Meeting Claudia


I was quite surprised when I saw the signature 'Claudia Funder' under the reply from info@swingpatrol.com.au. I'd written to the Swing Patrol to find out  more about the Melbourne Swing Festival. 

One of my questions was what sort of follower I'd be as you could choose between 'silver follower' and 'gold follower' and we never called our followers colours back in Brighton.


Well, it turned out that 'silver' and 'gold' was related to the different passes that could be purchased :-). All that as well as how to become a volunteer for the festival was explained in detail in Claudia's lovely email back to me. 








The name 'Claudia Funder' rang a bell as I'd read about the Swing Patrol before I moved to Melbourne.


Naive me somehow thought they must have been around for centuries and was blown away to find out that the founders are still around and do reply to first contact emails :-).

I grabbed my opportunity there and then and asked Claudia if she'd give me an interview for my blog and she was happy to so I was quite excited on the Tuesday morning we agreed to meet and took Barry for a beautiful ride along the river to Claudia's place. 
Photograph by Fudz Qazi
What a lovely lady! I liked her straight away :-)! We went for a some tea and coffee to a little cafe down the road and had a lovely chat. I really enjoyed listening to her when she answered my questions. I had a very good think about what to ask her. Things I wasn't able to find on the website... 

As a new smart phone owner I was very excited to be able to record us on my 'iFriend', so I won't get things wrong from my rather messy hand writing later on. 





Actually, that was one of the best ideas I've had in a while as when I started typing down the interview I realised how much everyone else must enjoy to simply listen to her.


So instead of typing anything, I worked a little bit on the recording to catch the best bits for you. 

Have a listen yourself!... Enjoy! :-)

You are just one click away:


For more information on the story of the Swing Patrol, visit their website and any questions you might still have should be answered:-).

http://mel.swingpatrol.com/about/

The Swing Patrol Story

Claudia Funder and Scott Cupit founded Swing Patrol in 1998 and now head up wonderful swing dance communities Melbourne, Sydney, London and Berlin.

Swing Patrol History: 1997-1998

Where do we start? well, Claudia taught numerous dance styles including Latin, Ballroom, Rock and Roll and Lindy Hop, but was a little frustrated with the dance as the scene wasn’t growing as quickly as her passion would like! There was, however, a small group learning Lindy Hop from a range of overseas teachers who came to Melbourne each year. Teachers who included luminaries of the day: the Rhythm Hot Shots and Steven Mitchell. They formed a group called “Vic Lindy Hop” and employed Rob Bloom to come down from Sydney to teach regular workshops.



At the same time, Scott had seen Lindy Hop at Disneyland and at a huge News Years Eve Swing Ball in Washington DC. He was hooked! Upon arriving back in Australia, Scott phoned every dance school in the Yellow Pages. Almost none of them had heard of Lindy Hop, or advised that it was not taught in Australia. This wasn’t true, of course, as Lindy was being taught in small pockets around Melbourne and had a solid community in Sydney.



Then Scott went web surfing and found Claudia’s email on a Sydney web site. Scott and Claudia teamed up, with Scott becoming Claudia’s swing crazed and passionate student. To this day Claudia still has that original email sent to her from Scott.



Melbourne was so different back then, with Sydney being the largest swing scene in Australia and Scott and Claudia battled to find anywhere to dance regularly in Melbourne. We would scour the papers and find any thing that said “jazz” to go and dance. The few Lindy Hoppers there were, would follow the musicians such as Ron Trigg, the Pearly Shells and the Moovin’ and Groovin’ Orchestra around Melbourne. There was no large swing dance community to speak of and almost no one really even knew what swing dancing was.


The Creation of Swing Patrol

This whole thing just started with a genuine and breath-taking passion and love for the dance. We just wanted other people to dance with and we NEVER dreamed Swing Patrol would become known as the largest swing school in the world. Many times we stand back and just marvel at what has happened.

With Claudia’s strong dance teaching background and Scott’s strong marketing background, we started talking about sharing the dance we loved so much. In April 1998, Swing Patrol became a registered business and on Tuesday August 5th, the first 23 original students turned up to the Rising Sun Hotel in South Melbourne. We taught on carpet, dressed our students in swingy vests and spent most of the time drinking rather than dancing. These were great times; the venue was carpeted and we dressed up in full swing gear every week to teach.

Students loved the new style of teaching and word seemed to spread quickly. Our focus was simply the joy of the dance! After a few months over 100 students were attending our first venue. We took some big risks early on and spending our own money on the first flyers and marketing campaign.

Every weekend, we would letter box drop together. We would have around 3,000 flyers printed almost weekly and promise each other that we wouldn’t stop until they were all in letterboxes. Sometimes we would still be out putting flyers in letterboxes at 2am, calling to each other across the street.

The only way to really grow swing was to entrust some of the teaching to others and in 1999 Swing Patrol announced its first teaching team, which consisted of its most promising students. Many amazing people soon followed and it was the quality of people on the team that played a massive role in Swing Patrol’s growth. Every person that can say they are (or were) a “Swing Patrol teacher” has been absolutely pivotal in our story and we will be eternally grateful for all the faith they have put in us. They have allowed us to lead them and the aim was always to provide a win–win situation where we have hopefully given our team many great opportunities. While we have in turn been rewarded with great teaching, unrivalled loyalty and some life long friendships.

It would be untrue to say there haven’t been tough times and we have made many mistakes. What has made Swing Patrol strong though, is that we have learnt and learnt quickly. We have made some brilliant strategic decisions mixed with some bloopers! We reflect today on all these times and love the learning and experiences.

Ninety nine percent of the journey has been an absolute thrill and we have LOVED it. We think we have the best jobs in the world; the best team in the world and have met some of the most inspiring people one could meet.

Swing Patrol now has one of the most experienced teaching teams in the world with first class troupe dancers who share the dance every weekend across Melbourne, Sydney, London and Berlin.

Anna

Another very cool person I met at the Swing Festival in Christchurch is Anna. She is the one that came up with the idea for all Dunedin dancers to show up in their own dino t-shirts. Not only that though, she actually made them herself! 


I got in touch with her after the festival and she was happy to answer some questions about herself and the cool dino idea.

I enjoyed a lot to find out a bit more about her and I'm sure, you will too :-)

So... tell us a little bit about yourself ...

In real life I'm a rocket scientist (worked on Orion, the next deep space vehicle for human exploration, the past 8 years developing the fault protection and response systems needed to recover autonomously from a failure). 

I like doing abstract photography and have always needed some creative outlet :).

My dance background is Blues! It's a dance that just gets better and better with technique.




(It all makes sense now! You'd know what I mean if you watched Anna on the dance floor when a Blues song is played.)

Swing ...
I've been dancing since 2011 when my friend finally got me to start going to his Blues lessons. Got easily hooked as I can listen to Blues and never get tired of it and it's variations (fusion).

In Denver I kept going Blues dancing and hadn't made the time to start Lindy or West Coast. Since there's not much of a Blues scene here I took the opportunity to finally get started on learning swing.


I've been in Dunedin for little over two months now. I was traveling around the South Island and came back to Dunedin for the Swing Festival and a job teaching a STEM focus program to a girls high school for a month.

And how come you are part of the Swing scene in Dunedin now?
I only started swing, Lindy hop, after arriving in NZ. Probably around March. When a mutual friend got me in touch with a swing dancer in Christchurch. I love dancing communities and started going to their Lindy nights in between car searching.

I met part of the Dunedin crew at the Omaru Jazz Festival. So much fun! At that point I was still dancing 'fake' Lindy (just trying to follow without knowing the steps).

Why dinos?
So why Dino's? For some reason a couple of us in Dunedin started mimicking animals in some of our goof off dances. Had some chicken and T-Rex moves that brought a lot of laughter :-). There was a 'Dinos In Space' party a friend hosted and my friend and I made dino tails. We started musing what kind of dance a T-Rex would dance ... It'd be Balboa (had just learned some basics)! Thought it was too cute not to try to make shirts to go with our dino tails.


I made a stencil from a plastic folder and painted them by hand. Each Dino has different stripes and spots since I had to hand trace the outlines anyway. 

The shirts were such a big hit at the party and subsequent swing dances in Dunedin that I offered to make some for people going to the Christchurch Swing Festival. 

I've helped out with some screen printing designs for a kickball team I was on but never gone through and made my own from scratch. Bit of an experiment but lots of fun.


Thanks Anna! Great job :-)

North Melbourne Interviews

Interview


Nial
Dancing for/since:  4 years
Teacher for/since: 1,5 years




A favorite tune Favourite tune?
'All The Cats Join in' as it's a great song to dance shag to. Although The California Feetwarmers are one of my favourite dancing bands at the moment.

One dancing experience you'll never forget:
A dancing experience I'll never forget is watching my original Shag teachers, Glenn and Rachel, dancing some social shag. They were so fluid and smooth in their movements.
Photo by Fudz Quazi
What makes your class a good class to come to?
I think Annabelle and myself are able to go in depth for both the lead and follow technique so that both roles are always learning something. We always make sure that we're giving feedback and advice to both roles.

(Annabelle and Nial run monthly Shag classes. But at North Melbourne both Julia and Nial were filling in for Kara and Keith, who normally teach that class)


Comments by me:
Nial is hasn't been teaching for that long. It was a special situation with him because no one was teaching a dedicated series of Shag classes. He became a teacher because he was passionate about the dance and wanted to see more of it.
You can't miss that if you watch him dancing the Shag


Interview


Julia
Dancing for/since: 2008 (Swing)
Teacher for/since: 2010

Swing Patrol Class North Melbourne

08/07/2015

Location:

Czech House
497 Queensberry St North Melbourne (Wednesdays)

It was 'Julia day' again today. She was filling in at North Melbourne tonight too.She welcomed me with a big smile and a "hello, I see you every day of this week!"

That was very true and I had no problem at all with it as I've been enjoying her classes a lot.

I also liked the fact that it was Nial this time she was teaching with. I'd met Nial many times and danced with him at all sorts of social events.

It was always good fun and I only found out by chance that he was a teacher when I watched him dancing 'Shag' and said to someone, "wow, he’s good at that!" That’s when I was told, "he’s the 'Shag' teacher!"




This was my first class with him and I was looking forward to it.

The level 2 class was really good, we learnt variations for swing outs, that worked well and looked good.
 
I again liked the fact that Julia looked around and always seemed to pop up at the right moment if somebody needed some help or had a question. That way it really made the moves sink in.

The second class for that night was the 'Shag level 1'. Perfect. I hadn't done much 'shagging' but knowing the basic step made me just the right level to fit in as the 'Shag' classes had been going on for a little while.

I had so much fun with this one. Nial is not only a good dancer but also a good teacher and I could tell that everyone around had just as much fun :-). We left the class with quite a few fun little 'Shag' moves we all tried during social dancing afterwards.


Melbourne CBD Interviews



Interview


Chris
Dancing for/since:  5 years
Teacher for/since: 2 years (Swing)


A favorite tune Favourite tune?
Allen Toussaint - St James Infermary

One dancing experience you'll never forget:
"Dancing with my wife in AJC and performances. I really enjoy sharing the dance I love and being able to do that with my wife. It's an awesome feeling."

What makes your class a good class to come to?
What makes MY classes good ones? Um... I don't take too many things too seriously, so I try to make my classes fun to be in, if people accidently learn to dance while they're there then I'm doing OK.
Comments by me:
Chris was the second teacher who gave me different times as an answer to one of my first questions. He was only teaching swing for two years. In total he was teaching for 3.5 years. That automatically lead to a follow up question:

What type of dancing were you teaching before Swing?

"I previously taught Modern Jive, the dance that got me dancing before I discovered Swing and Blues.
It's a good dance, I know a lot of people hate it, but it is fun and there's a really nice community in Melbourne as well. People just need to try different things."


Interview


Julia
Dancing for/since: 2008 (Swing)
Teacher for/since: 2010



Swing Patrol Class Melbourne CBD

07/07/2015

Location: The Exford Hotel (Tuesdays)

199 Russell St, Melbourne

And it was her again: Julia. The lovely teacher from the blues class last Sunday. She had said to me she was teaching on Tuesdays and I was looking forward to it a lot. 

The other teacher for the night was Chris, who had filled in for Jarrod, who was not well.


It was good fun to try them out at the end of the class. What I really liked about this class was the amount of music played and there was enough time to really practice and understand the moves we'd been shown.


Chris and Julia were great together. They were both so enthusiastic about dancing that there was no way that was not going to reflect on to everyone else in the room.

We had good lessons on '6 beat Lindy' and 'West Coast Swing' which was first time I’d been taught this style and I really enjoyed it. 


We learnt some cool little variations too which everyone could build in individually or together. It was great fun to try these out at the end of the class.

Blues Night Interviews

Interview


Julia
Dancing for/since:  2008 (Swing)
Teacher for/since: 2008 (Swing)




A favorite tune Favourite tune?
'One Night Stand' - Artie Shaw

One dancing experience you'll never forget:
When Julia was danicng in Sydney she came across an awkward guy, a strange dancer. At some point when they were dancing together, she added some variations to her dancing. When her strange partner noticed them he stopped dancing immediately and told her to stop doing that and kept repeating "I'm the star! I'm the star!!"
Hm, I think that would be a moment not to forget for me either :-)!!

What makes your class a good class to come to?
"Enthusiasm." she said. "I see what's needed and address it quickly in class."
I can only agree...


Comments by me:
As Julia was the first teacher I talked to that is from another country (at least that I know of), I asked her a little bit more about herself and how comes that she lives in Australia.

Julia has been in Australia for over 10 years. She came over for uni, fell in love with the country and her now husband and just stayed. 

Australia is her home. In Germany she feels like an outsider. Julia has been a Swing dancer since 2008 but has been dancing for much longer than that. She couldn't even remember for how long. It all started with Ballroom. That's something you'll notice about her straight away. She must have been dancing for a very long time and just loves every second of it :-).  

Beautiful. All the best :-).



Interview


Joel
Dancing for/since:   10 years
Teacher for/since:  6 years



Swing Patrol Class Blues Night

05/07/2015

Location: The Exford Hotel (Sundays)

199 Russell St, Melbourne

I made 'Blues Night' my Sunday evening plan. Adrian, one of my friends from dancing had invited me along for a belated birthday dance. That was just perfect as I wanted to try a blues class anyway after I had a go at the Christchurch Swing Festival and really enjoyed myself. 




The first thing I noticed about the class was the really good atmosphere when I came in. It was a nice little group all ready to dance the 'blues'. They all seemed quite familiar with each other and joked around a lot. 

The teachers for tonight were Joel and Julia. Joel I'd seen around and been to some of his classes but I'd never met Julia and she was mentioned to me before as we do have two things in common: our name and nationality :).

I liked her straight away. She has this really good energy and happiness about her. It was a lovely class and I felt very welcome as a newbie. We learnt a few nice basic blues moves that could be combined and played around with at the end of the class. 

More dancers had shown up for the social dancing by the time we finished. I was asked to dance by one of the dancers in the class and really enjoyed dancing with him. He was a very good lead and it just worked well. I tried not to think too much about the fact that I wasn't sure what to do. I tried to just feel the music and go with it and that's what I ended up doing all night. 

I really felt like a glass of wine with the music at some point. That's exactly what I did in Christchurch and it took me even deeper into that lovely relaxed feeling. I saw some bottles of wine around the tables so I wasn't the only one it seemed.

There was a difference between the Christchurch night and the Sunday night in Melbourne though. In Christchurch I knew I could just call my lovely friend Jeremy to pick me up any time.



All I had to do was just jump in the car and out again, whereas back here, in reality I'd just lost my job and had this agreement with myself to spend as little money as possible by not taking any trams any more or buying drinks.



My lovely bike friend Barry was downstairs in the pub waiting for me but I knew that wine wouldn't make it easier to cycle home uphill in one gear for half an hour after the music had stopped :). 

Therefore I kept enjoying the dancing with really good blues dancers without wine and I still had an amazing time.


The only strange thing that happened was that one dancer who'd ask me to dance, half into the song just went: "Do you want to lead?". I responded: "I've never lead." He then just switched the position, closed his eyes and said: "You can start now." I kind of pushed him back and forward a bit not really sure what I was doing and wasn't too unhappy when the song finished. 

That was my first blues lesson experience and I'm sold. I want more :-)!

Alicia


From the first time I wrote to the 'Swingtown Rebels' I was in touch with Alicia. She answered all my questions about payments from overseas and the locations of the venues patiently. I felt very welcome from my first email :-).

"Just a cool photo, showing all the energy at a dance :) (from Portland Lindy Exchange 2 years ago)"

When she found out I was coming over from Melbourne with no clue where I was going and how to get back to my friend's place in Huntsbury late at nights, she made a real effort to help me out with contacts.

I already liked her a lot from the way she was writing to me before we even met :-).

It was a pleasure to meet Alicia in person in Christchurch and we had a nice chat while I was on my volunteer shift on the last night. There was no doubt she was the one that could help me out with some answers about the 'Swingtown Rebels'. 

Not only that though, I wanted to find out a little bit more about herself too. Here her answers to my questions we exchanged again via email when I was back in Aussie:


"Me and Michael a few years ago we did a "Bear necessities" routine - which kind of sums up what I love about lindy hop - tons of fun, fairly ridiculous at times, and impossible not to be happy!"
How long have you been dancing?

4 and a half years

How did you come across swing dancing?

A guy in my office used to play in a swing band that played for the Swingtown Rebels every 6 weeks and used to always nag me to come along, and I was always like "oh yeah, some day..." then I ran out of excuses and went, and thought "wow, that's awesome...but I could never do that". But I was intrigued, so after several months of going to the 6 weekly band nights I started taking classes.

What's a dancing experience you'll never forget?

That's hard! The cool thing about dancing is there are so many of those moments! I have to say that the Sunday morning at Canberrang last year dancing out in the sun with a live band and a bunch of crazy folk in animal onesies (reinstated my bear suit!) was one of my happy moments!

Or pretty much everything at Pocket Change last year - it was so much fun! Ooh no, I know! It was always my main motivation for learning to lead so I can dance with my little sister - and this year I convinced her to start dancing and went over to Hullabaloo in Perth where she lives and had so much fun dancing and hanging out with her.

How do you fit into the picture of the Swingtown Rebels :-)?

I've been involved for a while in organising the weekly classes, and am on the committee for running our exchanges.