Hully Gully

The Hully Gully is a type of unstructured line dance often considered to have originated in the 1960s, but is also mentioned some forty years earlier as a dance common in the black juke joints in the first part of the twentieth century.[1] In its modern form it consisted of a series of dance steps called out by the MC. Each step was relatively simple and easy to execute; however, the challenge was to keep up with the speed of each step.[citation needed]

The phrase "Hully Gully" or "Hull da Gull" comes from a folk game in which a player shakes a handful of nuts or seeds and asks his opponent "Hully Gully, how many?"[2]

  1. ^ Oliver, Paul (1984). Blues Off the Record:Thirty Years of Blues Commentary. New York: Da Capo Press. pp. 45–47. ISBN 0-306-80321-6.
  2. ^ Abbot, Lynn; Seroff, Doug (2002). Out of sight: the rise of African American popular music, 1889-1895. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi. p. 309. ISBN 1-57806-499-6.

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