Getting Down to Basic

Every shagger and shag club is different, but the history they draw from remains the same. Shag is Music and Dancing. We use this section of the site to portray our appreciation of the society that has made Shag what it is today. We are indebted to "Fessa" John Hook who has done so much to pull together musicology of the dance so that we enjoy the old along with the new.

Club History Major

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Shag - The State Dance of South Carolina

It is lost in the sands of time - or the sands of the Carolinas when and how shag got started. What is certain is that Ground zero for the shag phenomenon has always been Ocean Drive, Myrtle Beach, and the Grand Strand of South Carolina, where "jitterbugs" swing-danced at open-air beach parties during the Thirties and Forties. This was one of the first examples of African-American culture bleeding over into the mainstream: white college kids would routinely visit racially segregated dances, pick up the moves, and bring them back to the beach. In addition, these kids pushed hard for local radio stations to play rhythm and blues as soundtrack for their party, creating a movement so sturdy that there are still radio stations in the Carolinas with "beach music" playlists.

Billy Jeffers and "Chicken" Hicks are two of the main shaggers credited with developing the dances we know now, helping to slow down the tempo of the original jitterbug and incorporate sexier, looser movements into it. The phenomenon faded in the Seventies, enjoyed an early-Eighties renaissance, faltered again slightly when clubs began restricting those under 21, and flourished again in the Nineties. Today, shag is an established segment of Southern culture. Indeed, the basic dance is now the official dance of the state of South Carolina.