The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Film festival
their “If Cities Could Dance” series, charts a dance phenomenon that blends masculine and feminine moves and celebrates the ferocity and expressive joy of dance. J-setting originated in the ’70s at historically Black colleges and universities with the dancers who accompanied marching bands at halftime shows and parades. The Jackson State University Prancing J-settes, who originated J-setting, created a unique, high-energy dance combining military precision, African dance and the characteristic pelvic thrust that has also given the dance its “bucking” moniker.
The style has since been adopted by performers including Beyonce and has been embraced by gay men who have made the dance their own, creating underground club battles that have established Atlanta as a J-setting center. The phenomenon is also chronicled in Jamal Sims’ captivating 2018 documentary “When the Beat Drops,” set in the fiercely competitive world of Atlanta J-setting.
“Wherever there was a marching band, there were
gay men who wanted to do this,” said Leland Thorpe, the charismatic team captain of the 11-member Atlanta dance troupe Dance Champz at the center of Taylor’s documentary. Dance Champz formed a COVID-19 pod so they could continue to practice and dance even at the height of the pandemic. As they perform the signature quick, precise, mesmerizing J-setting moves around Atlanta, Taylor’s kinetic camerawork captures the unbridled energy of the dancers who testify to the double burden of being Black and gay and how J-setting gives them a sense of worth and community.
Taylor’s film uses the city of Atlanta as its muse, with the dancers performing against the familiar backdrops of Piedmont Park’s fluorescent green lawn; Midtown’s rainbow flag crosswalk; Loss Prevention’s John Lewis mural, still decorated with bouquets of flowers after his July 2020 death; the Krog Street Tunnel; and a number of the city’s street art murals by artists including Jarrett Turner, Sam Parker and R. Land. For Taylor, the film celebrates just one component of what makes Atlanta unique and significant, a place that has always
had a robust independent film scene and incredible creativity, demonstrated in the J-setting phenomenon.
“Everybody comes here, they shoot all these movies, films, TV shows, whatever, and they never highlight or show Atlanta. And I’m offended. I think Atlanta is an incredibly eclectic, beautiful, diverse, modern, firsttier global city,” Taylor said.
The foundation for Taylor’s interest in the underground J-setting scene was set early in life. Taylor had his first taste of the hypnotic power of HBCU marching bands when his father was a band director at Cheyney University outside Philadelphia. “So I was indoctrinated into that world very early,” he said.
“And my favorite uncle of all time was gay and danced on ‘Soul Train.’ So I got it. It made total sense to me. And there was a comfort level there between me, Leland and the rest of the dancers as well.”
“There was always a sensibility and a sensitivity that I had for young black men that were a part of the LGBTQ community as well. So for me, personally, being involved in this project, it was just a lot of pieces to the puzzle coming together.”