Dancers in an intimate blues dance under atmospheric lighting
The Complete Resource Guide

Blues in West Coast Swing

Blues is the soul of West Coast Swing — the original music the dance was born to. This guide collects every resource you need: history, music, videos, technique, events, and community.

Blues & WCS: A Shared History

West Coast Swing was born from blues music. As Lindy Hop migrated west from Harlem in the 1940s, it met the slower, groovier blues and R&B of Los Angeles dance halls — and a new dance emerged. Blues has remained the common denominator through every decade of WCS evolution.

"Blues music, the original music used for West Coast Swing, has been the common denominator. No matter what decade you were in, you could dance WCS to Blues music." — WestCoastSwingOnline.com
Late 1920s

Lindy Hop Emerges in Harlem

African American dancers at the Savoy Ballroom create the Lindy Hop from Charleston and earlier forms like the Texas Tommy. Jazz musicians — Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Count Basie — drive the dance's evolution.

1940s–1950s

Swing Moves West, Meets the Blues

As swing dancing arrives on the West Coast, dancers adapt to smaller, crowded dance floors and the slower blues and jump blues popular in LA clubs. The slot style develops. Dean Collins films his smooth style in Hollywood movies.

1951

"Western Swing" Is Documented

Laure Haile, National Dance Director for Arthur Murray studios, documents the distinctive Los Angeles swing style and names it "Western Swing." Skippy Blair later popularizes the name "West Coast Swing."

1960s–1970s

The Dance Evolves with the Music

The coaster step is replaced by the anchor step. WCS absorbs disco, hustle, and funk while keeping blues at its core. The shuffle rhythm — the heartbeat of blues — remains fundamental to the dance's rolling count.

1978

Officially Named "West Coast Swing"

The dance is formally documented under the name West Coast Swing. Competition circuits grow, and blues music remains a staple of competitive events.

1988

California State Dance

West Coast Swing is declared the official state dance of California, cementing its West Coast roots and its deep connection to the blues tradition.

1993

WSDC Founded

Annie Hirsch co-founds the World Swing Dance Council, establishing governance for WCS competitions. Rules eventually formalize blues as a recognized music category option in Jack & Jill finals.

1990s–2000s

The Great Musical Expansion & The Blues Debate

WCS expands to include pop, hip-hop, and contemporary music. Some fear the blues roots are being lost. Ben Morris launches "Swingin the Blues" at Atomic Ballroom to keep the tradition alive. The community debates whether WCS is drifting too far from its swing and blues identity.

2005

Jordan & Tatiana's Blues Masterpiece

Jordan Frisbee & Tatiana Mollmann perform "Baby What You Want Me to Do" by Etta James — a routine that goes undefeated all year and wins the US Open. A landmark moment that powerfully demonstrates what happens when the world's best dancers return to WCS's blues roots.

Present Day

The Blues Tradition Endures

Blues rooms thrive at major events. WSDC rules formally offer "slow blues" as a finals music category. Crossover events unite WCS, Lindy, and blues dancers. The rolling count — rooted in blues shuffle rhythm — remains fundamental to every WCS dancer's training.

"Jordan & Tatiana's 2005 routine to Etta James allowed them to go back to the roots of West Coast Swing and the 'Blues' music they started with. It went undefeated all year." — JTSwing.com

The Ongoing Debate: Blues vs. Contemporary

  • The 1990s marked a turning point when WCS began absorbing pop, techno, and hip-hop — moving away from its traditional blues, R&B, and soul repertoire.
  • Legendary dancer Sylvia Sykes reportedly suggested renaming WCS to "Contemporary West Coast" since "there's literally no Swing music at any WCS nights."
  • Others argue WCS is "Modern Swing" — its evolution parallels how jazz evolved into bebop while remaining jazz. The 6-count patterns against 8 beats of music create inherent syncopation rooted in jazz traditions.
  • A recurring concern: DJs playing "Blues for Blues' sake without being selective" gives dancers a bad impression. Quality blues selection matters.
  • The community remains divided, but blues continues to be played at every WCS event, and its special status is preserved in WSDC competition rules.
Deep Dive

WCS History on Wikipedia

Comprehensive overview of WCS origins, the slot style, Lindy Hop roots, and musical evolution from blues to contemporary.

Read on Wikipedia
Academic

Sugarpush: A History of WCS, Race, and Gender

CalState thesis exploring the African American roots of WCS, its evolution through race and gender dynamics, and the role of blues music.

Read thesis
Article

12 Most Influential WCS Dancers

Big Apple Ballroom's list of the dancers who shaped WCS history, from Jack Carey to Jordan & Tatiana.

Read article
Discussion

Is WCS Going Too Contemporary?

Jonathan's exploration of the tension between WCS's blues tradition and its contemporary evolution. Essential reading for understanding the community debate.

Read article
Forum

"Original Music WCS Was Danced To"

Classic Dance Forums thread debating what music WCS was originally danced to. Features passionate arguments from experienced dancers about blues' foundational role.

Read thread
Evolution

WCS: From Classic to Contemporary

Atomic Ballroom's overview of how WCS evolved through the decades, from its blues origins through the hustle era to modern pop — and the challenges of keeping swing feel.

Read article

Key Dancers & Figures

These are the dancers and teachers who have shaped how we dance blues in West Coast Swing — from the pioneers who laid the foundation to the modern champions who keep the blues tradition alive.

Skippy Blair
The Teacher of Teachers

Started dancing in 1938. Popularized the name "West Coast Swing" and created the Universal Unit System. The foundation of WCS pedagogy, including how we understand blues rhythm, traces back to her work.

Jordan Frisbee & Tatiana Mollmann
11x US Open Classic Champions

Movement and pattern innovators whose blues performances are legendary. Their musicality and connection epitomize what blues WCS can be. Appeared on Fox's "30 Seconds to Fame" and CBS "Star Search."

Ben Morris
2x World Champion • "Swingin the Blues" Founder

Runs the iconic weekly "Swingin the Blues" event at Atomic Ballroom in Irvine, CA. A fierce advocate for blues in WCS who puts his philosophy into practice every Thursday night. Featured in Love N'Dancing.

Kyle Redd & Sarah Vann Drake
Multiple US Open Champions • 5x NASDE Champions

The only couple holding US Open titles in both Showcase and Classic divisions. Their blues dancing combines athleticism with deep musicality. Co-founders of SwingCouver.

John Lindo
US Open Champion • Professional Swing DJ

A pillar of the WCS community as dancer, teacher, judge, event director, and DJ. His DJ sets are legendary for their blues selections. Part of the WCS Top Music Team. Serves on the WSDC Board.

Robert Royston
8x US Open Champion

The only dancer inducted into five separate halls of fame. Choreographed Taylor Swift's "Love Story" video. Known for blending simple ideas with incredible execution, especially on blues music.

Myles & Tessa Cunningham Munroe
Canada's WCS Champions • Blues Grooves Creators

Their "Blues Grooves Workshop" and "Synergy Skills for Blues & WCS" are definitive educational resources. Teaching for 19+ years, specializing in blues footwork, musicality, and African American dance roots. Created the Swing Literacy method.

Benji Schwimmer
14x US Open Champion • SYTYCD Season 2 Winner

Brought WCS to mainstream audiences through "So You Think You Can Dance." A movement innovator who demonstrates how blues feeling can transform even the most technical WCS.

Wayne & Sharlot Bott
Classic Era Innovators • Hall of Famers

1990s innovators who introduced moves like the "Rim Whip" and "Cross Strut." Both in the CA Swing Dance Hall of Fame. Sharlot's "Blues Affair" is a beloved themed room at Jack & Jill O'Rama.

Diego Borges & Jessica Pacheco
Brazilian WCS Pioneers

Diego was the first Brazilian to win an official WCS competition at Swing Diego. They've been instrumental in bringing WCS and its blues tradition to the international stage through the Brazilian Open Swing.

Buddy Schwimmer
"The Man with 1000 Moves"

Won 2000+ competitions and invented Nightclub 2 Step in 1965. A blues groover at heart whose improvisational style laid the foundation for modern WCS musicality.

John Festa
Swing DJ Hall of Fame • Blues Room DJ Legend

Inducted into both the Swing DJ Hall of Fame and the WSDC Hall of Fame. DJs the Late Night Blues Room at multiple major events (Philly Swing Classic, Freedom Swing Dance Challenge). His blues sets are the gold standard for WCS blues nights.

Dean Collins
Hollywood Film Pioneer • 1937+

Brought Lindy Hop from New York to Los Angeles. His smoother, slotted style — preserved in dozens of Hollywood films — directly influenced the development of what became West Coast Swing. The original bridge between East Coast swing and the West Coast blues dance floor.

Jack Carey & Annie Hirsch
1949 Harvest Moon Ball Winners • WSDC Co-Founders

Won the 1949 Harvest Moon Ball dance competition. Annie later co-founded the World Swing Dance Council (WSDC), establishing the governance structure that preserves blues as a recognized music category in WCS competition.

Gary McIntyre & Susan Kirklin
UCWDC World Champions

Toured the original Broadway production of "Swing" as dance captain. Gary choreographed for Brokeback Mountain. Their classic style embodies the blues-swing connection.

Blues Music for WCS

From slow, soulful grooves to uptempo shuffles, blues music in WCS spans a wide tempo range. Here are the best playlists, curated lists, and resources to build your blues music library.

Tempo Guide: Blues for WCS

Slow Blues
60–80
BPM • Deep groove, heavy connection
Medium Blues
80–100
BPM • Sweet spot for social blues
Fast Blues
100–130
BPM • Uptempo shuffle, competition energy

Spotify Playlists

BLUES West Coast Swing
263 songs • by Abigail Vogels

One of the most comprehensive WCS blues playlists on Spotify, covering slow grooves to uptempo shuffles.

Open on Spotify
West Coast Swing - Blues/Soul
30 songs • by lendersonwcs

A focused collection blending blues and soul for WCS, perfect for getting into the groove.

Open on Spotify
Ruby Roxx - WCS Blues
362 songs • 1,400 saves • The largest WCS blues playlist

The biggest WCS blues playlist on Spotify. A massive collection covering every shade of blues for West Coast Swing.

Open on Spotify
Best of the Blues | EastonSwing
132 songs

A curated best-of collection of blues tracks for WCS from the EastonSwing community.

Open on Spotify
WCS Blues
190 songs • by martincorneliusv

A community-curated blues playlist specifically tailored for West Coast Swing dancing.

Open on Spotify
WCS Blues by Steve Hunt
91 songs • 348 saves

Tightly curated selection of blues tracks optimized for WCS social dancing.

Open on Spotify
WCS Blues ALL BPM (Freeswing)
272 songs • by Levente Friesz

Comprehensive blues collection spanning the full tempo range from slow grooves to uptempo shuffles.

Open on Spotify
WCS Slow (80–95 BPM)
by Campbell

Slow tempo songs ideal for deep blues connection and working on anchor technique.

Open on Spotify

Live Blues Musicians in WCS

Live Artist

Brother Yusef

Solo guitarist specializing in "fattback blues" — a mix of delta, Chicago, and Louisiana blues with smooth jazz. The most prominent live blues musician in the WCS scene, performing at events worldwide (including Korea's swing dance scene). Six of his songs appear on the Champions' Favorite Blues Songs lists. Hosts a monthly blues dance party at the Idle Hour Bar in LA.

Curated Lists & DJ Resources

Champions' Pick

Champions' Favorite Blues Songs

WCS Champions voted on their favorite blues songs. Includes slow and fast blues lists with YouTube playlists and Spotify links. Features songs voted by Jordan Frisbee, John Lindo, and 23 other champions.

View on ProSwingDJs
Top 25

WCS Fast Blues: Top 25

The definitive fast blues list curated by WCS Top Music, voted on by champions. Features energetic tracks perfect for shuffles and fast footwork.

Read on Medium
Top 19

WCS Slow Blues: Top 19

The go-to slow blues list for WCS. Deep grooves, heavy connection, soul-stirring tracks curated by the community's top dancers and DJs.

Read on Medium
DJ Resource

ProSwingDJs — DJ Favorites

Professional WCS DJs share their personal top 20 favorite songs from any era. A goldmine for discovering blues tracks used at major events.

Browse DJ favorites
Playlists Hub

LevelUp WCS Music Playlists

Comprehensive Spotify playlist collection organized by genre. Includes competition playlists, blues playlists, and social dance sets with 500+ songs total.

Browse playlists
Classic Archive

Classic WCS Music Lists

StreetSwing's archive of traditional and classic West Coast Swing music, preserving the blues and R&B tracks from earlier eras of the dance.

View archive

Blues Songs Every WCS Dancer Should Know

These are the tracks you'll hear at every WCS event. From Champions' favorites to classic blues standards, knowing these songs will level up your musicality on the dance floor.

Champions' Favorites (Slow Blues)

01
The Thrill Is Gone
B.B. King & Tracy Chapman
02
At Last
Etta James
03
Stormy Monday
T-Bone Walker
04
Baby What You Want Me to Do
Etta James
05
Never Make Your Move Too Soon
B.B. King
06
Give Me One Reason
Tracy Chapman
07
Dust My Broom
Etta James
08
Nobody Knows You When You're Down
Eric Clapton
09
Tin Pan Alley
Stevie Ray Vaughan
10
Tangled & Dark
Bonnie Raitt

Champions' Favorites (Fast Blues)

01
Bright Lights, Big City
Gary Clark Jr.
02
Don't Be Afraid of the Dark
Robert Cray
03
Chains And Things
Joe Bonamassa & Gary Clark Jr.
04
I Got The Blues
Brother Yusef
05
Mustang Sally
Buddy Guy
06
Sweet Sixteen
Junior Wells
07
Rack 'em Up
Jonny Lang
08
Early In The Morning
Taj Mahal
09
Too Many Tears
Buddy Guy
10
Wall To Wall
Vance Kelly

Classic Blues Artists for WCS

Artists to Explore

  • The Originals: B.B. King, Etta James, Muddy Waters, T-Bone Walker, Bobby "Blue" Bland
  • Guitar Heroes: Stevie Ray Vaughan, Robert Cray, Robben Ford, Albert Collins, Buddy Guy
  • Modern Blues: Gary Clark Jr., Joe Bonamassa, Keb' Mo', Jonny Lang, Brother Yusef
  • Women of Blues: Bonnie Raitt, Tracy Chapman, Katie Webster, Koko Taylor, Irma Thomas
  • Blues-Soul Crossover: Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Bill Withers, Sharon Jones, Amy Winehouse
  • British Blues: Eric Clapton, The Rides, John Mayer (honorary!)

Understanding Swung Rhythm

Swung rhythm is the single most important concept for dancing blues in WCS. It's the difference between dancing to blues music and dancing with it. If you only learn one thing from this page, make it this.

Straight vs. Swung: Hear the Difference

In straight rhythm, every subdivision is equal — like a ticking clock. In swung rhythm, the beat is split unevenly: a long note followed by a short one, creating a loping, rolling feel. Think DUMM-da, DUMM-da instead of tick-tick, tick-tick.

Straight Rhythm (Pop, Hip-Hop)

1
&
2
&
3
&
4
&
1&2& 3&4&
Equal spacing — mechanical, precise

Swung Rhythm (Blues, Jazz, Shuffle)

1
&
2
&
3
&
4
&
1& 2& 3& 4&
Long-short — rolling, human, groovy
"If straight rhythm is a metronome — tick, tick, tick, tick — then swung rhythm is a rocking chair: a long lean forward and a quick settle back. Blues lives in that rock."

The Triplet Foundation

Swung rhythm comes from dividing each beat into three equal parts (a triplet) instead of two. Play the first and third notes, skip the middle one — the first note now lasts twice as long as the second, giving you the signature long-short feel. In WCS, this triplet subdivision is called the rolling count.

& a 1
da - da - DUM

The rolling count triplet. Three even subdivisions where the beat falls on "1." Your body flows through "& a" to land on the beat.

1 & a
DUM - da - da

Same triplet, different emphasis. Starting on the downbeat and rolling through. Listen for this in the shuffle pattern of a blues drummer's hi-hat.

1 . a
DUM - . - da

The "skipped" triplet — drop the middle note and you get the classic swing feel: long-short, long-short. This is what most people mean by "swung."

How It Looks in a WCS Sugar Push

A sugar push has 8 weight changes across 6 beats: walk, walk, triple step (3 steps), anchor (3 steps). With swung rhythm, the middle step of each triple is delayed — closer to the next beat than the previous one.

Sugar Push — 8 Steps, Swung Feel

walk1
walk2
step3
step&
step4
step5
step&
step6
Walk steps (full beats) Triple step: 3 steps across beats 3-4, middle step delayed Anchor: 3 steps across beats 5-6, middle step delayed

Why It Matters for Blues WCS

The Swung Rhythm Cheat Sheet

  • Almost all blues music is swung. If you dance with straight timing on a blues song, you're fighting the music instead of riding it.
  • Rolling count is how WCS interprets swung rhythm. Skippy Blair codified it as "&a1, &a2" — the triplet feel that lets your body roll through each beat.
  • The degree of swing varies. Some blues is heavily swung (almost dotted), some is lightly swung. Listen and match. A good dancer adjusts their swing to fit the song.
  • Your triple step IS the swing. When you do a triple step to swung music, the timing naturally becomes long-short-long instead of even-even-even. Don't fight this — embrace it.
  • The anchor is where you feel it most. The 5&6 at the end of every pattern is where the swing feel locks in. Let the long-short rhythm settle into your body on every anchor.
  • Practice with shuffle blues first. Songs with a clear shuffle feel (listen for the drummer's ride cymbal going TSS..tss, TSS..tss in a long-short pattern) make the swung rhythm impossible to miss. Try "The Thrill Is Gone" or "Stormy Monday."
  • Body before feet. The swing starts in your center — a subtle body pulse on the long part of the beat. Your feet follow. If you try to swing just your feet, it looks mechanical.
  • Straight vs. swung is a spectrum. Some songs sit right in the middle. WCS's versatility means you can adjust your feel to match any song's swing percentage.

Learn More About Swung Rhythm

Essential

Straight vs. Rolling Counts (WCS Online)

Brian B's definitive explanation of the difference between straight and rolling counts, with video examples showing how each sounds and looks in your dancing.

Watch lesson
Deep Dive

What is Rolling Count? (WCS Online)

Detailed breakdown of how the rolling count works, including Skippy Blair's original Universal Unit System framework and how it maps to blues shuffle rhythm.

Read article
Advanced

Use Rolling Count to Dance the Heartbeat

How to use rolling count not just as a timing tool but as a feeling tool — connecting the triplet subdivision to the body pulse that drives blues WCS.

Read article
Musicality

Unlocking Your Triple (AdamRitaSwing)

Deep dive into how the triple step connects to blues shuffle rhythm. Why your triple should feel different on blues vs. pop, and how to let the music dictate your timing.

Read article
Workshop

Rolling and Swung Counts (WCS Online)

Video workshop combining rolling and swung counts with practical exercises you can practice at home. Includes side-by-side comparison of straight vs. swung dancing.

Watch workshop
Practice

48-Beat Blues Footwork Challenge

Swing Literacy's hands-on challenge: create 48 counts of blues footwork choreography using swung rhythm. The best way to internalize the feel is to practice it.

Take the challenge

Blues Technique for WCS

Dancing blues in WCS is about feel, musicality, and groove. Here's what makes blues WCS distinct and how to develop your blues vocabulary.

Rhythm

Master the Rolling Count

Blues music uses shuffle rhythm — the beat divided into triplets. The rolling count (a1, a2...) connects directly to this shuffle feel. It's much more common in blues than other WCS genres. This is the key to dancing blues authentically.

Learn rolling count
Musicality

Understand 12-Bar Blues Phrasing

Blues music is phrased in 48-beat cycles (6 sets of 8 = 12 bars), unlike the 32-beat phrases of pop music. Recognizing this longer phrase structure lets you anticipate musical changes and hit them in your dance.

Learn phrasing
Styling

Dance Low & Groovy

Especially with "dirty" blues, dancing low brings out the groovy sound. Hit accents inside of moves rather than with all-out breaks — most blues music doesn't just stop for a break, so find ways to accent within your patterns.

Blues tips
Footwork

Blues Footwork Variations

Become comfortable with footwork variations to create energy. Shag-inspired footwork, kick ball-change, and hold ball-change emphasize upbeat pulses and the swung rhythm that defines blues WCS.

Syncopation elements
Connection

Body Pulse & Grounding

Blues WCS emphasizes a deeper, more grounded connection. The body pulse — a subtle up-down movement through the center — helps both partners feel the music together and creates the intimate quality that defines blues dancing.

Blues Grooves Workshop
Musicality

Full Musicality Resource

WCS Online's comprehensive musicality section covers counting, phrasing, texture, dynamics, and how to respond to blues music's unique characteristics in your dancing.

All musicality lessons

Quick Tips for Dancing Blues WCS

  • Rolling count is king. Blues music is much more likely to have a rolling count than other WCS genres.
  • Stay grounded. Lower your center of gravity to match the earthy feel of blues music.
  • Accent inside moves. Blues rarely has hard breaks — find subtler ways to hit the music.
  • Use body isolations. Chest, rib cage, and hip isolations add texture to your blues dancing.
  • Study Shag dancers. They provide great inspiration for how to use footwork to bring out blues energy.
  • Practice at 80–100 BPM. This is the sweet spot for social blues where you can work on connection and feel.
  • Listen to 12-bar patterns. Count the 6 sets of 8 and note phrase changes — that's where the magic happens.

Essential Videos

Watching great dancers interpret blues music is one of the best ways to learn. Here are the key video resources and channels for blues WCS.

Video Archive

WCSVideos.com

The largest curated archive of West Coast Swing competition videos. Browse by pro dancer, event, or year. Search for blues performances by filtering for specific dancers known for their blues style.

Browse the archive
Competition

US Open Swing Dance Championships

The Super Bowl of WCS. Videos from decades of US Open performances, including iconic blues routines by Jordan & Tatiana, Kyle & Sarah, Robert Royston, and more. Many available on YouTube.

Official site
YouTube Rabbit Hole

Austin Westie Academy's WCS Guide

A curated Medium article pointing to the best starting points for a WCS YouTube binge, including iconic blues performances and championship moments.

Start the rabbit hole
Instructional

WCS Online YouTube Channel

Brian B & Megan teach over 20,000 dancers per year online. Free YouTube videos covering blues-specific techniques including rolling count, blues footwork, and musicality.

Dancing to Blues
Champions

Jordan & Tatiana (JT Swing)

580K+ TikTok followers. Their blues performances are masterclasses in connection and musicality. Check their online platform JT Swing TV for structured learning.

Competition

The OPEN Swing Dance Championships

The oldest international swing dance competition, now in its 41st year. Classic Division routines heavily feature blues. Official YouTube channel publishes first-place performances.

Music Curation

Liza May YouTube Channel

WCS music curation channel updated almost daily. Monthly song lists with cutting-edge music selections for social dancing and competition, featuring regular blues picks.

Find on YouTube
Directory

Top 30 Swing Dance YouTubers (Feedspot 2026)

Curated list of the top swing dance YouTube channels, ranked by activity and subscribers. A one-stop starting point for discovering WCS video content.

View rankings
Pinterest

200 Favorite WCS Videos (2023)

A massive Pinterest collection of favorite West Coast Swing performances, organized for easy browsing. Many blues performances featured throughout.

Browse collection

Must-Watch Blues WCS Performances

Classic

Jordan & Tatiana — US Open Classic

The gold standard of blues WCS. Their 2001 US Open Classic remastered alongside later performances. The routine that defined what blues WCS could be.

Watch on YouTube
Jack & Jill

Jordan & Tatiana — BudaFest 2018 Pro J&J

Improvised Pro Jack & Jill at one of Europe's biggest WCS events. Pure connection and musicality.

Watch on YouTube
Musicality

Robert Royston & Melissa Rutz — Grand Nationals

The viral musicality video that became one of the most shared WCS clips in 2016. "WCS musicality at its finest."

Watch on YouTube
Classic

Kyle Redd & Sarah — "How Long Can a Fool Go Wrong"

James Cotton blues at GNDC 2002 Classic division. The kind of bluesy routine that shows why the Classic division matters.

Watch on YouTube
Showcase

Myles & Tessa — MADjam 2012 Showcase

The creators of "Blues Grooves Workshop" in a competition showcase that demonstrates their deeply rooted blues style.

Watch on YouTube
Jack & Jill

Ben Morris & Virginie Grondin — BudaFest 2018

The "Swingin the Blues" founder in an improvised Pro J&J at BudaFest. Blues musicality from one of WCS's greatest.

Watch on YouTube
Champions J&J

John Lindo & Jessica Cox — Demo of the Stars

Powerful, grounded WCS from a WSDC board member whose DJ sets and dancing define the blues side of the community.

Watch on YouTube
Exhibition

Wayne & Sharlot Bott — WCS Exhibition

Historic footage of the classic era innovators who introduced the Rim Whip and Cross Strut. See where modern WCS blues vocabulary began.

Watch on YouTube
Classic

Wayne & Sharlot Bott — 2000 Capital Swing Winners

Classic Division winners at Capital Swing 2000. Blues-era WCS at its peak from two Hall of Famers.

Watch on YouTube
Browse All

WCSVideos.com — Full Pro Archives

Browse hundreds more performances organized by dancer. Deep-dive into any pro's full competition history.

Learn Blues WCS Online

From free articles to structured online courses, there's never been more ways to study blues in West Coast Swing from home.

Free Articles

West Coast Swing Online

Brian B's comprehensive free resource with articles on blues musicality, rolling count technique, footwork syncopation, and how to dance to blues music specifically. An essential starting point.

Online Course

Swing Literacy — Blues Grooves Workshop

Myles & Tessa's signature workshop: 1-hour of progressive footwork drills yielding 10+ combos inspired by Shag, Tap, and Vernacular Jazz. Includes historical context about African American roots of WCS.

View workshop
Live Event

Blues Breakthroughs Live

SwingLiteracy's live online event focused on breakthrough moments in blues WCS. Features guest coaching sessions with blues musicians like Brother Yusef.

Learn more
Subscription

JT Swing Online Classes

Jordan Frisbee & Tatiana Mollmann's online platform with structured WCS courses. Their blues interpretation and musicality work is world-class.

JT Swing TV
DVD Rental

DanceFlix: Synergy Skills for Blues & WCS

Myles & Tessa teach "puppeteering" techniques for Blues and WCS — connecting deeply with both your partner and the music simultaneously. Available on DanceFlix Silver/Gold plans.

View on DanceFlix
Blues Dance

The Blues Room

While focused on blues dance (not WCS), this platform offers 59 courses and 869 classes covering blues fundamentals, musicality, and solo skills that directly apply to blues WCS. 14-day free trial available.

Explore courses
Musicality

AdamRitaSwing — Unlocking Your Triple

Deep dive into how the triple step connects to blues shuffle rhythm. Essential reading for understanding why the rolling count matters in blues music.

Read article
Blog

DanceVision — Best Practice Music

Recommendations for the best blues songs to practice WCS to, organized by difficulty level. Includes BPM ranges and tips for what to focus on with each song.

Read guide
Song Catalog

Music4Dance WCS Catalog

Searchable database of songs categorized by dance style and BPM. Filter for blues songs in the West Coast Swing tempo range.

Search catalog
Technique

Body Isolations for Blues

Rib cage pops, shoulder drops, hip settling — the building blocks of blues expression in WCS. Essential for adding texture and soul to your blues dancing.

Learn isolations
Technique

WCS Styling Checklist

Comprehensive checklist covering ribcage isolations, shoulders, upper body angles, and the concept of contrast — key to making blues styling pop.

View checklist
Musicality

48-Beat vs 32-Beat Phrases

Why blues music uses 48-beat phrases (12-bar blues = 6 sets of 8) instead of 32-beat phrases (4 sets of 8). The key to blues musicality in WCS.

Understand phrasing
Online Course

Blues Breakthroughs (30-Day Course)

Swing Literacy's 30-day online course to demystify blues music and conquer it on the dance floor. Self-guided multimedia content plus 4 live coaching calls. 100+ participants per cohort.

View course
Reference

Library of Dance — WCS

Comprehensive reference covering WCS history, basic patterns, music, and technique. An excellent academic-style resource with clear explanations and historical context.

Read resource
Instructional

Robert Royston — Howcast WCS Series

8x US Open Champion Robert Royston teaches WCS fundamentals on Howcast. His approach emphasizes musicality and the blues-rooted basics of the dance.

Watch series
Video Archive

Dr. Matt's WCS Move Archive

Comprehensive archive of WCS steps and moves with video clips, organized by pattern type. A practical reference for building your vocabulary.

Browse moves
Technique

DanceTime WCS Technique Articles

In-depth articles on rolling count, footwork technique, and the fundamentals that underpin blues WCS. Includes embedded video demonstrations.

Read articles
Purchase

Synergy Skills: Puppeteering for Blues & WCS

Myles & Tessa's video course on deeper partner connection techniques for Blues and WCS. Available as a digital download from Canadian Swing Champions.

Purchase course

Events & Venues

From weekly blues nights to international conventions with dedicated blues rooms, here's where you can experience blues WCS in person.

Weekly • Irvine, CA

Swingin the Blues

Ben Morris's legendary weekly Thursday night at the Atomic Ballroom. The premier blues WCS social dance in Southern California. Free lessons at 8:15pm, dancing 9pm–midnight.

Event details
Annual • Orange County, CA

Jack & Jill O'Rama

Features "Sharlot's Blues Affair" — a themed blues room alongside other specialty rooms like "Lindo's Favorites." The most Jack & Jill divisions of any WCS event. June in Garden Grove, CA.

Official site
Annual • Budapest, Hungary

BudaFest

One of the world's premier international WCS events. Features top-tier competition with blues music prominently featured in social dancing and Jack & Jill finals. Now in its 15th year.

Official site
Annual • Raleigh, NC

Trilogy Swing (+ Blues/Fusion Room)

A four-day WCS event that partners with Dance Gumbo, Greenville Fusion, and RDU Blues to offer a dedicated Blues/Fusion Room. Features 6 hours of blues technique workshops plus 12 hours of Fusion social dancing (10pm–4am both nights). September in Raleigh.

Official site
Annual • Boston, MA

Boston Tea Party Swings

The only remaining crossover swing event in the US, featuring WCS, Lindy Hop, Balboa, and Blues. A unique opportunity to experience the connection between all four dance forms.

Official site
Annual • Canada

Canadian Swing Championships

Multi-swing event where WCS, Lindy Hop, Balboa, Blues, Boogie Woogie, and Rockabilly Jive all come together. The blues–WCS connection is alive and well here.

Official site
Annual • Wilmington, DE

Freedom Swing Dance Challenge

Features a "Late Night Blues Room" with DJ John Festa. Workshops from top pros including Thibault & Nicole Ramirez. January event near Philadelphia.

Official site
Weekly • Austin, TX

Blue Moon Swing

Free weekly event at Neon Boots Saloon (historic Esquire Ballroom). Thursdays 9pm–midnight. Lessons at 8:15pm. Blues, soul, and classic swing music in a beautiful venue.

Official site
Classes • Milton Keynes & Nottingham, UK

Evolve Swing

UK-based WCS school offering periodic blues-specific workshops. Past events include a Blues Workshop with All Star Teachers Kevin & Aggie Town plus guest DJ sets.

Official site
Annual • East Coast

MADjam

Major East Coast WCS competition featuring Champions Jack & Jill and Strictly Swing divisions. Consistently produces iconic blues performances. Many documented on WCS Videos.

Watch videos
Annual • Bay Area, CA

Boogie by the Bay

Premier Bay Area WCS competition. Champions J&J and Strictly Swing divisions often feature blues music. Regularly attracts top-tier competitors.

Watch videos
Annual • Various US

Summer Hummer

Long-running WCS event featuring Champions divisions and social dancing. Blues music is a fixture of the late-night social rooms and competition DJ rotations.

View on Scoring.dance
Annual • Philadelphia, PA

Philly Swing Classic

East Coast event known for its DJ quality and late-night blues rooms. Features DJ John Festa's legendary blues sets.

Official site
Directory

DanceUs.org — Swing Festivals Worldwide

Comprehensive directory of swing dance festivals, exchanges, and events worldwide for 2025–2026. Filter by region to find WCS events near you.

Browse events
Directory

Meetup.com — WCS Groups

Find local West Coast Swing groups and social dances in your area. Many local groups host blues-themed nights and events.

Find a group

Community & Organizations

Join the conversation, find local dancers, and stay plugged into the world of blues WCS.

Governing Body

World Swing Dance Council (WSDC)

The international governing body for WCS. Maintains the points registry, hall of fame, and competition rules. Blues is recognized as a core music category in competition guidelines.

Hall of Fame

California Swing Dance Hall of Fame

Honors the dancers who built WCS from its blues roots to today. Inductees include Skippy Blair, Ben Morris, the Schwimmer family, Kyle & Sarah, and many more.

View inductees
Competition Tracking

Scoring.dance

Track WCS competition results worldwide. See which dancers are competing and follow the competitive circuit, where blues songs feature in every event's DJ rotation.

View results
Forum

Dance Forums — Swing Discussion

Active forum with threads about WCS blues history, the "original music" WCS was danced to, technique discussions, and community debates about blues in modern WCS.

DJ Community

ProSwingDJs.com

The hub for professional WCS DJs. Their curated blues lists, champions' favorites, and DJ resources are invaluable for dancers wanting to deepen their blues music knowledge.

Visit site
Music Blog

Music4Dance Blog

Detailed analysis of dance music including tempo ranges, music categorization, and the ongoing discussion about what constitutes "proper" WCS blues music.

Read blog
Blues + Fusion

The Smallroom Dancer

Dedicated to supporting Blues, West Coast Swing, and Fusion dance communities in the Great Lakes region. A bridge between the blues dance and WCS worlds.

Visit site
DJ Music

SwingDJs Forum

Forum for WCS DJs discussing song selection, blues playlists, BPM ranges, and what music works for different crowds and competition levels.

Visit forum
Teacher Development

Swing Literacy Teacher Development

Myles & Tessa's program for WCS teachers, emphasizing historical roots, blues musicality, and responsible pedagogy that respects the African American origins of the dance.

Learn more