The Nutbush is a line dance performed to Ike & Tina Turner's song "Nutbush City Limits". [1] The dance, which emerged during the 1970s disco era, is particularly popular in Australia, where it has been taught in schools. [2]
The dance is generally performed by a group of people of all genders and ages at a social function, and has been performed in schools, social gatherings such as weddings and at community events. The dance is usually performed with the dancers positioned roughly in a box configuration, like that of a chessboard.[ citation needed ] The steps are fairly simple, such that one who does not know them can generally pick them up by watching other dancers. A key in the song and dance being a popular combination is that the song has a moderately long introduction before the strong dance beat starts, which allows people who are sitting down to get up to the dance floor and for all dancers to assemble themselves in a grid.
The origins of the Nutbush are elusive. Despite the wide popularity of the dance, Tina Turner herself never performed the dance to the song. [3] Writing in Honi Soit in 2023, Lucy Bailey noted the similarities between the Nutbush and the dancing of Turner and her backup singers (The Ikettes) during the 1970s, most particular in a 1975 clip from the television variety show Cher. [4] A 2024 joint study by the University of South Australia and Edith Cowan University traced the possible origin of the dance to the New South Wales Department of Education, which reportedly developed the dance as a teaching aid in the mid-1970s; the study also found that the Nutbush may have been based on the existing Madison dance, or that the Nutbush may have evolved from schools initially attempting to teach students the Madison. [2]
The Nutbush took off in Australia as it spread in schools during the late-1970s and 1980s. [2] The dance has continued to be implemented in some Australian states' curricula, [5] and this has been attributed as the reason behind its enduring popularity in the country. [2]
In 2019 and 2020, the dance saw widespread international attention when it was the subject of various viral TikTok videos. [6] [7]
The steps to the dance are as follows:
Variations of the final step are known to occur. For example, jumping both feet out (beat 1), jumping and crossing over your legs (beat 2), then uncrossing out to the side (beat 3), and finally "do the clap." (beat 4) This variation is known as the criss-cross.
In 2015, dancers in the Victorian town of Horsham set the first Guinness World Record for the number of people doing the Nutbush, with 254 dancers. On 19 October 2017, students at Rivermount College in Yatala, Queensland doubled this record with 522 dancers. [8] On 12 July 2018 the record was broken again at the Big Red Bash, a music festival situated beneath the Big Red Dune on the edge of the Simpson Desert in outback Queensland. [9] Crowds lined up to take part, dancing along to "Nutbush City Limits" as 1,719 people took part in the challenge. [3] On 16 July 2019, a new record of 2,330 people performed the Nutbush at the Big Red Bash, breaking the previous year's record. [10] On 7 July 2022, a new record of 4,084 people performed the Nutbush at the Big Red Bash, breaking the previous record. [11] The record was again broken at the Big Red Bash on 6 July 2023 with 5,838 dancers. [1]
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