Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Homeland Popping and Locking Practice spots

Homeland Popping and Locking Practice Spot/Sessions - Long Beach CA



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The Homeland Cultural Center was established in 1989 with a mission to provide a safe place to cultivate, present, and preserve the cultures of residents through the performing and visual arts, and to celebrate the Anaheim (Street) Corridor’s dramatic ethnic diversity by encouraging artistic expression in various cultural traditions. With the help of Ice Man, Steam, Waveomatic and Dixie, Homeland has become a place to share the Hip Hop culture to its fullest.


Homeland has been known for its Tuesday night bboy/bgirl practice sessions and also for its Monday night popping/locking practice sessions. During these weekly sessions, many dancers of all ages and locations come together to share their knowledge and skills on the dance floor.



Need directions? Map Homeland Cultural Center aka MacArthur Park



Find us on Myspace at:
http://www.myspace.com/homelandlb



MONDAY- Poppin and Lockin Practice - 7:00PM ~ 10:00PM



TUESDAY - Bboyin/Breakin Practice - 7:00PM~ 10:00PM

Interview with Waveomatic

For more Interviews with Old School poppers, popping videos/video clips,info on practice spots and popping events and information regarding Popping please visit the online community and info center -> http://www.westcoastpoppin.com


Enjoy the interview!

westcoastpoppinWhen did you start Popping?

WaveomaticI started doing the robot in 1979.



westcoastpoppinWhat got you into popping?


WaveomaticI use to hang out at this park close to my house, it was mostly a Samoan nieghborhood around this one park, and my homie David Alo was locking as usual, but then started doing these crazy robotic movements, I was hooked!




westcoastpoppinHow did you get your name?


Waveomatic I was with a couple of my homies learning some moves from some of the older cats that "occupied" the park so to speak, this one Samoan cat was showing us an arm wave, the only wave I had seen was really a tidal wave, so when he told me to try it, I did it pretty good the first few times, he turned one of the other cats and said "that was automatic, he got it down automaticaly!" and this other older Samoan cat gave me his beer and a hit off a his joint (I was like 12, hehe), and told me "your wave-o-matic", .... and that was it.



westcoastpoppin Were you in a crew? if so which?


Waveomatic Some of my homies and me started a crew early 80's, Electric Knights, we were a mixed bunch, started with Chilly Willie, John Hayward, Deno Rivera (we called him Flap, he was half Philipino half Japanese, hehe), Danny Affajay, Fili Vaa Swani (his cousin was Oka from Blue City fam, one of the dopest poppers I had seen back then), Scotty Pearson (also Blue City fam, we use to go to Sam Niko's house and eat, practice, eat, chill, eat, eat and eat some more), Philip Gills(one of the craziest tutters, hard ass hits with tuts), the Morales Brothers, Sunny, Joel, and Jo Jo, DOPE ass lockers and poppers, crazy cool filipino brothers from Carson, and fo sho Pookey (my homie Craig Caseywho lived in Inglewood, CA, who moved from the Harbor Area to Inglewood back and forth, always had to give homie a ride when I got my car) and others later.



We were poppers, lockers (Willie, Pookey, and me weren't as much as lockers as the others, just basics for group routines, I became crazy for waves, hehe) and even eventually bboys(we all got into breakin'), a grip of nieghborhood crews had all aspects covered, especially when bboyin hit the scene here in the West Coast.


westcoastpoppin Are you in a crew now? if so which?


Waveomatic No, but I represent Homeland, Long Beach City, California, and all of the Harbor Area, you know! :)



westcoastpoppin Where were you from? Where are you now?


Waveomatic I was born in Hollywood, CA, first male of my family to be born in this country. My family is from Greece. My grandfather lost what they had during WWII when the Germans bombed, they hit our house and destoyed acres of land, so my grandfather gathered whatever he could and they came to America through Ellis Island.




They came to Los Angeles, and my dad grew up across the street from Lagoona Park in East LA, went to Garfield High, worked hard, went back to Greece to marry my mom, then they moved to Hollywood then Harbor City. I went to school with some amazing poppers growing up, my area was a poppin haven. Anthony Medina, God rest his soul, was an AMAZING dancer. I went to school with Boogaloo Shrimp for a year in middle school, he was living in Wilmington, CA. Would always go to Scott Park and see cats like Donald Devou then Blue City crew and now you can see him still hittin hard as hell in Booyaa Tribe videos, hehe, still bad!



westcoastpoppin What do you think is the major differences between todays scene and before?


Waveomatic It was much more raw back then, battles in the streets, malls, schools, parks, garages, everywhere, 24/7. Today, thanks to technology and to many OG's that never stopped doing for the artform what all of us should be thankfull for.....keeping it alive, it has reached many people an many areas and has given bith to many events and contests all over the world. Expereincing both eras, it really makes me appreciate one another. The rawness of back then, the growing love for it today. I am amazed at so many of todays dancers, the technicality and execution of their dance is amazing to watch.




A major difference between today and then, for me, is creativity. Back then, we didnt have tutorials in forms of mpegs, avi's, dvd's, vhs, forums, newsgroups, emails, etc. So when we were "stuck" or "studing" on a style, we looked at movies, cartoons, insects, whatever to get some iinfluence, some direction. We looked within our imagination. Many stylese came out in a short period of time, and those styles got flipped by the next person, you took the ball and ran with it your way. Today, many cats emulate thier dance from the sorce they are studing to learn it from. That, in my opinion, takes away some of the creative process that takes place when figuring out styles, moves, transitions, etc, yourself.



westcoastpoppin Who were some known poppers back then? What made them known?

Waveomatic Wow, so many. From Boppin Andre to Boppin Ron, King Snake to King Cobra, Heckle and Jeckle (samoan) to Heckle and Jeckle (white), hehe. So so many to mention. You had cats like Mr Wiggles, Mr Wave, Popmaster Fabel and others we had seen in movies and videos, we were like "those cats are bad!" as in DOPE. Here in the West Coast, you had gangs of dancers and crews from the Bay all the way to LA.




Many cats were not famous, out of all the dancers involved in the scene, a very very small percentage made movies and commercials, or even made huge reps amoung the masses, many underground cats were dope as hell!!!! Some could take anyone!!! I'll tell you about my hoods poppers. In my niehborhood and surrounding hoods, more knowns were Boogaloo Shrimp, Blue City Crew, really dope cat Anthony Medina, Alo Bothers, Cosmix, Curtis E, Packy and Candy Man ( local crips), Sunny Lopez (hardcore lowrider popper), Chilly Willie (mostly a bboy when that hit, but before he popped and locked, his house was the spot, pool, we swam when it had water and skated it when it wa empty, his garage was the main practice spot.) Dino (baddest American-Japanese popper I had seen, we went to school together and practiced a grip), Deno Rivera (first dude I ever seen do hand waves like what cats doing "liquid" nowaday call the handflow, I took his concept and flipped it to travel around my body, bending and turning as it changed speeds, antoher amazing waver) , Pookey, Scotty Pierson ( a blood from Scott Park Killers, also Booyaa Tribe/Blue City Family, my close poppin partner, half samoan half white, hehe, and would inspire me to get better all the time, so did his brother J J, God rest his soul, another soldier murdered), Bam Bam (Ricky from EST, got his name from getting shot 7 times in the back and still lived, now has a house and family and all that, Sammy Burchet (this dude looked exactly like Billy Idol, he could get down! Bad ass whiteboy.), Lil' Guns (not cause of guns as in 9mm semi automatics/gats, but he had some big ass muscle arms....guns), Joker ( gansta), Wero (gansta), Actions (dope ass dancer), Fili Vaa Swani ( my close homie, dope ass samoan popper with mad styles, my sister recently ran into him, hopefully I can get him back into the game. His cousin OKA showed me the very first trace wave I had scene, he would wave his eyebrows even, he was an amazing waver, showed me the "neverending wave", Willie Walnut (later became a crip, died runnning from the cops in a freak death, hopping over a spiked fence, he slipped and the fence speared right thru him), Jo Jo, Joel and Sunny Morales (DOPE ass filipino poppers from Carson) Phillip Gills (crazy hard ass tutter from my hood, one night he battled all night at some Gardena Rec Center poppin event, mostly tutting on them, hard ass sharp tutts with crips hits, all on beat,), Marcellas, Whiteboy Danny and Whiteboy Dave (part of the Kurkindile brothers, craziest whiteboys I have ever met, youngest bother Psycho was a notorious killer in the hood, thank God we were good homies, hehe.), Dee O T (pimp popper), Marty Martini (new wave popper), Sinbad (sentinced to life in prison for murder), JimBad, Tone Stone, , Lil' Creeper (dope mexican popper), Angel Rivera, Randy Keaha (Hawaiian cat, an all round dancer, he did jazz and all that too), Kung Fool(this cat was funny), Tung (dope vietnamese popper, one of the dopest basketball players too, this cat could hoop anyone, and Pookey was semi pro, and he would ball him up.... me, Willie, Vaa, Sammy and Pookey use to kick it in his garage all the time, homeboy had 8 brothers, Tin, Ton, Tung, Bin, Bong, Vit, and some other older ones deep into veitnamese mafia, homeboys were crazy! ), Little Casper (his brother was huge dealer, hehe, dude had a new car every month, till he got raided), Arabian Prince (yeah, he was a DJ and lived down the street for a while, he made some dope cuts too) to name some.



westcoastpoppinWhere were the hot spots to session/battle at? How often did these things go down?


WaveomaticMy favorite spots where Noahs Ark/Infinity, an all ages club in Long Beach. Carson Mall, Dell Amo Mall, Fox Hills Mall, school dances had dope battles, Big Johns, King Harbor, Venice Beach, at house parties (meaning at ppls house, not meaning the House music of the Chicago scene) Hollywood Blvd (motly by Highland, but up and down the blvd), friday night highschool football games, Shamrock roller rink (nice low key spot), FatBurgers, and Studio K/CLoud 9 at Knotts Berry Farm in Buena Park, CA. Shit went down every weekend, and once in a while a good local park event or a church's dance to go hit up :) Also if I was lucky enough to go to an Uncle Jams Army event, those were dope, think of it like a funk-tastic-poppin-pre-rave, hehe.



westcoastpoppinWho was ur inspiration?


WaveomaticMany dancers, really many different things. As I said earlier, I started in 79, sometime before May, I had asked my Mom about it and she says I was doing it on my birthday nonstop that year. :) Back then, I had seen many older Samoan cats, also David Alo (he busted the robot first that made me really trip out) and Oka (my waving inspiration) inspired me big time. Also seeing Robert Shields and Yarnel on TV was mad inspirational. So many cats I grew up inspired me at one point or another, so did many cartoons, movies, animals, and things like water. :) I'm sure indirectly other inspirations helped me and keep helping me grow as a dancer.



westcoastpoppin Did you train with a certain group/individual/teacher? If so who?


Waveomatic Mostly with the homies, but in 85 I had to leave the country, I moved to Greece and was the only popper there, at least that I knew of.



westcoastpoppin Can you still find inspiration from the new generation?


Waveomatic HELL YEAH!!!! It's the new generation that has me out dancing all the time again!!!! THANK YOU!!!!!



westcoastpoppin Please tell us about any memorable battles, beefs, sessions, moves, places, etc.


Waveomatic Man, there is so much to say about all the battles, sessions, moves and places...lets just say that there were some spots like Hollywood Blvd that you would see a gang of new heads you had never seen before, seeing new shit, and at all age clubs. Sessions usually happened at a homies garage, but we would also session at the park.




I grew up close to Scott Park in Carson that opened me up to a lot of poppin. A crazy beef I remember was between two cats, Pookey and this other cat, cant remember his name, this filipino cat, but they battled, then they squabbed, and then they battled and squabbed all over again. This lasted a few hours between a lot of shit talking and pushing, later getting half the place involved. It was at a rented out wharehouse party, Knights of the Turntables spinnin, kegs, no ID needed, these two dudes went crazy that night. I'll never forget during their second battle, the other homeboy was poppin and by the end of a few rounds he had a big ole' knott on his head (Pookey had headbutt him), hehe, he was swellin' up bigtime, bloody shirt, lump growing upside his head, busted eye and all, :). These cats didnt dance to fight, but fight to dance :)



westcoastpoppin What was the dominant styles back in the 70s? How about in the 80s?


Waveomatic When I started, it was all about the robot, and if you weren't doing that, you were lockin or doing both. It was the robot that got me into it fo sho. Again, this was in '79, and before that I really don't remember much, I was 11, and wasnt exposed to much other than lockin and the robot. It wasnt till I saw it done up close that got me crazy hooked.


The 80's is when I started seeing all kinds of styles and moves, here in the Harbor Area of Los Angeles, the very early 80's was a poppin explosion. As far as my area goes, from the 70's, many Samoan cats that orginaly lived in the Bay had moved to Carson, CA, and Long Beach, CA, and some of their styles came along with them. Also, Poppin Pete and his brother Boogaloo Sam moved to Long Beach from Fresno, and brought Sam's Electric Boogaloo style. I had heard of Pete, my sure my homie had told me about him, like I beleive he called hime Poppin Pistol Pete or something very simular to that, describing his hard hittin style, and I later came to know about Sam and Pete.



Also Boppin style was big, thanks to Boppin Andre, he influenced many here in LA too, another poppin legend as well. I beleive all these cats, Bay Area styles and more, played a role in the area and surrounding areas I'm from (Harbor Area).


The 80's you saw a lot of poppin, animation (3 d'ing and many other styles incorporated in mimicing stop action and clay mation movements, much inspired by movies based on Greek, Persian and Arabic mythological creatures), bay are struttin and boogaloo, the style of poppin in itself (yes, poppin is a style, like continuouse hitting, not just a term used to describe the dances that accompany it, hehe, and different areas "popped" different even though the foundations was there, like compton style was more gangsta, for example), electric boogaloo (old man, walk out, twist o flex, rolls), waves(all different types, waves in the mid 80's got VERY creative) , bops (came from bottin, rythmatic robot dancing which incorporates a hit usually comming from the stomach area and chest), hits ( the "tensing" of various body parts, the essence of poppin), vibrating, strobbin (mimicing the actions of a strobe light's effect), tickin (sharply "stop and go" pausing your moves), tuts (egyptian style, mimicing egyptian hieroglyphic postures, ancient eastern indian hand positions, buggs bunny cartoon angles, then led to more geometrical styles)floats and glides (illusionary walking movements, like walking in place, or going backwards while giving the illusion of moving forwards[this is known as the backslide, but was commonly mistaken as the moonwalk, which is what Micheal Jackson called it when he first performed it on a Motown Show on TV-MJ use to robot back in the days, but he learned a gang of poppin from Poppin Taco and Poppin Pete I beleive], also done on the knees, like the famous Mr Wiggles knee slide), walks (character walks), puppet (like being controlled on a string), to name a some, and routines (many influenced by the Bay Area)and so on.




westcoastpoppin How were battles judged back then? Do you feel it is better judged now or before?


Waveomatic It depended, if it was a battle, or a contest, or a talent show. See, a battle, is the RAWEST form, it was judged by the crowd watching it. The crowd judged. Contests, it would depend, as did talent shows, sometimes they gave it to the highest crowd response, or they had judges, usually the sponsors of the event, hehe. I like it when you battle and the crowd judges, this artform is such an entertaining one, its great to be able to feed off of that factor. I'm all about the crowd :)



westcoastpoppin Skill level compared to back then to now, what are the differences?


Waveomatic The skill level now is INSANE! Not saying it wasnt back then, the Old School is no were close being documented to see what the skill level was like, the footage available, being great, does not reflect all what was going on, those who were there know how advances some were..... but DAMN, some styles have progressed so much, like boogaloo, tutting and waving, even bottin, for example that seeing cats like Sweepy, Jay Jay, Tetris, Skywalker, Elsewhere, Madd Chadd, and so so many more, to see them doing amazing things with it, wow, makes me feel young again! I definetly would like to see more character, musicality is dope now adays, cats are hitting beats like crazy. I wish they played more of a variety of poppin music at events so we can see what cats really can do with musicality other than songs that are redundantly being played throughout events.



westcoastpoppin Who did you want to battle back then? What about now??

Waveomatic Anyone, and anyone. ;)



westcoastpoppin what do you feel about the internet becoming a big part of networkin in poppin community?


Waveomatic DOPE! The internet is a valuable tool, a very powerful one too. But be carefull, it can make you lazy, and if it is your blueprint to learning this dance, then it might do you more harm. As a communication tool, to talk and learn with others all over the world, its amazing, I'm a nerd because of it. What I mean by lazy, if it's just to download clips and vids to learn, thinking its a shortcut, it is, but its a shortcut to somewhere that will be harder to find your OWN way back home. IMO dance is self expression, you want to express yourself when you dance, not someone else. Also much credit goes to Space Capital setting it off with Bboy.com, and FO SHO Mr Wiggles for his many contributions even thru his website, and how it's brought so many dancers together to discuss topics in a form not many other places have provided, always reaching out to every dancer and respecting every opinion. It has proven to be a valuable tool, I think his website might be underappreciated by even myself for what it has provided for the community. So on that note, THANK YOU!



westcoastpoppin When did you get back into the scene? why?


Waveomatic You never stop dancing, I really believe that, but I did fall out of the scene and stopped practicing for years. My crew started claiming the hood instead, gangbangin, drug dealing, quick comeups, it just ruined what we once had in my hood. The crack cocaine hit hard, dealing went out of control, gangs, dancing was the lowest on the list.




I started doing shows with THE SHAPESHIFTERS, an underground hip hop group started by memebers of CBS graffiti crew here in LA. I produced tracks, worked a lot with Circus, we were close homies for many many years, and Mek on beats starting even before the album Planet of the Shapes very early 90's, and danced live during shows later in the 90's too, even poppin in costumes.



I toured with the homies thru states too, and also did tons of shows all through California. I also popped on a few underground videos, like for Awol One and a few of our crazy ShapeShifter vids. In the 90's, I also toured to Europe with Milk Skateboards for the World Championships, in 96 I had a REAL battle again in Amsterdam against a Dutch popper at a hip hop event. This got me back into lookin more into it again.




Then around 2001-2002 I started posting online, on websites, where I met Tetris and Pandora, they took me to Homeland(a place for dancers, DJ,s and graff writers to do there thing without getting in trouble, we have designated walls there for cats to do there pieces, legally) when it was for Bboy/Bgirls, and we became the true homies. With their help, IceMan (OG Bboy), Bboy Don (OG boy), Steam(OG Graff artist), and Dixie ( REALLY OG, she ran the park, changed it around, use to be gang infested, its deep in the hood, but is one of the safest places you'll ever visit, thanks to all her efforts), we started Homeland on monday nights for poppin and lockin. They are the ones mainly responsible for getting me back in the game.




Those two and what else that inspired me most to get back in the game was seeing Detours. WOW, I related to those cats cause I have a simular approach, later I met Skywalker wavin at an underground D&B event, we started meeting up at spots a grip, then later Elsewhere and Squid where we shot a video for some house group called Eltro, and we have became close homies since, hehe. We are some really weird wavers from SoCal, hehe.



I can never thank Elsewhere enough, and even more Tetris and Pandora, they took me under their wing and we were the three amigos going out every weekend, oh yeah, and Ted, haha, those were good times.




westcoastpoppin what was the down time of the scene like (late 80s early 90s) how did ppl react to poppin?

Waveomatic Mid eighties is when I saw the down fall, actually in 86-87, I came back from Greece and most of the crew was gangbangin and hustling instead. No one was poppin at parties. I was getting clowned for poppin, 'cause when I was in Greece, I was still doing my thing. I couldnt beleive it, I was not feeling this change one bit, but later got sucked into its trap. Many of the "poppin" neighborhoods got infected by this social virus, bieng they were in low income areas, like the projects (ghetto) and arrested developemented communites.



Our poppin shirts and pants were replaced by colorless gear, our boom boxes by boom sticks. No glory in it, nothing close to the days of poppin battles. Poppers were like gladiators, battles were face to face, not suppose to be someone who gets shot in the back while running for cover. In LA the gang scene got really nutty, and many of the most talented individuals fell prey to it. If they werent bangin, they were robbing, and if they werent robbing and stealing, they were dealing, and if they werent dealing, they were smoking, and when they werent smoking, they were doing other dirt. Many fell to that lifestyle, and the media started to milk it thru gansta rap and other forms.


Poppin is a West Coast dance, spawned by the funk era musically, to its earliest traces in the Bay to Central, then down to Southern California area geographicaly, commonly mistaken for being a Hip Hop element, even though now in my opinion it probably is, but thats not where it originaly came from, as Hip Hop originally came from the Bronx, NY. When Hip Hop started to take a change, so did many of its dances and the dances it accompanied. Bboyin, a true hip hop element, also started to phase out when poppin and lockin phased out as a main scene.



The true essence of these West Coast dances and Hip Hop elements found themselfs at thier roots again....underground....when only MC'ing could be turned to products to sell, rappin was on the forefront.....commercial Rap and commercial Hip Hop spawned other scenes, and took some of the dancers there, even away from dancing, hehe. At that time, many elements of poppin found themselfs in other scenes here in LA for example, that era, mid to late 80's, was the time of the first "raves" her in LA. Electro, which was big in the early to mid 80's, also shifted scenecs, it went way underground, college and underground radio became a home to these, the BMP's started getting faster and faster, which started the first TechnoElectro parties here in Los Angeles, and with the influence of a scene starting in Detroit, Techno for short (many Electro Funk influences, like Kraftwork and Tangarine Dream, were the influences that also spawned the Techno scene that first started in Detroit, these influences and others, like Chicago's House and New York's "Garage" scenes, and UK's many electronica scences, and many others reached here from the 80's thru the 90's).


Here in LA, Party Crews started throwing these type of clubs, as did many college students promotting these hallucenogenicaly laced parties, mostly illegal events at abandoned buildings, rented out hangers and lofts, our even out in the desert. Some poppers like myself attended these parties, we could dance and not get bagged on for poppin, but with the beats so fast, we mostly just waved all night long, hehe. Just try hittin to beats at 100 - 140 BPM all night long, hehe, what a workout!


westcoastpoppin what do you think brought poppin back? Who is responsible?

Waveomatic How could such a dance, an artform, so unique, so distinctfully different..unhuman if you will, compared to other dances...that came from the streets, done with such grace, creating so much creativity, igniting such imaginaton, how could something like that ever just dissappear? Thats what I really think now, it never left, just shifted scenes. Sure, it lost many participants along the way, but now gains more and more all the time.



I give most of the credit to the Electric Boogaloos for taking this dance to soo many places, that is just undeniable. Also, cats like Boogaloo Shrimp got many cats involved thru ppl seeing him in Breakin, you'll always here the words "turbo" when someone with minimal knowledge tries to describe it. He doesnt get much credit, but he should, he also went to Japan and took the dance with him doing shows. Now cats like Elsewhere have sprung new dancers and fans of the dance with his worldwide commercials and his Kollaboration clip, the most downloaded dance clip on the internet, hehe, that keep exposing the artform to different scenes and regions.


westcoastpoppin What legacy would you like to leave for the scene?

Waveomatic hehe, I would love to be known as or even leave a legacy, who wouldnt, the truth is I'm just one of so many poppers that got down back in the days, I wasn't famous back then, well, outside of my hood, hehe, but I had my underground rep fo sho, mostly known as the crazy white boy from harbor city, hehe. Ideally I would like to leave cats hopefully knowing that my style is mine, a much as anyones dance can be thier own, that I tried to be an innovator, and create new ideas for the dance. If I inspired at least one person thru my dance, who inturn inspires another, that not too bad. :)



westcoastpoppinWhat advice would you give to anyone who is interested in getting into this dance?

Waveomatic DO IT!!!!!!!!! ITS THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH!!!!!!!!!



westcoastpoppinAnything you would like the readers to know about you? Any other comments?

Waveomatic Yeah, thanks again for the interview, I wasnt famous or was I the best popper back then, but I know I could get down with the best of them, hehe, so its an honor for someone like me, an underground popper, to get a chance to be heard and acknowledged, even though my participation in the history of the artfrom is just a splash of water, a wave breaking in an everflowing ocean of knowledge.



That, and come to Homeland Cutlural Center on Mondays nights so we can get down!!!!!!!!!!!!! :) Much love to my family, Mom and Dad let me dance, they knew it kept me out of trouble....for a while, hehe, and I have to give a big shout out to my baby Karlita aka "Pop Roxx", she helped my thru some really tought times not too long ago that almost had me sent somewhere way outside this scene, hehe, THANK YOU BABE! And a big huge thanks to all the homies I have met, all my HOMELAND HOMIES!!!!!!!!, and all the homies I have yet to meet!

Interview with Mr.Wiggles

WestcoastpoppinWhen did you start Popping?

Mr.Wiggles I started my journey in the early 80’s, but i learned (and am still learning) in the late 90’s



WestcoastpoppinWhat got you into popping? At what age?


Mr.WigglesFor me it was because I was originally a BBOY in the Bronx, but Breakin started to play out in like 78/79(this is when Breakin was only in the BX and Manhattan), I was Breakin at a Jam (1978) in the BX and some girls started sayin “that’s played out!”. Haha. so i started seeing and hearing about a dance called the “BIONIC BOOGIE” and “ELECTRIC BOOGIE”. These were the names that were on the streets. And i heard of a dude called “Pistol Pete” (Poppin Pete), who was doing crazy moves, so I eventually went from Breakin to Poppin.



Age? Wow. I ain’t goin there. I been countin backwards for the last decade, I don’t even know how old i am today. LOL.


WestcoastpoppinHow did you get your name?


Mr.WigglesI got the name Mr Wiggles from a well known underground Graffiti Writer named SEEN TC5 (he was the younger Seen) who had a side name “Mr Wiggles”. So one day he saw me gettin down in school and just threw the name at me, and it stuck! (THANX MA BROTHA SEEN!!!)



Westcoastpoppin Were you in a crew? if so which?


Mr.WigglesThe Electric Company, CYA (Crazy Young Artists), P.A.R.T.Y. (public artist rockin the yards, people are rejecting the young), TCV (the Crazy Vandals), Rock Steady Crew, Zulu Nation, Magnificent Force, Rhythm Technicians, Ghettoriginals, 7 Grand Masters Tribal Click, Electric Boogaloos.



Westcoastpoppin Are you in a crew now? if so which?


Mr.WigglesRock Steady Crew, Electric Boogaloos, Zulu Nation, Tribal Click



Westcoastpoppin Where were you from? Where are you now?


Mr.WigglesSOUTH BOOGIE, BOOGIE DOWN BRONX, BX. Now in Las Vegas.



Westcoastpoppin What do you think is the major differences between todays scene and before?


Mr.WigglesWell in the 70’s Hip Hop was Raw, and more street, on some no where to run and no where to hide type sh&t. Early 80’s was fun, and exciting, but after 83 when the movies came out (Beat Street, Breakin) it became more Hollywood, and comercial, and to me it was a downfall. Believe it or not the dance scene was much bigger (every household had people dancin), but it was too comercial. Today it is smaller but more underground, and yes it has been suburbanized as well, But i prefer today‘s scene over the 80‘s scene, but the 70‘s scene was the best. There are things that young dancers get away with today that they would not have gotten away with back in the days, this especially goes out for the BBOY scene.



Westcoastpoppin Who were some known poppers back then? What made them known?


Mr.WigglesIn NYC it was Pop-A-Matics, Realizm, Lock-a-Trons, and eventually us Electric Company and Electric Force. From the mother land it was Electric Boogaloos, Jazzy J, Chain Reaction, Groovin Rubin, Taco, Shrimp, Blue City Strutters, ect.. What made them known were their skills and rumors of their skills traveled across the country, Jazzy J for example, I had heard of him years before i actually seen him, and I first saw him on a tv show called “EYE ON LA”, and he was ill.



WestcoastpoppinWhere were the hot spots to session/battle at? How often did these things go down?


Mr.Wiggles In NYC it was the Roxy, Fun House, In Cali it was the Radiotron.  It happend every week.



WestcoastpoppinWho was ur inspiration?


Mr.Wigglesoriginally the Electric Boogaloos set it off in every hood across the US on Soul Train. Then Suga Pop came to NYC and taught us allot. Then when Taco and Shrimp came to NYC I was learnin from Taco, if you see my early 80’s clips you can tell i was influenced by Bruno. Tangerine was also an influence for my front knee Bop Style. And then when i saw Pete it was over! Poppin Pete started doing what i called Poppin Power moves, i was strictly Pete’s moves.



Westcoastpoppin Did you train with a certain group/individual/teacher? If so who?


Mr.WigglesI got to learn from Suga Pop, and Taco, but Suga Pop had the biggest influence on allot of NYC dancers since like 81. Also Lock-A-Tron John, Skeet came to NYC during the mid 80’s and droped bombs.



Westcoastpoppin Can you still find inspiration from the new generation?


Mr.WigglesYes, most definitely.



Westcoastpoppin Please tell us about any memorable battles, beefs, sessions, moves, places, etc.


Mr.WigglesI guess back in the days it was exciting cause every cipher was a battle, point blank, people always walked away with there feelings hurt. I had some battles in LA when I was back and forth, I guess one dope one was me and a Mexican brotha, he just walked up to me in a club and said he wanted to battle me, so I was like coo. We opened up a huge circle, first round he Ticked and Popped, I Popped and did Ground moves, second round we both Tutted, i had just created the leg through Tut’s, so “it was all over for homeboy“, after that round you can see he was losing his heart and was like damn what did I get myself into. And then I just kept “smokin” him until this shadow appeared on the side of the circle, and was lookin at me like Wiggles? Haha, when I looked it was TACO!, me and Taco hugged and when homeboy saw that, he really didn't want no more. LOL, I had the pleasure of jammin with Taco that night and he through some of the most amazing moves I had seen next to Pete’s. The “CART WHEEL WAVE”, “HAND STAND WAVE”, “ANMIATED CHEST WAVES”, me and him had a similar wave that we both did that night “LEG KICK WAVE”, he went batty, and we had a good time, Toni Basil was there as well.



Westcoastpoppin What was the dominant styles back in the 70s? How about in the 80s?


Mr.WigglesIn the 70’s it was definitely more BOOGALOO and POPPIN. The 80’s was POPPIN, ANIMATION, WAVING, TICKIN.



Westcoastpoppin How were battles judged back then? Do you feel it is better judged now or before?


Mr.WigglesNo rules, and thecrowd decided, and there was always disputes that lead to rivalries and even more battles. I liked it before, it was more street, and you always had to stay on your toes, and there was no internet, so peeps would say sh&t to your face. Haha, LOL.



Westcoastpoppin Skill level compared to back then to now, what are the differences?


Mr.WigglesTo me the original EB’s were the most musical, they lived the era of the music we dance to today. But as far as the entire Poppin community, today is better.



Technique: Today we have more people Poppin correctly than back in the days, but when you look at Sam, Pete, Skeet, Taco, Dre, Tangy, Ron, ect.. there is no question they had the technique down back then.


Originality: IMO it was more original back then, more diverse skills, but today comes close.


Crowd control: Back in the days fasho, today we have Salah who can control a crowd and is a throw back to the way we performed. Back then everyone could control a crowd. We were much better performers back then cause of all the shows we were doing, and we influenced each other. But you gotta give it up to Japan and France. they put on great shows, and have skills in controling the crowd.


Character: Back in the days, character was a must, just look at Beat Street, Wild Style, Breakin, Breakin and Entering, and you will see what i mean.



POPPIN, BOOGALOO:the original EB’s were the best to me, but the over all skill level is way higher today. It had gotten to a point where everything was so comercial that people only responded to tricks and moves (that’s why I changed my style to strictly tricks during the 90’s so i can compete with BBOY power moves with the crowd).


ANIMATION:I saythe 80’s was better, everyone had there own characters by 83/84


WAVING: I still say the 80’s was better and more creative and watery. And allot of underground wavers that never got there props.



BOPPIN:while there are decent Boppers today, the skill level was higher then, and back then the dance seem to fit the era much better, and the Boppers were even more effective then.


TUTTIN: back in the days it was less technical and more funky, but today it is way more technical with the angles and concepts, and cats is gettin funky with it too now, but I will say today for sure.


Westcoastpoppin Who did you want to battle back then? What about now??


Mr.Wiggles I was cocky when I started gettin good and I wanted to battle everyone. Right now i’m battling myself, and I have a secret hit list of cats..lol, I’ll keep that to myself.


Westcoastpoppin what do you feel about the internet becoming a big part of networkin in poppin community?


Mr.WigglesGOOD in a sense that we can communicate more, and drop history, and also sell products to support our art forms and us as parents who are still dancing past 60 (just kiddin) BAD because while the communication is better, people do tend to copy and imitate without fear of gettin caught and yes it hurts the originality of a person cause of this, also the street credabilty is losing it’s importance cause people can get fame by talkin sh&t on the net, and posting clips on the internet instead of bouncing from hood to hood, spittin at your adversaries face to face, creating a real legacy. I missed that aspect, and allot of Poppers are taking the easy rout. Trust me, have the sh&t talkin on the net would be eliminated if these people had to face the people they are talking about.



I think it’s all coo for videos and clips, but people have to remember to look at these clips for inspiration not for biting and copying verbatim. Peeps need to take from what they watch and twist it to there own sh^t. or if they are beginners, bite a lil until you are able to understand the dance better, and then change what you have bittin to your own sh&t.


Westcoastpoppin When did you get back into the scene? why?


Mr.Wiggles I never left the scene, i have always remained a dancer, danced my whole life, and have not held a regular job down since 80. I never stopped, maybe that’s why i’m feeling the wear and tear now, but I never quit, and I will continue till they put me in a wheelchair, and yall will still see me “POPPIN” WHEELIES.



If it wasn’t gonna be dance it was gonna be Graffiti. if it wasn’t gonna be Graffiti, it was gonna MCin, if not that it would have been Producing Beats, ect. No matter what I was gonna live Hip Hop. Hip Hop was literally the only thing i knew, and the only thing did well. I was never gonna abandon that, Hip Hop is a major part of who i am in this world. And it is also the reason why I am still alive today.


Westcoastpoppin what was the down time of the scene like (late 80s early 90s) how did ppl react to poppin?

Mr.WigglesIt was wack, people looked at us the same way that Americans looked at Mimes. It was not good, But we (RSC) didn’t care, we would hit clubs sportin adidas laced with the phat cotton thick joints, and we was either Kangol down, or sportin the latest gears mixed with olds school sh&t and we would get into fights every weekend and the whole nine. Be we never gave a f&ck.



Westcoastpoppin what do you think brought poppin back? Who is responsible?

Mr.Wiggles The Electric Boogaloos. Peeps, might give peeps like me credit for keepin the buz alive, but the EB’s brought the dance back in it’s original form after almost 20 years of being extinct.


Westcoastpoppin What legacy would you like to leave for the scene?

Mr.WigglesOf course I want people to respect my skills, and my growth, but above all I want peeps to remember that I truly love the dance, and did what I could to help spread the art form the best way I can. and told the truth as I truly believed it.



WestcoastpoppinWhat advice would you give to anyone who is interested in getting into this dance?

Mr.WigglesStudy foundations, get as close to the root of the style you want to learn. respect all other styles and dancers even if you ain’t feelin them, or there style, let your dancin do the talkin for you, you can’t win a battle or argument debating on the internet, only believe what you can see with your own eyes, and not someone else’s typing/opinions.



WestcoastpoppinAnything you would like the readers to know about you? Any other comments?

Mr.WigglesMr Wiggles is a proud Puerto Rican, who married a Beautiful Dominican BGIRL and that had beutiful PuertDominican...na wait....Dominirican...uhuh....DomRicans...lol...naa...DominiRicans yea that sounds right DominiRican children (and one PuertItaliana Love ya Alex)

Monday, December 18, 2006

The Break Down of a Forgotten Era

Alot of people wonder where the roots of "Popping" came from and there are alot of controversial debates that rage on even until now


Since I was not even born at the time this all took place, I cannot say who is right and who is wrong, but I have been doing my share of research and have come to a conclusion on my own from the information I have gathered.


I stumbled accross this topic on Mr.Wiggle's Forum and I thought this was some great information that had been forgotten about and burried in all of the other posts.



This was posted by "Birdman" back in 2002, enjoy!


"Hey,

What's up everybody? my name is BIRDMAN, I'm and up and coming dancer that combines all styles of this great art form that everybody calls "popping" or either "boogalooing". But before I decided to get serious about this art form, I wanted to do some research on the history of popping because of all the controversy.


Well it just so happens I ran into allot of O.G.'s from Oakland and started hanging with them, and I mean these guys are in their late 30's, early 40's, and damn near 50's. And I explained to them about what was going on with this dance so they were curious to find out what was going on. So I showed them tapes, they seen the tape of "Soul Train", I even showed them clips on the computer. But unfortunately these guys aren't really into the technology of computers like I am because they're busy working with their families, and doin' all kinds of other stuff. So all of them wanted me to translate from them to me about their opinion and facts about what really happened. And believe me, I've showed them everything, they've read everything, they've read all the posts, so they definitely without a doubt know the perspective of what's goin' on now, as opposed to what was goin' on when they were dancing. So here we go:


First of all, there are so many subjects to talk about, because this has gotten way out of hand. But that's o.k. Because people really don't know. It is correct the word "boogaloo" has probably been used a hundred times since the beginning of dance. But in the late sixties, early seventies, the brothas in Oakland decided to take that name "boogalooin'" and connect it with the dance that created illusion, as such forms as the robot, slidin', hittin', wigglin', and pointin', and breakin' down, posin', tremblin' and walking, and yes, dancing all over the place while hitting to the beat. And to answer this question, no it wasn't a style that Sam was doin', because Sam had his own style. Not to mention he came ten years later. So if anything, he was doing a spin off of what they were doing. And if anybody knows if somebody originates a dance, then those are the people who dictate from that point on, what the dance should be in general.



At that time, When you said you saw "boogaloo" It didn't mean that he was just doing one style. You would have many styles. You might go somewhere, one guy might come out creepin' and vibratin', one guy might be jump ropin' and skippin', and posin', and hittin' at the same time while dancing, a style that has not been seen to this day. When I watch the boogaloos dance, what they definitely do is incredible, and they have carried this art form on. But the problem is, when everybody comes out, they all dance similar to the leader, known as Poppin' Pete, or Boogaloo Sam. I mean you really can tell this style is made for him. The way he looks, his height, his chemistry with that dance, and bond. Everybody else comes out and kind of does the same style but with their own twist. But it's basically the same style of dancing. With the constant movement, the shoot downs, the rollin' the legs, the same general concept. Where as back in the day, you'd have a boogaloo group with the guy moving like Poppin' Pete, but with his own style, but the rest of the guy’s style would be totally different. Nothing alike. Which I am surprised that they haven't done, especially when I seen the Soul Train tape, with the same leader, in the earlier generation, where everybody had a distinct style.


Why was that concept not kept? Every guy came out with something unique, pretty much all the way. Well, that's the way that all the Oakland groups were getting down from about 1967 up until about 1979. But of course, like any other era of dancing, the styles in Oakland evolved over a period of time.


So that brings us to this: “I was told that groups in Oakland were pretty much dancing off of music on 45, and fast music”. First of all, that’s incorrect. The groups that were doing that were San Francisco, and Richmond groups. And that started happening from about 1978 on after that. But that's not important right now. I get the impression that there were no groups in Oakland dancin' to Funk. Not only were we dancin' to Funk, we started off with Soul. And let me describe to you to the best of my abilities of what we were doing.


About 1967, there was a group called Aces of Soul. They used to wear white gloves, white apple hats, white shoes, black turtle neck sweaters, with the "#1" on the back. And they used to dance off a song by "Rare Earth" called "Gettin' Ready", which I believe might have been also recorded by the Temptations. And they used to dance in the talent shows. It was four of them. They used to announce them, and all the people would go crazy and run up to the stage, screaming like if they were the Beatles. They had a strobe light on. And they would all come out creepin' together. All of the sudden they would just start moving all over the place. And yes it was continuous movement, and they constantly hitting, some were posing, wiggling, and jumping all over the place at the same time. But they all had unique and different styles of doing it that were totally different. Those were some of the original styles of boogalooing. And again, no, it wasn't like how Sam was moving. Because it was the original style. And anything that came from that was a derivative. But of course as time goes on, styles are gonna get more advanced.



Just as a Popping video I've seen of Pete dancing in black and white, and years later where he dances totally different. He even says it himself that every time you see him, from time to time that he gets better and more advanced. One of the things I wanna say is when the brothas was comin' out with boogalooin'', when they were rollin', the whole purpose of boogalooing was to make somebody believe that you were doing something that you weren't doing. And there really wasn't any rules, but at the same time it was an unspoken rule that you knew if you're doing this dance. The whole purpose of it was, to mix some form of hitting, animating, 3d, robot, slidin', dime stopping, meltin', Chinese robot, skippin', shieldin', some form of pantomime, hitting, etc. As long as you combined any of them together, anything goes.


Which is another thing, you could shift gears to any speed, or any style that you wanted at any time, and at that time there was no rules that when you get in a contest that you had to stick to only one style. (Yes I read that article). Back then, if there was 500 dollar boogaloo contest, you could do whatever you wanna do. It was your responsibility to learn every possible style that you could know. Just like when you get into a battle, nobody tells you that before you get into the circle, you must only stick with this one style. First of all, it's restricted, boring, it stops artistic freedom of expression, and it stunts the growth of the dance. When you see breakers gettin' down in the circle, you never see them saying "before you get in the circle, you only can do this style" They get out there and do whatever they wanna do. Yes, during the circles, every once in a while, you'll see someone getting into a head spin battle, uprock battle, but after that, it goes back to normal. So even when breakers get into contests, they have the freedom to do whatever they wanna do. So if poppers start doing the same thing, and are restricted to one style, not only is it gonna be boring, it's gonna kill the art form and it won't go to the next level like breaking did. In some way, the guy I saw named "Crazy Legs" on some interviews seemed like he was trying to restrict breakin' too much with the original style that he does. But I won't go into that because I'm not a breaker.


So back to the boogalooing. You had another group called One Plus One, in 1969 that used to dance off of "Walk on" by Isaac Hayes. And they had a whole style to it. You had another group in 1971 called the "Soul Steppers". Obviously, you could tell by the first name of the group, what they probably danced off of. They danced off of "Unfinished Business" by Donald Byrd of the Blackbirds. And they all moved extremely fast. I've seen a tape of Poppin' Pete and his group on the "Late Show" in 1979. It looked like Don Kirschner's "Night Show" dancing off of "Hot Number". That style they were doing (not the moves) but the style, the rhythm, and the hittin', Oakland was doing that from 1971-1974.



But imagine with a little difference in moves. The reason why people probably don't have this information is because, at the time, there was no medium for this art form to be seen. (Except this one little show called "The Soul is" show, or the "Jay Payton" show), and I don't think that show was syndicated past Oakland. So basically, Oakland got "Lost in the Sauce". By the time they quit dancing, people forgot about those eras.


About the robotical styles, well they were always robot styles from the beginning. But as you know, there's many types of robot styles as you guys as well know yourself. For instance, you got the robot style that they did on "Soul Train". I believe somebody said "Charles the Robot", and "Tangerine", then you had Michael Jackson's robot off of "Dancin' Machine", and "Slim"'s robot from the Lockers and then you had "Demeta Joe/Private Benjamin"'s robot. Well same thing over here. You had various robots in Oakland. From the beginning, to the end. Some robots were done by itself, others were mixed with boogalooin', because when a person boogalooed, He didn't have to stay to one foundation.



He or she could shift gears at any moment. That's what made it fun. But as the late seventies rolled around, 1974-76, people started moving like animated clay figures. Like Sinbad, Clash of the Titans, Stoppin' like Statues, melting, vibratin', and advanced roboting at the same time. And this is where more of the dimestopping elements got more advanced. And this is how it went until it stopped at about 1979-80. I truly believe this might have been the point, whoever said they saw Oakland just getting stiff on the dime came in at. Well, this is the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. You guys said you wanted to hear from some O.G.'s in the bay area; well here it is, in black and white.

"