaps.[71] These evolutions prioritize artistic innovation over competitive purity, often critiqued by traditionalists for diluting origins but praised for broadening accessibility and cultural dialogue.[72]

Music and Performance Context

Breakbeats and Hip-Hop Integration

DJ Kool Herc pioneered the breakbeat technique in August 1973 during a back-to-school party at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx, New York, where he used two turntables to isolate and extend the instrumental "breaks" in funk and soul records, creating prolonged rhythmic segments for dancing.[25][24] Herc drew from Jamaican sound system practices but adapted them to emphasize percussion-heavy breaks, noticing that partygoers, particularly youth crews, intensified their movements during these vocal-free intervals, which typically lasted 10 to 20 seconds in original tracks.[33][73] Breakbeats consisted of drum-centric grooves from sources like James Brown's 1969 track "Give It Up or Turnit A Loose" or the Incredible Bongo Band's 1973 "Apache," which Herc and subsequent DJs looped to sustain energy without lyrical interruptions.[24] This looping method, achieved by cueing records and using faders, transformed party soundtracks into repetitive, high-impact rhythms that prioritized groove over melody, enabling dancers to showcase extended routines rather than brief interludes.[33] The integration of breakbeats with breaking occurred symbiotically within emerging hip-hop culture, as the extended breaks provided a sonic canvas for b-boys and b-girls—terms derived from "break boys" who dominated the floor during these segments—to perform coordinated, competitive displays of footwork, spins, and freezes timed to the beats.[16][2] At these gatherings, breaking crews like the Zulu Kings or Rock Steady Crew filled the musical voids with athletic improvisation, where the break's percussive pulse dictated move transitions, fostering a direct causal link between DJ innovation and dance evolution.[33] This fusion positioned breaking as one of hip-hop's core elements alongside DJing, MCing, and graffiti, with breakbeats serving as the rhythmic engine that propelled street performances from spontaneous reactions to structured battles.[2]

Evolution of Accompanying Music

The accompanying music for breakdancing originated in the early 1970s Bronx block parties, where DJ Kool Herc developed the "merry-go-round" technique on August 11, 1973, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, using two turntables to isolate and loop the percussive "breaks" from funk and soul records, extending danceable sections for b-boys and b-girls.[74] Herc frequently selected tracks like the Incredible Bongo Band's "Apache" (1973) and James Brown's "Give It Up or Turnit a Loose" (1970), prioritizing drum-heavy segments that emphasized syncopated rhythms suitable for footwork and power moves.[74] [75] This approach, drawn from Jamaican sound system influences and existing funk grooves, shifted music from full songs to repetitive, high-energy breaks, directly enabling the physical demands of breaking.[76] By the late 1970s and into the 1980s, DJ innovations expanded the palette, with Grandmaster Flash introducing scratching and beat-juggling around 1979, as heard in his "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel" (1981), which layered breaks like "Apache" for dynamic transitions in dance battles.[75] Electro-funk emerged as a key style, exemplified by Afrika Bambaataa's "Planet Rock" (1982), blending Kraftwerk samples with Roland TR-808 drums to create futuristic, bass-driven beats that supported faster, acrobatic elements in breaking.[74] Tracks such as Arthur Baker's "Breakers Revenge" (1984) and Nucleus's "Jam on It" (1984) further integrated synthesized elements, reflecting hip-hop's commercialization and global spread via media like the film Beat Street (1984).[74] These developments marked a transition from raw vinyl manipulations to produced records tailored for breakers, maintaining emphasis on 4/4 rhythms with prominent snares and kicks.[76] The 1990s saw breakbeat sampling proliferate through affordable technology like the Akai MPC60 (1988) and S900 sampler (mid-1980s), allowing producers to chop and reprogram classic breaks into hip-hop instrumentals, as in DJ Krush's atmospheric tracks that revived interest in battles and crews like the Rock Steady Crew.[75] [74] Influences from UK genres, including jungle and drum and bass—which accelerated breaks like the "Amen Brother" (1969) by The Winstons—introduced faster tempos (around 160-180 BPM) for energetic footwork, though core breaking retained mid-tempo funk roots.[75] Big beat subgenres, popularized by The Prodigy and Fatboy Slim in the late 1990s (e.g., "Praise You," 1998), added distorted, sample-heavy layers, influencing international cyphers while preserving the break's causal role in driving synchronized moves.[76] In contemporary breakdancing, particularly since the 2010s in global competitions like Red Bull BC One, DJs such as Fleg curate eclectic mixes combining vintage funk breaks with modern hip-hop, trap, and electronic styles, prioritizing tracks with unpredictable drops and heavy percussion to adapt to dancers' improvisations.[74] For the 2024 Paris Olympics debut, Fleg blended classics like James Brown samples with updated beats to evoke hip-hop origins while appealing to diverse audiences, though purists emphasize original breaks for authenticity in judging musicality.[74] This evolution reflects technological advances in digital DJing and sampling, yet remains anchored in the rhythmic causality of 1970s breaks, enabling breakers to synchronize complex sequences without predefined choreography.[76] [75]

Global Expansion

Early International Spread

The early international spread of breaking occurred primarily in the early 1980s through hip-hop crews' tours and media exposure, transitioning the dance from New York streets to global audiences. In 1982, the Rock Steady Crew embarked on the Roxxy European Hip-Hop Tour, performing in London and Paris, which introduced breaking's acrobatic elements and competitive battles to Western Europe.[1] This tour, organized by French promoter Roxxy, featured live demonstrations that inspired local dancers to form crews and replicate styles like downrock and power moves.[1] The 1983 documentary Wild Style, capturing Bronx hip-hop culture including breaking, accelerated dissemination by premiering in Japan before its U.S. release, fostering early adoption in Asia.[77] Accompanied by promotional tours involving Rock Steady Crew members and artists like Cold Crush Brothers, the film prompted Japanese youth to organize cyphers and battles, establishing breaking communities by mid-decade.[78] In Europe, the film's influence combined with touring crews led to rapid uptake; for instance, France saw the emergence of groups like Paris City Breakers, adapting U.S. techniques to local contexts.[1] Hollywood productions amplified this momentum: Flashdance (1983) showcased breaking sequences to mainstream viewers, while Breakin' (1984) and Beat Street (1984) depicted battles and crews, exporting stylized versions that influenced perceptions abroad.[1] These films, distributed internationally, spurred fads in the UK, where breaking swept urban youth culture amid neon-clad performances on streets and television by 1984-1985.[79] By 1986, the dance had reached Eastern Europe, evidenced by competitions in Riga, Latvia, reflecting underground transmission via bootleg media and traveling performers despite regional political barriers.[80] This phase marked breaking's shift from localized U.S. phenomenon to a burgeoning global practice, driven by cultural exchange rather than institutional promotion.

Adoption in Specific Regions

Breaking rapidly spread to Europe in the 1980s, finding fertile ground in urban marginalized communities similar to its Bronx origins. In France, it took root in Parisian banlieues, where immigrant youth adopted it as a form of expression amid social exclusion, with key venues like the Forum des Halles serving as early hubs for practice and battles from the mid-1980s onward.[81] [82] The United Kingdom saw initial adoption in 1981, particularly in Wales, with hotspots like Newport's roller rink drawing breakers by 1983 for regular sessions.[83] Germany emerged as a competitive center, hosting the inaugural Battle of the Year in 1990, which grew into one of the world's largest international breaking events and solidified European infrastructure for the dance.[39] In Asia, Japan embraced breaking early through cultural imports from the United States. The 1983 release of the film Wild Style and a concurrent tour by the Rock Steady Crew introduced the style, sparking formations of influential crews such as B-5 Crew, Mystic Movers, and Tokyo B-Boys, who performed in public spaces like Yoyogi Park.[84] [85] Pioneers like Crazy-A further propelled its growth, establishing weekly cyphers and blending it into Japan's emerging hip-hop scene.[10] South Korea's adoption began in the 1980s via American military presence in areas like Itaewon, where U.S. soldiers shared the dance, leading to initial clubs and practices.[86] By the 1990s, it entered the mainstream through K-pop influences, such as Seo Taiji & Boys' music videos, fostering a robust b-boy culture that produced world-class competitors and integrated breaking into youth identity formation.[87] [68] This period marked a shift from underground adoption to widespread participation, with Seoul becoming a global hotspot for b-boying by the early 2000s.[88]

Modern Global Competitions

Red Bull BC One, launched in 2004, stands as one of the premier one-on-one breaking competitions worldwide, featuring regional cyphers that qualify dancers for an annual world final hosted in rotating global locations such as Rio de Janeiro in 2024, where Dutch b-boy Menno and Indian b-girl India emerged as champions.[89] The event draws thousands of participants from diverse nations, emphasizing individual battles judged on creativity, technique, and musicality, and has significantly elevated breaking's international profile through live broadcasts and sponsorship.[90] Battle of the Year (BOTY), originating in 1990 but maintaining annual world finals into the 2020s, focuses on crew performances and has hosted events in locations like Osaka, Japan in 2023 and Hwaseong, South Korea in 2025, showcasing teams from over 20 countries in judged routines that highlight synchronization and originality.[91] This competition fosters global crew exchanges and has contributed to breaking's spread by integrating cultural elements from participating regions, with finals drawing large international audiences.[92] Under the World DanceSport Federation (WDSF), the Breaking for Gold series and World Breaking Championships provide structured international platforms, including the 2023 adult championships in Leuven, Belgium, and the 2025 event scheduled for Kurume, Japan, open to unlimited athletes per nation and contributing to world rankings.[93] These WDSF-sanctioned events, aligned with Olympic standards, promote standardized judging and have expanded breaking's reach through national federations, though some traditional breakers critique the shift toward sport-like formats over street origins.[94] Hip Hop International's World Breaking Battles offer 1v1 national representation contests, awarding prizes to top performers from member countries and reinforcing competitive pathways for emerging global talent.[95] Collectively, these competitions have driven breaking's globalization by providing verifiable progression systems, international travel opportunities, and media exposure, with participation numbers surging in the 2020s amid heightened visibility.[96]

Competitive Scene

Battle Formats and Judging

Breaking battles feature direct confrontations between individual breakers in one-on-one (1v1) formats or between crews in team matchups such as 2v2 or 3v3. Competitors alternate throwdowns, performing improvised sequences of moves for up to 60 seconds each, with the goal of surpassing the opponent's display through technical prowess, creative responses, and dynamic energy. Battles are generally structured as best-of-three rounds, extending to five in finals of major events, and progress through knockout brackets or preliminary group stages in larger tournaments.[97][98] Judging occurs via a panel of three or more expert breakers, who compare performances round-by-round to determine winners through majority vote or aggregated scores. No single global standard governs all events, leading to variations: street battles often emphasize crowd reactions and improvisational flow, while competitive formats like Red Bull BC One employ structured criteria focused on objective elements. Formal competitions, including Olympic qualifiers, penalize misbehavior—such as intentional disruptions or inappropriate gestures—via a tiered deduction system applied cautiously to maintain cultural integrity.[97][99] Core judging criteria, standardized in events like the 2024 Paris Olympics with nine judges assigning equal 20% weight to each, assess breakers relative to their opponents. These include:
CriterionDescription
VocabularyDiversity and range of foundational and complex moves demonstrated.
TechniquePrecision in body control, athletic foundation, and spatial dynamics.
ExecutionClean delivery without errors, including falls, pauses, or incomplete sets.
OriginalityUnique personalization, innovation, and avoidance of repetitive imitation.
MusicalityAttunement to the track's beats, accents, and rhythmic structure.
Judges evaluate holistic impact, prioritizing breakers who "kill" rounds by dominating through superior adaptation and flair.[99][98]

Major Events and Tournaments

Battle of the Year (BOTY), established in 1990 by Thomas Hergenröther in Hannover, Germany, initially as the "International Breakdance Cup," is the oldest and largest annual international breaking competition focused on crews. It features regional qualifiers leading to a global final, emphasizing team routines judged on creativity, musicality, and execution in a multi-round battle format.[100][34] Red Bull BC One, launched in 2004 in Biel, Switzerland, serves as the premier one-on-one individual breaking tournament, with 16 competitors in the world final selected via global qualifiers and cyphers. The event prioritizes solo battles assessed on technique, originality, and dynamism, and has hosted finals in cities worldwide, including multiple returns to locations like Japan.[101][102] The World B-Boy Series, initiated in 2013, connects major solo events into a championship circuit culminating in a grand final, while the World DanceSport Federation (WDSF) organizes official World Breaking Championships since aligning with the sport's Olympic push, such as the 2023 adult event in Leuven, Belgium, and the 2024 editions in Chengdu, China, and Houston, United States. These tournaments employ standardized judging criteria including musicality, technique, vocabulary, and creativity, often with separate adult and youth divisions.[103][104] Breaking debuted as an Olympic sport at the 2024 Paris Games on August 9–10 at Place de la Concorde, featuring 16 B-Boys and 16 B-Girls in separate events with a round-robin preliminary phase followed by quarterfinals, semifinals, and medal battles judged on five elements: technique, vocabulary, execution, musicality, and originality. Qualification occurred through continental championships and world series points, marking the first inclusion after Youth Olympic Games appearances starting in 2018.[105][15]

Olympic Inclusion (2024)

Breaking, the competitive form of breakdancing, made its Olympic debut at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, marking the first inclusion of a dance sport in the Games' history. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) approved breaking's addition in December 2018 as part of Paris's proposal to incorporate youth-oriented urban disciplines, aiming to attract a younger demographic and reflect contemporary cultural expressions. This decision aligned with the IOC's broader strategy since the 2020 Tokyo Games to refresh the program with sports like skateboarding and sport climbing, emphasizing accessibility and global appeal over traditional athletic metrics.[106][107] The events consisted of two medal categories: one for B-Boys (male breakers) and one for B-Girls (female breakers), each featuring 16 qualifiers in a single-elimination bracket format culminating in round-robin finals. Qualification occurred through a series of international events, including the World Breaking Series, continental championships under World DanceSport Federation oversight, and an Olympic Qualifier Series held in Shanghai and Budapest in 2024. Competitions took place on August 9–10 at Place de la Concorde, an urban plaza repurposed as a temporary venue to evoke breaking's street origins, with battles judged on six criteria: musicality, vocabulary (range of moves), technique, originality, execution, and affective power (emotional impact). Each one-on-one battle lasted approximately 1.5 to 2 minutes per round, scored cumulatively by nine judges.[108][4] Canada's Philip "Phil Wizard" Kim won gold in the B-Boys event, defeating France's B-Gay in the final, while Japan's Ami Yuasa claimed the B-Girls gold after defeating Poland's Dominika "Nicka" Banevic. These outcomes highlighted breaking's international growth, with participants from 18 nations, though dominance by breakers from Japan, Canada, and France underscored uneven global development. Viewership and media coverage were modest compared to established sports, with some reports noting limited mainstream traction despite promotional efforts.[108][109] Inclusion sparked debate within both Olympic circles and the hip-hop community, with proponents praising its role in diversifying the Games and critics arguing it diluted competitive integrity by prioritizing subjective artistry over measurable athleticism. Figures like Australian squash champion Michelle Martin labeled the Olympics a "mockery" for adding breaking while excluding established sports like squash or karate. Hip-hop purists expressed concerns over commercialization eroding cultural authenticity, including disputes over music licensing costs that exceeded those of many other events. Despite these, organizers viewed the debut as a qualified success for exposure, though breaking was excluded from the 2028 Los Angeles program—a decision finalized in 2023 based on host city priorities favoring American-appealing sports like flag football, independent of Paris performances.[110][111][112]

Social and Cultural Dynamics

Crews and Community Structures

Breakdancing crews, consisting of affiliated b-boys and b-girls, originated in the South Bronx during the 1970s as organized groups for collective practice, performance, and mutual support amid urban challenges.[1] These units typically featured hierarchies with experienced leaders mentoring younger members, fostering skill development through shared sessions and representation in public displays.[113] One of the earliest documented crews, the Rock Steady Crew, formed in New York in 1979–1980, emphasizing discipline and innovation in moves drawn from street acrobatics and earlier dances.[39] Community structures in breakdancing center on informal gatherings like cyphers—spontaneous circles where participants alternate improvising to music—and jams, extended events blending dancing with live DJ sets that encourage communal energy and creativity.[113] These formats evolved from Bronx block parties in the 1970s, serving as low-barrier entry points for newcomers while allowing crews to scout talent and build alliances.[34] Battles, more structured confrontations between individuals or crews, formalized rivalries and adjudication, often held at clubs or outdoor venues, reinforcing crew loyalty and territorial identity without escalating to violence.[113] In certain demographics, such as Hmong youth in 1980s–1990s Fresno, crews functioned as quasi-institutional networks, offering social cohesion and alternatives to gang involvement by channeling competitive energies into dance.[114] Crews generally operate as extended families, with members providing emotional and practical aid during personal hardships, though traditional models face dilution from commercialization and digital fragmentation as of the 2020s.[115] Globally, while local crews persist, international events now integrate diverse groups, preserving core principles of mentorship and collective identity.[113]

Gender Participation and Challenges

Breaking emerged in the 1970s as a predominantly male activity within hip-hop culture, where b-boys outnumbered b-girls significantly, often marginalizing women's roles to spectators or peripheral participants.[116] Historical accounts describe it as an "exclusively male" expression tied to urban machismo, with female breakers facing exclusion from crews and battles despite early involvement.[117] Participation ratios reflected this, as seen in observational studies of battles showing far more male than female engagements.[118] In modern competitions, female participation remains lower outside quota-driven events. At the 2023 World Breaking Championships, 92 b-girls competed alongside 115 b-boys, yielding approximately 44% female representation.[119] The Paris 2024 Olympics enforced near parity with 16 b-boys and 17 b-girls in separate events, aligning with the Games' overall 50% female athlete target, though this quota system contrasts with organic battle scenes where men predominate.[98][120] B-girls encounter physical challenges rooted in sex-based differences, particularly in power moves requiring upper-body strength and rotational force, which demand greater muscle mass and leverage—attributes biologically advantaged in males due to higher testosterone levels and skeletal structure.[121][122] Women often adapt by emphasizing footwork, freezes, and dynamic transitions, leveraging advantages in flexibility and lower center of gravity, but power elements like windmills or headspins prove more demanding anatomically.[123][122] This leads to lower usage of high-risk power moves among b-girls, correlating with reduced injury rates compared to b-boys.[124] Cultural hurdles persist, including ingrained biases viewing breaking as masculine territory, limiting mentorship, sponsorship, and visibility for women.[122][125] Despite these, b-girls have gained ground through dedicated circuits and Olympic exposure, with figures like Japan's Ami Yuasa securing gold in 2024 by innovating within the form's demands.[126] Increased training access has enabled more dynamic performances, challenging stereotypes while highlighting ongoing disparities in non-segregated battles.[127]

Commercialization and Authenticity Debates

The commercialization of breakdancing, originating as "breaking" in the Bronx during the 1970s, accelerated in the 1980s through mainstream media exposure, including films like Breakin' (1984) and Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo (1984), which generated box office revenue exceeding $10 million combined and introduced the dance to global audiences but often portrayed it through simplified, performative lenses detached from its improvisational street battles.[36] This era's surge led to short-lived fads, sponsorship deals, and television appearances, providing economic opportunities for dancers while fostering perceptions of dilution, as early practitioners criticized media representations for prioritizing entertainment value over cultural depth.[36] In the 2000s and 2010s, breaking transitioned toward structured professionalization via corporate-backed events, such as Red Bull BC One, launched in 2004 with cash prizes starting at $10,000 for winners and expanding to global broadcasts reaching millions, alongside organizations like the World DanceSport Federation formalizing judging criteria for international competitions.[128] This shift enabled career paths with endorsements and touring circuits but introduced standardized formats that some viewed as commodifying an art form rooted in spontaneous, community-driven cyphers.[128] Authenticity debates intensified with breaking's Olympic debut at the 2024 Paris Games, where inclusion as a one-off event—absent from the 2028 Los Angeles program—drew accusations of transforming a hip-hop element into a sanitized sport, with critics like b-girl Sunny Choi arguing that rigid judging and format changes risk eroding the genre's emphasis on musicality and personal expression in favor of athletic spectacle.[128][129] Performances, such as Australian b-girl Rachael Gunn's ("Raygun") unconventional routine yielding zero points across rounds, amplified concerns that Olympic visibility misrepresents skill hierarchies derived from street battles, while instances like Lithuanian b-girl Dominika Banevič's durag use sparked claims of cultural appropriation, given the headwear's ties to Black hair protection and hip-hop iconography.[129][7] Community figures, including actor Kevin Fredericks, labeled such elements "weird" and emblematic of inauthentic adoption, highlighting tensions between global accessibility and preservation of Bronx-originated norms.[129] Proponents counter that commercialization has empirically expanded participation, with events like the Olympics attracting over 30 world-class competitors and boosting youth involvement in countries beyond its U.S. origins, fostering innovation without negating foundational techniques, as evidenced by gold medalist Ami Yuasa's prior Red Bull BC One victory in 2023.[7] These debates reflect broader hip-hop dynamics, where market forces have scaled cultural exports—evident in breaking's presence at the 2018 Youth Olympics—yet purists maintain that prioritizing prizes and broadcasts over organic, place-based rivalries undermines causal links to its anti-establishment roots in marginalized communities.[128][7]

Physical and Health Considerations

Training and Physical Demands

Breakdancing demands exceptional upper-body and core strength to support bodyweight in inverted positions, rotational power for spins and flares, lower-body explosiveness for jumps and footwork, and flexibility for dynamic ranges of motion in downrock and freezes. Battles feature high-intensity intermittent efforts, with performers executing 30-45 seconds of continuous movement per round, totaling up to three minutes, blending anaerobic bursts for power moves and aerobic capacity for sustained rounds. Physiological profiles of professionals show a VO2max of 47.8 ml/kg/min, indicating moderate-to-high cardiovascular fitness, while biomechanical tests reveal countermovement jump heights of 32.8 cm and squat jumps of 33.4 cm, underscoring the need for plyometric power without elite-subelite differences in these metrics.[130][130][131] Training regimens emphasize breaking-specific practice supplemented by strength, conditioning, and mobility work, with professionals logging a median of 24.4 hours weekly—23.5 hours for elites and 29 hours for developing breakers—after a median 11 years of experience. Core and arm strength are built via bodyweight exercises like handstands and push-ups to handle forces in headspins and windmills, where angular momentum conservation demands precise control to avoid joint overload. Flexibility training incorporates dynamic and static stretches to achieve splits and rotational mobility essential for footwork, while anaerobic and aerobic demands are primarily met through dance itself rather than isolated cardio.[130][130][131] Hip adduction and abduction strengths average 0.61 and 0.59 kg per bodyweight unit, respectively, supporting lateral stability in power moves, with shoulder rotation strengths at 0.26-0.33 kg per bodyweight for resisting torsional forces. Supplementary training focuses on full-body explosiveness and injury prevention, as the sport's biomechanical stresses—such as halting mid-rotation—increase joint vulnerability without yielding superior jump or endurance profiles in more experienced breakers.[130][131][130]

Common Injuries and Risks

Breakdancing, characterized by dynamic acrobatic maneuvers such as freezes, power moves, and footwork, exposes participants to elevated risks of acute and overuse musculoskeletal injuries due to repetitive high-impact loading on extremities and the axial skeleton.[130] Epidemiological data from a prospective study of amateur and professional breakdancers reported 1665 injuries and 206 overuse syndromes over 380,588 training hours, resulting in 10,970.6 lost training days, with professionals experiencing higher incidences in the wrist, knee, hip/thigh, ankle/foot, and elbow compared to amateurs.[132] Another cross-sectional survey of competitive breakdancers identified injury rates where arm-hand (40.6%), shoulder (35.9%), knee (32.2%), neck (22.8%), and ankle (15.6%) were the most affected sites.[133] Sprains, strains, and tendinitis constitute the majority of injuries, accounting for approximately 89.6% of cases in surveyed breakdancers, while fractures and dislocations affected 31% of respondents in one cohort.[134] Upper extremity injuries predominate from weight-bearing moves like handglides and windmills, including wrist fractures (e.g., distal radius), shoulder dislocations, and elbow bursitis; lower extremity risks involve knee ligament sprains and ankle inversions from drops and spins.[135] Neck strains and cervical spine issues arise from headspins and turtles, with nearly half of breakers reporting chronic neck pain; rare but severe complications include "headspin hole" (cranial osteomyelitis from repetitive scalp friction) and subdural hematomas.[136] Spinal injuries, such as lumbar strains (16.9% prevalence), stem from hyperextended freezes and aerial maneuvers.[137] Risk factors include inadequate protective equipment, with studies showing reduced injury rates among those using wrist guards or helmets, and higher exposure in professionals due to intensified training volumes.[132] Youth participants face additional vulnerabilities like growth plate fractures in the clavicle, radius, or ulna from falls.[135] Overuse syndromes, such as stress fractures and tendinopathies, correlate with weekly training exceeding 10-15 hours without sufficient recovery.[130] Preventive strategies emphasize progressive conditioning, technique refinement, and screening for pre-existing conditions to mitigate these hazards.[138]

Cultural Impact and Reception

Role in Hip-Hop Culture

Breaking emerged as one of the four foundational elements of hip-hop culture in the early 1970s, alongside DJing, MCing (rapping), and graffiti, forming the pillars of a movement born among working-class African-American and Latino youth in New York City's Bronx borough. This dance style provided a kinetic outlet for rhythmic expression during the instrumental "breaks" in records played by pioneering DJs, enabling performers to improvise acrobatic footwork, power moves, and freezes in competitive formats that emphasized individual flair and group dynamics.[33][1] The practice solidified through block parties, where DJ Kool Herc's technique of looping breakbeats—first notably employed at a 1973 back-to-school event in the Bronx—created extended dance segments that distinguished breaking from prior influences like James Brown's footwork or Capoeira-inspired martial arts motions. Dancers, termed b-boys and b-girls, formed crews to hone styles in cyphers (circular jams) and battles, which served as non-violent arenas for resolving disputes and showcasing innovation amid urban decay and limited opportunities. This integration reinforced hip-hop's ethos of self-reliance and cultural reclamation, with breaking acting as the physical counterpoint to lyrical and sonic components.[33][39] Pioneering crews like the Rock Steady Crew, established in 1977 by Jimmy D and Jojo in the Bronx, elevated breaking's status by standardizing competitive routines and bridging street practice with wider visibility through performances at hip-hop gatherings. These groups perpetuated a merit-based hierarchy where skill in toprock (standing moves), downrock (floorwork), and freezes determined respect, embedding breaking as hip-hop's embodiment of athletic storytelling and communal ritual. By the late 1970s, this element had become indispensable to the culture's identity, influencing global adaptations while preserving roots in Bronx ingenuity.[139][140]

Media Representations

Breakdancing first gained widespread visibility in mainstream media through early 1980s films that captured its street origins in New York City's Bronx. Wild Style (1983), directed by Charlie Ahearn, portrayed authentic hip-hop elements including graffiti, DJing, and MCing alongside breaking battles, drawing from real crews like the Rock Steady Crew and helping to export the culture globally.[1] Subsequent releases such as Flashdance (1983), Breakin' (1984), and Beat Street (1984) emphasized acrobatic power moves and freezes, often blending breaking with other dance styles like popping, which introduced the form to broader audiences but sometimes prioritized spectacle over cultural depth.[1] These films, produced during a period of hip-hop's commercialization, grossed millions—Breakin' earned over $38 million domestically—and sparked a short-lived "breakdance craze," though critics noted their tendency to romanticize urban poverty without addressing underlying social conditions.[141] Documentaries have provided more ethnographic portrayals, focusing on breaking's evolution and practitioners. Planet B-Boy (2007), directed by Benson Lee, followed international crews competing in battles, highlighting the dance's migration from the U.S. to South Korea and France, where it developed distinct regional styles, and received praise for showcasing competitive rigor without scripted narratives.[142] Earlier works like The Freshest Kids (2002) chronicled Bronx pioneers such as Crazy Legs and Ken Swift, using archival footage to trace origins in 1970s block parties amid economic decline, emphasizing breaking as a non-violent outlet for youth expression.[143] Such films contrast with fictional media by prioritizing participant interviews, revealing tensions between preservation of foundational techniques—like toprock and downrock—and global adaptations. Television representations have often integrated breaking into episodic formats or series, amplifying its accessibility. The Step Up franchise (2006–2014), spanning five films and a TV adaptation, featured breaking sequences in urban competition plots, with actors undergoing training to replicate power moves, contributing to renewed interest among younger demographics.[144] Shows like America's Best Dance Crew (2008–2012) on MTV showcased breaking crews in group routines, awarding winners like Jabbawockeez, which blended masking traditions with synchronized freezes, though formats favored entertainment value over battle authenticity.[145] The 2024 Paris Olympics debut elicited polarized media coverage, framing breaking as both innovative and incongruous with traditional sports. Broadcasters highlighted battles at Place de la Concorde, where Japan's Ami Yuasa won gold on August 9, 2024, via creative footwork and originality scoring, yet much attention fixated on Australian competitor Rachael Gunn (Raygun), whose unconventional kangaroo-inspired moves scored zero points, spawning viral memes and debates on qualification standards.[146] Outlets like Rolling Stone described the event as "glorious, and a little bit goofy," reflecting public amusement, while hip-hop communities criticized media for overshadowing skilled performances and ignoring the form's roots in marginalized Black and Latino enclaves.[147] Coverage in sources such as The New York Times acknowledged breaking's Bronx heritage but noted institutional biases in selection processes, with Gunn's top world ranking (per World DanceSport Federation points excluding Olympics) fueling accusations of diluted competitive integrity.[148] This portrayal underscored media's pattern of prioritizing novelty and controversy over substantive cultural analysis, exacerbating authenticity debates within breaking circles.[149]

Criticisms and Controversies

The inclusion of breaking in the 2024 Paris Olympics elicited criticism from segments of the hip-hop community, who argued that institutionalizing the practice as a sport risks diluting its origins as an improvisational street art form rooted in Bronx block parties during the 1970s. Purists contended that Olympic formats impose standardized judging criteria—emphasizing technique, vocabulary, execution, musicality, and originality—which prioritize athletic competition over the cultural essence of battles in cyphers, potentially commodifying and sanitizing breaking for global audiences.[111][150] Some breakers expressed reluctance to adapt their styles to Olympic constraints, viewing the event as accelerating a shift toward performative spectacle detached from community-driven authenticity.[151] A prominent controversy arose during the 2024 Olympics involving Australian breaker Rachael Gunn, known as Raygun, whose performances featured unconventional moves such as a kangaroo hop, resulting in zero points across three rounds against opponents from the United States, France, and Lithuania on August 9-10. Gunn's qualification through the Oceania continental quota drew allegations of impropriety, including claims that she and her husband, an adjunct professor, established the Australian Breaking Association in 2020 to control national selections, though no formal investigation substantiated rigging.[152] The viral mockery of her routine amplified debates on subjective judging, with one judge defending her "originality" while others in the breaking community decried it as unrepresentative, prompting Gunn to quit competitive breaking amid online harassment.[153][154] Post-event, World DanceSport Federation rankings placed Gunn at number one globally in September 2024, citing her prior continental wins, which fueled further scrutiny of the body's criteria amid breaking's niche status.[154] Breaking's exclusion from the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, confirmed in August 2024, stemmed from decisions made in 2023 by organizers favoring sports like flag football, lacrosse, and squash to align with American interests, amid high costs for licensing over 390 hip-hop tracks used in Paris events.[112] Critics within the community interpreted this as evidence that breaking struggles to sustain Olympic viability due to its subjective nature and limited mass appeal compared to established disciplines, though proponents argued it validated breaking's one-off cultural showcase without long-term dilution.[155] The decision predated Paris performances, including Raygun's, and reflected broader IOC constraints on program size rather than outright rejection.[156]

References

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