REVIEW · WORKSHOPS
Beginner’s Two Step and Country Swing Dancing Class
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Learning to dance fast feels weirdly easy here. Nashville’s two-step and country swing class turns a music-loving crowd into a learning team, led by instructors who teach partner dancing in plain steps. I especially like how beginner-focused the hour is and how the studio offers practical extras like cubbies and a digital sign for messages. One thing to keep in mind: with only about one hour, you’ll leave with fundamentals and a few showy moves, not a full dance library.
If you can walk, you can swing. The class is built around getting you comfortable quickly: a demo with spins and dips, lots of practice, and you dance either with your partner or with an instructor’s help if you want it. A possible drawback is simple: if you’re feeling self-conscious, the first minutes can feel a bit like stage training before the fun kicks in.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel in the Room
- Nashville Two-Step and Country Swing, Packed Into One Hour
- Where It Happens: The Studio Setup Makes Participation Easier
- The First Minute: A High-Energy Demo That Teaches By Showing
- Two-Step Basics: The Step That Gets You Moving Fast
- Turning Steps Into Country Swing: Practice, Then Add Flair
- Partnering Up: Couples, Solo Dancers, and Instructor Support
- Spinning Without Fear: How the Class Helps You Look Good
- Cost and Value: What $44.97 Buys You (and What It Does Not)
- Practical Touches That Make the Lesson Feel Like an Event
- A message on the digital sign
- Bring your own drinks
- Cubbies and real-world comfort
- Photos, if you want them
- Who Should Book This Class in Nashville
- Should You Book? My Decision Guide
- FAQ
- How long is the class?
- What time does it start in Nashville?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What does it cost?
- Do I need a partner to take the class?
- Can I bring my own alcoholic beverages?
- Is the class taught in English?
- What is the cancellation window for a full refund?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel in the Room

- Top coaches teaching beginners with lots of patience, including partner help if you’re solo
- Two-step plus country swing in one session, with spins and moves for variety
- Bring your own alcoholic beverages, plus storage cubbies for personal items
- Digital sign message so you can send a note to a loved one during class
- Small group size (max 24) so you’re not lost in a crowd
Nashville Two-Step and Country Swing, Packed Into One Hour

This class is built for quick confidence. In about 1 hour, you’ll learn the basic two-step and then turn those steps into country swing—a partner dance you can do to a lot of different songs, not only specific choreographed tracks. The pitch is simple: start with the fundamentals, practice them right away, then add a few spins and fancier moves so you don’t feel stuck repeating the same step.
You’ll also appreciate the practical angle. Country swing is designed to look good without requiring fancy footwork or even a strong sense of rhythm. And it doesn’t demand a lot of space, which matters in real-world Nashville settings—think crowded bars, festivals, or any place where you can’t spread out like you would in a ballroom.
The biggest value isn’t just that you learn steps. It’s that the structure is meant to get you moving early, not at the end of the hour. That’s how you leave feeling like you can actually join the dancing later, not just survive a lesson.
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Where It Happens: The Studio Setup Makes Participation Easier

The class meets at Turn Their Heads Nashville Line Dancing Lessons And More, 830 Fesslers Pkwy suite 114, Nashville, TN 37210. The start time is 4:00 pm, and the activity ends back at the same meeting point.
A few details here matter because they affect how relaxed you feel when you arrive:
- Mobile ticket is used, so you can plan to have your phone ready rather than hunting for a paper ticket.
- Cubbies are available, which is a small thing that makes a big difference. When you’re practicing partner dance, you want your bag, jacket, and odds and ends out of your way.
- You can display a message to a loved one on the classroom’s digital sign. This is the kind of extra that turns an ordinary lesson into a personal moment, especially for birthdays, anniversaries, or a fun surprise.
- The studio is near public transportation, which can matter if you’re mixing this with other Nashville stops.
- Service animals are allowed, and the class notes that most people can participate.
And because the group is limited to 24 travelers, you’re less likely to get swallowed by the room. You’ll usually be able to see what the instructors are doing and get enough attention to correct your basics.
The First Minute: A High-Energy Demo That Teaches By Showing
Before you’re asked to copy anything, you’ll get a demo. The class starts with an impressive presentation of two-step and country swing, including spins and dips from the instructors.
This is smart teaching. Instead of explaining every move like a manual, you watch the flow first. Your brain starts to understand what a “good” country swing look is supposed to feel like. That matters because partner dance is as much about timing and connection as it is about step patterns.
You’ll likely notice the instructors are upbeat and direct, and that comes through in the feedback tied to this class. People talk about the staff being friendly and patient, and about instructors who can turn nervous beginners into confident dancers. In this case, the names that come up are Rick, Nicole, and Becky, which is a good hint that you’ll experience a consistent teaching style rather than a rotating cast.
Even if you’re the kind of person who usually hangs back at the dance floor, the demo helps you map the moves visually. Then the lesson moves into steps you can actually do, not just admire.
Two-Step Basics: The Step That Gets You Moving Fast

Once the demo wraps, you get down to the core lesson: the basic steps of two-step and how to use them with a partner.
The teaching approach here is beginner-friendly in a very practical way. The class description basically says: country swing can be learned quickly, and the lesson is built for people who are new. You don’t need to be a dancer to start—you need basic movement coordination, the willingness to try, and the ability to follow counts.
What you can realistically expect during the two-step portion:
- You’ll learn a step pattern you can repeat.
- You’ll practice the pattern with a partner so timing becomes natural.
- You’ll build the connection needed for country swing, because swing is not just your feet. It’s the feel of the dance together.
If you’re solo, you’ll still be kept busy. You’ll either dance with an instructor or be paired with another student. That’s a big deal for solo travelers, because the lesson isn’t designed as a couple-only performance class. It’s designed so you don’t wait around while others practice.
The end goal of this phase is confidence. Not perfection. The basics are what you’ll reuse again later when you hit Nashville dance floors.
Turning Steps Into Country Swing: Practice, Then Add Flair

After the basics click, the class shifts from learning steps to doing country swing dancing.
Here’s where the hour starts to feel fun rather than instructional. The lesson doesn’t stop at a simple step. You’ll also learn a variety of spins and moves so you can add variety and style.
That matters because country swing can get boring fast if you only know one move. By giving you additional options—especially spins—you’re more likely to feel like the dance is dynamic. Even if your spins are small or basic at first, adding them early lets you look engaged instead of stuck.
The class description also mentions “lots of practice,” and that lines up with the kind of feedback people leave. The instructors are repeatedly praised for patience and for helping beginners relax. That’s not just a nice personality trait; it affects learning. If people feel rushed or mocked, they freeze. If they feel supported, they try again after a mistake, which is how you improve in a single hour.
And since the group is limited and the instruction is hands-on, you’re not just watching. You’re dancing through the learning process.
Partnering Up: Couples, Solo Dancers, and Instructor Support

This is a partner dance class, but it’s set up so you’re not trapped without a partner.
You’ll dance:
- with your partner if you have one,
- with the instructors during practice,
- or with another student if you come on your own.
This gives you flexibility. Couples can build shared muscle memory and keep practicing the connection. Solo dancers still get the experience of dancing with someone rather than standing off to the side.
One useful thing to know: some people come in expecting to feel awkward, especially if their partner isn’t a “dancer” by nature. The feedback around this class includes examples of people who were unsure at first but ended up enjoying it a lot and even wanting to take another class. The instructors’ job seems to be getting people past the initial self-conscious moment.
So if your inner voice says, I’m going to be terrible, I’d treat that as a warning label—not as truth. The class is built for first-timers.
Spinning Without Fear: How the Class Helps You Look Good

The spins and dips in the demo are eye-catching. But the real learning value is what they represent: the class teaches you where the move comes from and how to connect it to your basic steps.
In a one-hour class, you don’t want complicated multi-step choreography. You want moves you can layer on top of the basic rhythm without getting lost. That’s exactly the pattern here: fundamentals first, then extra moves for variation.
You’ll probably leave with a small menu of moves you can remember on a night out. That’s the point. You want something you can reuse in real settings, not just something that works inside a studio.
Also, because country swing can be done to a wide range of music and doesn’t require huge space, you can practice what you learned in more situations than you might think. The lesson is designed for the kind of dancing most people actually run into.
Cost and Value: What $44.97 Buys You (and What It Does Not)

At $44.97 per person for about 1 hour, this isn’t the cheapest thing in Nashville. But for what you get, it’s reasonable.
Here’s the value logic that matters:
- You’re paying for live instruction from the studio’s country dance coaches, not a self-paced video.
- You learn both two-step and country swing, plus some spins and moves.
- The group size is limited to 24, which helps keep the teaching practical.
- The class is designed around getting you dancing quickly, which reduces the “I paid to stand and watch” problem.
What it does not do is turn you into a competitive dancer. You’re not leaving with a full routine. You’re leaving with fundamentals and a few confidence-boosters so you can hit the dance floor and actually participate.
For many people, that’s the sweet spot: one structured hour that gives you a repeatable skill.
Practical Touches That Make the Lesson Feel Like an Event
This class isn’t only about steps. It includes a few details that turn the experience into something you’ll remember.
A message on the digital sign
If you want to celebrate something, this is a fun option. The classroom has a digital sign where you can send a message to a loved one. It’s a small setup, but it changes the emotional tone of the class.
Bring your own drinks
The class includes an option to bring your own alcoholic beverages. That can make the session feel more like a social Nashville activity, not just a lesson. Just remember: it’s still a practice environment, so you’ll want to keep your balance and stay focused.
Cubbies and real-world comfort
Cubbies help you avoid carrying bags while you dance. That’s practical design for partner movement.
Photos, if you want them
One detail that matters: there was a report about not receiving a picture, with the studio offering that instructors can take photos upon request. If photos matter to you, ask during the session.
Who Should Book This Class in Nashville
Book this if you want a short, social, beginner-friendly way to learn partner dancing in Nashville.
It’s especially good for:
- couples who want something active to do together,
- friend groups where one or two people are brave enough to teach the rest by example,
- solo dancers who want partner practice without having to arrange a dance partner ahead of time.
If you’re the type who likes learning a skill you can use that same week, this fits. If you’re looking for hours and hours of choreography, you might find one hour too short. But if your goal is to leave the studio able to join the dance floor with confidence, the format is built for that.
Should You Book? My Decision Guide
I’d book this class if you want the quickest path to practical partner dancing. The instruction format, the high-energy demo, the step-by-step basics, and the addition of spins and moves make it more than a casual walk-through.
Also, the studio has a strong reputation for keeping beginners at ease. Names like Rick, Nicole, and Becky show up repeatedly in the kind of feedback that centers on patience, friendliness, and turning hesitant dancers into people who actually want to go out and try what they learned.
If you’re nervous about dancing in front of others, go anyway. The class is designed for first-timers, and you’ll be paired with support rather than left to guess.
FAQ
How long is the class?
The class is about 1 hour.
What time does it start in Nashville?
The start time listed is 4:00 pm.
Where is the meeting point?
It meets at Turn Their Heads Nashville Line Dancing Lessons And More, 830 Fesslers Pkwy suite 114, Nashville, TN 37210.
What does it cost?
The price is $44.97 per person.
Do I need a partner to take the class?
No. You’ll dance with your partner if you have one, but if you’re solo you’ll either be paired with another student or you may dance with the instructors.
Can I bring my own alcoholic beverages?
Yes, the class offers an option to bring your own alcoholic beverages.
Is the class taught in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
What is the cancellation window for a full refund?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.




























