France’s Tecktonik dance craze
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Tecktonik, the dance craze thats a bit techno, a bit hip-hop and a bit original, is everywhere in France -- in clubs and classrooms, in cities and suburbs, on the streets and on the Web.
Teaching a sort of master class in Paris for about 25 techno fans is Treaxy, center, an 18-year-old star of the genre. Tecktonik is already as much a movement as a way of moving on the dance floor. (Richard L. Harbus Rapport / For The Times)
Tecktonik, the dance craze thats a bit techno, a bit hip-hop and a bit original, is everywhere in France -- in clubs and classrooms, in cities and suburbs, on the streets and on the Web.
Students participate in a Tecktonik class at a Paris health club. Tecktonik began about eight years ago at Metropolis, a suburban nightclub near Paris Orly Airport. (Richard L. Harbus Rapport / For The Times)
Parisian Christophe Wydra, 13, in the white shirt, at a Tecktonik class. Tecktoniks biggest critics think its a fad that has been commercialized to death or at best is a derivative art form invented to sell clothes to poor kids and exploit their need to feel cool. (Richard L. Harbus Rapport / For The Times)
Treaxy leads a Tecktonik class. A 34-year-old philosopher who has studied subcultures thinks Tecktonik is a reflection of a more conservative France of recent years, and of a narcissism in the culture that inspires young people to make videos alone in a garage. (Richard L. Harbus Rapport / For The Times)
Cyril Blanc, one of the dancers to invented the label Tecktonik, acts as a DJ at a class on this hot new form of dancing that has taken over the French party scene and dance clubs. (Richard L. Harbus Rapport / For The Times)