Latin Strut Joe Bataan recorded a song called "Latin Strut" after visiting a Bronx Club called the "310 1/2" in 1973 and seeing the first version of a 6-step dance called "The Hustle." This new Latin rhythmic sound helped young Latino Teenagers develop a faster more robust version of the original slower paced six-step dance which was also a bit robotic. However, with the introduction of songs with faster rhythmic tempos young hustle dancers started doing the dance with fancier gyrations which is when it became known as the Latin Hustle. Other variations of the Hustle would soon be developed by the Black and White communities who also helped spread the Hustle throughout New York City, and eventually the world.
James Brown and Fatback The original early hustle was a 5-step count with no turns, created by Puerto Rican teenagers in late 1972 as a direct result of Puerto Rican elders objecting to young teenagers doing a grinding slow dance known as the 500. Created in the
South Bronx among Puerto Rican teens it was originally done at house parties,
hooky gigs, and basements club dances in the South Bronx. It became known as "Spanish hustle"; from 1975 to 1976, funk band the
Fatback Band made a song with that name. It was also known as the "Latin hustle"; and was a 6 step count to the beat of the music. And
James Brown released ''Everybody's Doin' the Hustle & Dead on the Double Bump'' album in 1975. Same year The JB's released
Hustle with Speed album. Around 1976 it became known as the "New York hustle". Later, known as just "the hustle", when the dance became commercialized after the release of
Saturday Night Fever in 1977. The early Latin hustle Pioneers were Willie "Marine Boy" Estrada and many other members. Some of them were members of a gang called the Imperial Bachelors, who used the Latin hustle as a way to bring peace into a violent
South Bronx. They hosted hustle parties at St. Mary's Recreation Center on 145th St. and St. Ann's Ave, in 1974. Those parties ended in October 1974. However, it was the venue that produced some of the best hustle dancers in
New York City, who would help spread the dance in nightclubs throughout New York City in late 1974. In 1975 music business entrepreneur,
Marty Angelo created the first all hustle dance television show entitled,
Disco Step-by-Step. Each one-hour show featured top hustle dancers and two 10-minute instructional segments that allowed viewers to learn how to hustle dance in the privacy of their own living rooms. One of the first shows featured a young Billy Fajardo and the Disco Dance Dimensions. Many of the show's video clips can be found on
YouTube. Marty Angelo also created the Hustle Hall of Fame online list of dancers in 2000 that he eventually turned over to Ron Bess and Mark James.
Van McCoy's song The original Latin Hustle started being developed in late 1972 by Puerto Rican Teenagers in the South Bronx and by 1974 was being done all over New York and the Tri-State area, and by 1976 became an International Dance Sensation.
Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony's song "
The Hustle" became a hit in 1975, reaching the #1 spot on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Hot Soul Singles charts. Tipped off by DJ
David Todd, McCoy sent his partner Charlie Kipps Jr.to the Adam's Apple
discotheque in New York City's East Side. And "The Hustle" reached the top of the
Billboard Pop Singles chart the week ending July 26, 1975. Van McCoy with
The Stylistics got disco songs such as "Disco Baby", "Can't Give You Anything", "Love is the Answer" and "Funky Weekend". Van McCoy and Charlie Kipps produced David Ruffin also.
Depiction in Saturday Night Fever The 1977 disco movie
Saturday Night Fever (the sound track includes
Tavares,
Yvonne Elliman,
Bee Gees,
Kool & the Gang,
KC & the Sunshine Band,
The Trammps) showed both the
line and partner forms of hustle, as well as a dance referred to as the "tango hustle" (invented for that film by
Deney Terrio, according to the DVD commentary). Although the popularity of the movie faded quickly as the hype of the movie died down, the hustle and the step-by-step dance has continued even after the
Disco Sucks movement and is still a "global social dance" and it took its place beside swing, salsa, mambo, cha-cha-cha, tango, rumba, bolero,
nightclub two-step and other partner dances in America. ==New York hustle==