NY
nyc, boston, raleigh, pittsburgh (maybe not the dominance, but have had a presence)
NYC is a powerhouse. def not an underrated region, but not mentioned in your post. Areas on the rise- Boston- fauj is leading the way, but Northeastern is on the rise too. -Florida- PDAP and Gator are boosting Floridas bhangra presence, and Bhangra Off Limits is sure to become a great team as their members get older-Detroit- i love the diversity in detriot/michigan. FS is an amazing all guys team, Wolverine is a great co-ed more traditional team, MBT is a great co-ed more modern team, and ASD a great all girls team. I def see detroit continuing to hold a strong presence in the scene.-Pittsburgh- this is a tad biased (perhaps self pump?), but CMU, Steel City, FCB, and FCB Jrs have been competing pretty heavily over the last few years, and BIB continues to be a great success year after year. Without a doubt TRB made bhangra a part of Pittsburgh culture and tradition as wellIm expecting Texas to rise up and start tearing up the circuit soon too. I know there are a few comps down there, a few great upcoming teams, and DBI.
I agree with Michigan... Wolverine is dirrrrtyy. And Furteelay's BAB performance this past summer was also really sick. Dancer quality from Michigan is very high.
Quote from: amancheema on November 30, 2011, 01:58:24 AMI agree with Michigan... Wolverine is dirrrrtyy. And Furteelay's BAB performance this past summer was also really sick. Dancer quality from Michigan is very high. Not just now, but if you look at the growth of bhangra, Michigan has been one of the most important regions in America, arguably in the top 5. There is no midwest bhangra scene if Michigan teams didn't exist. But for some reason it seems like the state doesn't get much credit, possibly because we are a bit isolated from the east coast/west coast scenes.
Quote from: HarmanSingh on November 30, 2011, 02:05:51 AMQuote from: amancheema on November 30, 2011, 01:58:24 AMI agree with Michigan... Wolverine is dirrrrtyy. And Furteelay's BAB performance this past summer was also really sick. Dancer quality from Michigan is very high. Not just now, but if you look at the growth of bhangra, Michigan has been one of the most important regions in America, arguably in the top 5. There is no midwest bhangra scene if Michigan teams didn't exist. But for some reason it seems like the state doesn't get much credit, possibly because we are a bit isolated from the east coast/west coast scenes. Agreed... Michigan also needs to compete more frequently
Here's a history of Dominant Teams in NY/NJ area over the past 10 years: 2002-2006: RU/Cornell/NYU/Columbia2006-2009: Virsa, AEG, NYU, RU, Columbia2009-Present: SMD, Virsa, AEG I am hoping for a resurgence for the collegiate teams in this area. Cornell, RU, NYU, Columbia have all fallen-off considerably as their core veterans are long-gone. But, I have seen major sings of life from NYU this season and hope that the collegiate revival can really kick into high gear. Punjabis in the area just aren't inclined to dance bhangra on an organized level. The mere presence of punjabis is not enough. There was never an infrastructure for Punjabi dance in NY/NJ. Bhangra afterall was introduced to NY first by collegiate teams (that were 1. not technically sound, 2. modern, not withstanding RU). The generations of dancers in the 2006-Present period grew up watching collegiate teams. Hence, why there was never a real development of dancers/techinical prowess. Places like Cali, BC and Toronto have a very strong core group of academies and uncles/aunties to learn from. These days, in places like NY, the dancers learn from veterans on the circuit, who themselves were never given the proper training. That's why NY always has, and always will 1. lag behind the circuit, and 2. always have spotty coverage in terms of major/dominant teams. NY just isn't a core region like BC, Cali and T.O. I am pretty ignorant about Mich. and Burgh, but I imagine they have had similar problems. (Mich. kids grew up on a steady diet of collegiate teams, as did Burgh. (PDDS and TRB notwithstanding).