The Dance Hall 12: Boston Tea Dance Party

Dobre

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Orihara moved away from Japan while still a junior.

I think of her as one of those incredible stories. Like Vanessa James or Javier Fernandez or Denis Ten. Driven. Knew what she wanted early. Knew it wasn't achievable at home. And was prepared to make the sacrifice to do what she wanted to do.

*Hopefully Cathy Reed's program is changing the situation for young Japanese ice dancers training at home in Japan. It seems that way.
 

Former Lurve Goddess

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Karen-W

YMCA is such a catchy tune!
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I'm looking over the link from @Former Lurve Goddess and wondering...

Anyone want to take any bets on Lagouge/Caffa skating to "I'm Too Sexy"?

I'd love it if someone went full-on '90s angst with Meatloaf's "I'd Do Anything For Love (But I Won't Do That)" - maybe CarPon could give us the necessary melodrama required of that song, lol.

But, yes, that list really doesn't cover just how diversified the musical landscape in the US became during the 1990s.
 

Dobre

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When I think of 90's songs, I think of . . .

Step by Step by New Kids on the Block and
Hold On by Wilson Philips because a friend and I listened to them a bunch of times while sharing a walkman on a fieldtrip.

The Thunder Rolls by Garth Brooks, which was such a big hit that my cousin from the city showed up for a holiday event in cowboy boots.

Kurt Cobain dying. (I never listened to Nirvana, but it was a big thing).

Baby's Got Back (I hated that video) and
Under the Bridge by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, which were playing on repeat on MTV during an all day, indoor sports event I attended.

The Barbie Song, which was popular when I was in Mexico, where of course, many people didn't care about lyrics and were just listening to it for the beat.

Ace of Base. Ditto but in Spain. (I forget what song).

And, of course,

My Heart Will Go On, which people played on repeat while leaving windows open so that everyone else who wanted fresh air had to hear it again and again and again.


None of these reasons, I would say to ice dancers, is a good enough reason to choose any of these pieces of music for an RD. It's simply what one remembers when a song is so prolific that it winds up associated with a particular memory.

I personally was a Tanya Tucker fan, and her music was definitely not popular. (Though Two Sparrows in a Hurricane played quite a bit after Katrina).
 

Jay42

Between the click of the light
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I was thinking Love Shack for the Fun Finns but then saw it was released in 1989.
Well now I'm retroactively sad no one used it when the theme was the 80's.
The Barbie Song, which was popular when I was in Mexico, where of course, many people didn't care about lyrics and were just listening to it for the beat.
Probably a good thing Piper and Paul did a Barbie and Ken theme this year because I could see them skating to this.
 

marbri

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Well now I'm retroactively sad no one used it when the theme was the 80's.

Probably a good thing Piper and Paul did a Barbie and Ken theme this year because I could see them skating to this.
I think a junior team may have. The junior teams had overall better music choices from the 80´s but I put a lot of blame on the ISU ice dance committee for the patterns they chose for the two groups. Stupid choice for the seniors.
 

Karen-W

YMCA is such a catchy tune!
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51,070
If a team is clever enough to do a Clueless/Emma (1996 version) program, I will be in heaven. And I also hope that some teams choose music outside of the Anglosphere. I wonder if any Canadian will choose any Canadian music outside of Bryan Adams and Celine Dion.
None of the Canadian teams have the sass & panache to pull off Shania Twain, sorry.
 
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