Celebrating the History of African and African American Dance

Dance group
Ā鶹Ō­““ Impact

Enjoy Afrobeat, hip-hop and step dance by Motherlandā€™s Finest.

Ā鶹Ō­““ has a new multicultural, student dance group ā€“ Motherlandā€™s Finest. The group recently made their debut for Black History Month.

Founded last year by Ā鶹Ō­““ nursing student Victoria Gyamfi (third from left in photo), who is also a member of Harambee, the collegeā€™s first black student organization, Motherlandā€™s Finest hopes to simultaneously lift the spirits and offer a bit of African and African American history.

Of Ghanian descent, Gyamfi says she grew up mimicking dances such as ā€œAzonto,ā€ a popular dance genre from Ghana that features acrobatic knee bending and hip movements, and Afrobeat, a Nigerian dance that combines West African musical styles with American funk, jazz and soul influences.

The repertoire of Motherlandā€™s Finest spans Afrobeat, hip-hop and step dancing. The latter is a form of percussive dance that requires participants to use footsteps, spoken word and hand claps. Since the early 1900s, step dancing has been a ritual practiced among African American fraternities and sororities.

Gyamfi was a member of the step dancing squad while a student at Providenceā€™s Classical High School. She says step moves are complex and have been a challenge for other members of the dance company to learn.

ā€œBut my outlook with the other dancers is to be patient,ā€ she says. ā€œI tell them not to stress because this organization is supposed to be a fun thing. Everyoneā€™s dance levels are different.ā€

Gyamfi says she named the organization Motherlandā€™s Finest because ā€œAfrica is the motherland. Life started there.ā€

ā€œI want this group to be a way to honor, cherish and remember the long, rich history and talent of Black people.ā€

Motherlandā€™s Finest is scheduled to perform again in April at the University of Rhode Island.