Until the video surfaces in its entirety, remains a delightful mystery. Is it a sultry jazz performance from a smoky Atlanta club? A joyful clip of Lindy Hoppers in a community center? Or simply a home movie of a woman named Susan enjoying her city’s nightlife?

, a name frequently associated with the "West Coast Swing" and "Shag" dance communities in the United States.

Atlanta’s musical identity provides a rich backdrop. Historically, the city has been a crossroads for African American musical innovation—blues, gospel, R&B, hip-hop—and has hosted jazz luminaries across decades. Late 20th- and early 21st-century Atlanta also cultivates vibrant local scenes in bars, small clubs, and community arts spaces where emerging and established jazz players test repertoire and audience rapport. The phrase “in Atlanta” therefore situates the performance within a specific cultural ecology: one that blends Southern heritage with urban dynamism. In such a setting, swing music acquires distinctive inflections—perhaps a gospel-tinged emotional arc, or a rhythm section informed by Southern groove—that make the performance uniquely local even as it participates in a global tradition.

Archiving the Unarchivable: Performance, Privacy, and the Obsolete Format in “Swingin In Atlanta - Susan Reno.wmv”

Reno's impact on Atlanta's swing dance community can be seen in several areas:

If you are looking for similar "swinging" experiences in Atlanta today, the city maintains a vibrant scene: Triple Step Studios Dance school Closed2700 Northeast Expy C500

Swingin In Atlanta - Susan Reno.wmv ((better))

Until the video surfaces in its entirety, remains a delightful mystery. Is it a sultry jazz performance from a smoky Atlanta club? A joyful clip of Lindy Hoppers in a community center? Or simply a home movie of a woman named Susan enjoying her city’s nightlife?

, a name frequently associated with the "West Coast Swing" and "Shag" dance communities in the United States. Swingin In Atlanta - Susan Reno.wmv

Atlanta’s musical identity provides a rich backdrop. Historically, the city has been a crossroads for African American musical innovation—blues, gospel, R&B, hip-hop—and has hosted jazz luminaries across decades. Late 20th- and early 21st-century Atlanta also cultivates vibrant local scenes in bars, small clubs, and community arts spaces where emerging and established jazz players test repertoire and audience rapport. The phrase “in Atlanta” therefore situates the performance within a specific cultural ecology: one that blends Southern heritage with urban dynamism. In such a setting, swing music acquires distinctive inflections—perhaps a gospel-tinged emotional arc, or a rhythm section informed by Southern groove—that make the performance uniquely local even as it participates in a global tradition. Until the video surfaces in its entirety, remains

Archiving the Unarchivable: Performance, Privacy, and the Obsolete Format in “Swingin In Atlanta - Susan Reno.wmv” Or simply a home movie of a woman

Reno's impact on Atlanta's swing dance community can be seen in several areas:

If you are looking for similar "swinging" experiences in Atlanta today, the city maintains a vibrant scene: Triple Step Studios Dance school Closed2700 Northeast Expy C500