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Let’s Dance: Where to Dance in Washington

By Matt Carr

Where can you shake your groove thing in Washington? We’ve found lots of dancing destinations, from posh clubs to skeevy dives.

Sweaty Workouts
Limbs fly on the second floor of Columbia Heights’ Wonderland Ballroom. Local DJs are a fixture on weekends, as are full-capacity crowds that often spill over onto the bar’s small stage.
Another consistently sweaty mess of dancing can be found every Friday night at the Liberation Dance Party at DC9. It costs $6 to get into the second-floor party, but the bar serves free rail drinks from 9 to 10:30.
The Red Lounge is an unmarked hot spot between U and V streets. It’s easier to find on weekends when the line is out the door. Make sure to stop by when the local DJ group Fatback spins.
Silver Spring’s Gallery Restaurant & Lounge is gaining a reputation for its late-night events Thursday through Saturday from 10 PM to 3 AM. DJs play house and techno on the downstairs dance floor.

Club Hopping
If you’re headed to a club, make sure to avoid the full cover charge by either going early or RSVPing online. Also, pick one that’s close to other bars in case the line is long and you want to bail.
Liv sits on top of the famous Bohemian Caverns jazz club in the U Street neighborhood. The two-story nightclub has two bars, a dance floor, and a small performance stage where DJs and R&B acts perform. Don’t expect to find a seat—people come here to dance.
Chinatown’s Muse Lounge, formerly RnR, is a block from the Verizon Center. The nightclub has three levels, each with its own DJ and style of music, ranging from pop and hip-hop to electronic and house. The main dance floor is on the first level, where you’ll occasionally see a hired dancer or two in the crowd.
After the drag show at Town Danceboutique, a two-floor gay dance club, the staff clears tables and chairs to make room for its dance floor, which uses state-of-the-art lighting and video screens.
The Park at Fourteenth nearly always has a line, but three floors of dancing and a fourth-floor VIP lounge provide plenty of space once you’re inside. It’s one of the pricier clubs, with a $20 cover.

Salsa and More
Interested in learning to dance salsa? Lima Restaurant and Lounge hosts free lessons every Monday night. There’s also an open bar for ladies Monday from 9 to 11.
Columbia Heights’ Latin Jazz Alley offers mambo, salsa, and merengue lessons Thursday through Saturday for $5.

Last Stop
Sometimes the best option is the least glamorous. At Chief Ike’s Mambo Room, just off Adams Morgan’s main drag, there’s always room to dance. No pretension here: The drinks are cheap, and the DJs play everything from Salt-N-Pepa to Guns N’ Roses and Beyoncé.
The nearby Heaven and Hell has a similar atmosphere with its weekly Thursday-night ’80s party. If you like early Whitney Houston and Duran Duran, this is the place.

Check out our guide to bars that offer dance lessons for even more options.


Category Tags: Music, Nightlife, Dance, Guides


Comments


Anyone who dances Salsa for awhile and knows the scene knows that the following are good places to go, and I am stunned they aren’t in the above article:

Monday - Clarendon Grill in Arlington
Tuesday - The Barking Dog in Bethesda (not good atmosphere, but some of the best dancers around)
Wednesday - Station 9 in DC
Thursday, Friday and Saturday - The Salsa Room (formerly Cecilia’s) in Arlington

Posted by: Renee, Apr 25, 2009 06:09:08 PM

Where can a 30 yr-old take a visiting 50 yr-old friend for a dancing night on the town? Looking for someplace that isn’t populated solely by the college crowd, but lots of fun and a bit wild. thanks!

Posted by: Steph, Apr 09, 2009 08:39:45 PM

Blues Bar, try the Saloun on M Street in Georgetown or look at the listings at the DC Blues Society Web site look under "Juke Joints" at www.dcblues.org.

Posted by: Rusty, Feb 28, 2009 10:05:38 AM

Are there any Blues Bars in the Washington DC area?
thanks.

Posted by: Rhonda, Feb 26, 2009 07:59:40 AM

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