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"The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy — History, Facts & Guide 
"The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy
{{#seo: |title="The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description="Explore the legacy of Garth Brooks' iconic song 'The Dance' in Nashville, its cultural impact, and its connection to the city's music heritage." |type=Article }}
{{#seo: |title="The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy | Nashville.Wiki |description="Explore the legacy of Garth Brooks' iconic song 'The Dance' in Nashville, its cultural impact, and its connection to the city's music heritage." |type=Article }}


== History ==
== Background and Release ==
"The Dance," released in 1990 as the lead single from Garth Brooks' album *No Fences*, marked a pivotal moment in the artist's career and in the evolution of country music. The song's creation was influenced by Brooks' personal experiences and his deep connection to Nashville, a city that had long been a hub for country music innovation. Its lyrics, which reflect on the complexities of relationships and the passage of time, resonated with audiences nationwide, helping Brooks achieve unprecedented commercial success. The track's success was not merely a personal milestone for Brooks but also a testament to Nashville's role as a cultural and artistic center for country music. By the time "The Dance" reached number one on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, it had become a symbol of the genre's ability to blend emotional storytelling with commercial appeal.
Tony Arata wrote "The Dance." He was a Georgia-born singer-songwriter who'd moved to Nashville in the 1980s to try breaking into the industry. Back in 1988, Arata composed the song, and it just sat there, mostly ignored until Garth Brooks caught a performance of it at a small Nashville venue and immediately saw what it could become.<ref>["The Story Behind 'The Dance'"], ''American Songwriter'', 2019.</ref> The track landed on Brooks' self-titled debut album, ''Garth Brooks'', released in April 1989 on Capitol Nashville, not on his second album ''No Fences'' as some people mistakenly claim. Brooks released it as the fifth and final single from that debut record. It hit number one on the ''Billboard'' Hot Country Singles chart in June 1990, where it stayed for two weeks.<ref>[https://www.billboard.com/music/garth-brooks "Garth Brooks Chart History"], ''Billboard''.</ref>


The song's legacy in Nashville is further cemented by its association with the city's music industry infrastructure. Brooks, who moved to Nashville in the late 1980s, became a key figure in the city's revitalization of country music during the 1990s. His success with "The Dance" and subsequent albums helped shift the industry's focus toward more emotionally resonant and artistically ambitious work. This period coincided with Nashville's broader transformation into a global music capital, as the city's studios, venues, and cultural institutions supported a new generation of artists. The song's enduring popularity has since been celebrated in various Nashville landmarks, including the [[Garth Brooks Museum]] and the [[Grand Ole Opry]], which continue to honor Brooks' contributions to the city's musical heritage.
John Lloyd Miller directed the music video, and that's really what gave the song its staying power. The video showed footage of young people who'd died early: John F. Kennedy Jr., Keith Whitley, Lane Frost, and Thurman Munson. Through those images, the song's core message came through visually: that a short life isn't made less valuable by its brevity, because the living itself was worth doing. That stuck with American cultural memory in ways radio alone couldn't have achieved. Arata's lyric plus that video turned a country single into something that felt like a eulogy for ambition and risk.


== Culture == 
Brooks himself had arrived in Nashville in 1987 with almost no money, sleeping on friends' couches before Capitol Nashville signed him.<ref>["Garth Brooks: The Road to Nashville"], ''The Tennessean'', 1998.</ref> "The Dance" was certified Platinum by the RIAA and helped turn Brooks into a serious commercial and artistic force in country music at a moment when the genre was working hard to compete for mainstream attention.<ref>[https://www.riaa.com "RIAA Certification Search"], Recording Industry Association of America.</ref>
"The Dance" has become an enduring cultural touchstone in Nashville, reflecting the city's deep-rooted connection to country music and its role as a narrative medium for personal and collective experiences. The song's themes of love, loss, and reflection align with the storytelling traditions that have defined Nashville's musical identity for decades. Its widespread appeal has made it a staple at events ranging from weddings to memorials, where it is often performed as a tribute to the enduring power of relationships. This cultural resonance has been amplified by Nashville's status as a hub for live music, where the song is frequently covered by local and national artists at venues such as the [[Ryman Auditorium]] and [[Bridgestone Arena]].


The song's influence extends beyond its lyrics, shaping the way Nashville's music scene approaches emotional authenticity in songwriting. Brooks' success with "The Dance" demonstrated that country music could tackle complex, introspective themes without sacrificing commercial viability, a lesson that has informed the work of subsequent generations of artists. This legacy is evident in the city's continued emphasis on storytelling in both traditional and contemporary country music. Nashville's cultural institutions, such as the [[Country Music Hall of Fame]], frequently highlight Brooks' contributions, including "The Dance," as part of their exhibits on the evolution of the genre. The song's presence in these spaces underscores its role as a bridge between the past and present of Nashville's musical heritage.
== History ==
When "The Dance" hit number one in 1990, something shifted. Country radio was suddenly willing to support something different. This song isn't a love song in any traditional way. It's a meditation on whether painful experiences justify themselves, and it answers with a quiet yes. That kind of emotional ambiguity was rare for country singles back then, and its commercial success proved listeners wanted it.


== Notable Residents == 
Brooks' rapid rise in Nashville changed how the city's music industry worked and what it aimed for. His success with the debut album, and specifically with "The Dance," happened during a period when the major labels were reconsidering what country music could actually sell. The song's chart performance gave producers and A&R people proof that introspective, narrative-driven material could move copies. That mattered. It had real consequences for which artists got signed in the years after.
Garth Brooks, the artist behind "The Dance," is one of Nashville's most influential and enduring residents, whose impact on the city's music industry and cultural landscape is immeasurable. Brooks moved to Nashville in the late 1980s, a period when the city was undergoing a significant transformation in its approach to country music. His arrival coincided with a broader movement to elevate the genre's artistic and emotional depth, a shift that "The Dance" helped to catalyze. Brooks' decision to remain in Nashville rather than pursue opportunities in other cities reinforced the city's reputation as a center for musical innovation and creativity. His presence in the city has also inspired countless aspiring musicians, many of whom cite Brooks as a key influence in their own careers.


Brooks' contributions to Nashville extend beyond his music, as he has been actively involved in various community initiatives and charitable efforts. His work with organizations such as [[The Garth Brooks Foundation]] has supported causes ranging from education to disaster relief, further embedding him in the city's social fabric. Additionally, Brooks' long-standing relationship with the [[Grand Ole Opry]] has helped maintain the institution's relevance in the modern era, ensuring that it remains a vital part of Nashville's cultural identity. His legacy as a resident is not only defined by his artistic achievements but also by his commitment to the city and its people, making him a central figure in Nashville's ongoing story.
The Country Music Association gave "The Dance" Video of the Year in 1990, marking one of its first major industry recognitions.<ref>[https://www.cmaworld.com "CMA Awards History"], Country Music Association.</ref> It was also nominated for the Academy of Country Music Award for Song of the Year. Tony Arata, whose name tends to get lost in casual talk about the song, won the CMA's Song of the Year in 1991 for it. That recognition mattered because it showed his contribution was compositional, not just interpretive.


== Attractions == 
In Nashville's music industry, the song's legacy connected to the city's infrastructure in concrete ways. Brooks' success through the early 1990s, built on that debut album foundation, helped keep Capitol Nashville strong during a period of industry consolidation. His later albums, including ''No Fences'' (1990) and ''Ropin' the Wind'' (1991), broke sales records partly because "The Dance" had already established him as an artist whose emotional sincerity people trusted.
Nashville's attractions related to Garth Brooks and "The Dance" offer visitors a chance to engage with the city's rich musical heritage. The [[Garth Brooks Museum]], located in the [[Ryman Auditorium]], provides an immersive experience that highlights Brooks' career, including the creation and impact of "The Dance." The museum features memorabilia, recordings, and interactive exhibits that trace Brooks' journey from his early days in Nashville to his status as among the most successful artists in country music history. This attraction is particularly significant for fans of Brooks and those interested in the evolution of country music, as it serves as a tangible link between the artist's personal story and the broader narrative of Nashville's musical legacy.


Another key attraction is the [[Grand Ole Opry]], where Brooks has performed numerous times and where "The Dance" has been celebrated as a defining moment in his career. The Opry, a historic venue that has been central to Nashville's music scene for over a century, continues to draw audiences from around the world. Its role in Brooks' story underscores the venue's importance as a cultural landmark, where generations of artists have showcased their talents. Visitors to the Opry can experience the same energy that defined Brooks' performances, including the emotional depth of "The Dance." These attractions collectively highlight Nashville's ability to preserve and celebrate its musical history while remaining a vibrant center for contemporary creativity.
== Culture ==
"The Dance" has become something of a staple at American funerals, memorial services, and weddings. Few country songs have managed that kind of cultural reach. Why? The lyric doesn't claim that loss won't hurt. It only says that the experience before the loss was worth it. That's more honest comfort than most popular songs deliver, and people turn to it in hard moments because that honesty matters.


{{#seo: |title="The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy — History, Facts & Guide | Nashville.Wiki |description="Explore the legacy of Garth Brooks' iconic song 'The Dance' in Nashville, its cultural impact, and its connection to the city's music heritage." |type=Article }}
In Nashville, you hear it covered everywhere. Broadway honky-tonks play it. So do more formal venues like the [[Ryman Auditorium]]. Younger artists cover it not to show off their voice but to prove they can handle emotional material without overselling it. Brooks himself has described performing it live as one of the most vulnerable experiences of his career. In a 2024 interview with ''American Songwriter'', he said he's "never been more scared" than when singing it in front of a crowd, because the audience's investment in it is so complete that any mistake feels like a betrayal.<ref>[https://americansongwriter.com/garth-brooks-shares-his-most-vulnerable-moment-on-stage-ive-never-been-more-scared/ "Garth Brooks Shares His Most Vulnerable Moment on Stage"], ''American Songwriter'', 2024.</ref>
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]]
 
What Brooks did with "The Dance" showed that country music could tackle complex, introspective themes without losing commercial appeal. That lesson shaped how later generations of artists worked. The [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]] includes Brooks' contributions, among them "The Dance," in its exhibits about the genre's evolution through the 1990s. In those spaces, the song works almost like a hinge: before it, country radio stuck to more straightforward narrative structures; after it, the space opened up for something more searching.
 
Tony Arata deserves more credit than he typically gets. He wrote it before Brooks ever recorded it, tried shopping it around Nashville without success, then watched it become one of the most-played country songs of the decade. His is a classic Nashville story: the songwriter who breaks through not by performing but by writing the right song at the right moment and having the right artist hear it.
 
== Streaming and Accessibility ==
One major recent development in the song's life is that it's not available on most major streaming platforms. Brooks signed an exclusivity deal with Amazon Music, which pulled his catalog, including "The Dance," from Spotify, Apple Music, and everywhere else.<ref>[https://www.whiskeyriff.com/2026/04/04/garth-brooks-is-hurting-his-own-legacy-by-keeping-his-music-off-streaming-services/ "Garth Brooks Is Hurting His Own Legacy By Keeping His Music Off Streaming Services"], ''Whiskey Riff'', April 4, 2026.</ref> Music industry observers have criticized the arrangement for limiting the song's reach among younger listeners who discover music almost entirely through streaming.<ref>[https://www.ad-hoc-news.de/boerse/ueberblick/garth-brooks-why-his-music-legacy-faces-streaming-challenges-in-2026/69083302 "Garth Brooks: Why His Music Legacy Faces Streaming Challenges in 2026"], ''AD HOC News'', 2026.</ref>
 
In practical terms, the impact is clear. A listener in 2026 who wants to play "The Dance" at a funeral or wedding can't just pull it up on their usual platform. They need an Amazon Music subscription or a physical copy. For a song that's always traveled through emotional word-of-mouth, that friction adds up. Critics of the deal argue that streaming exclusivity made sense as a short-term revenue move but works against the long-term cultural preservation of Brooks' catalog.<ref>[https://www.whiskeyriff.com/2026/04/04/garth-brooks-is-hurting-his-own-legacy-by-keeping-his-music-off-streaming-services/ "Garth Brooks Is Hurting His Own Legacy By Keeping His Music Off Streaming Services"], ''Whiskey Riff'', April 4, 2026.</ref> The song endures. But access to it has narrowed.
 
== Notable Residents ==
In 1987, Garth Brooks arrived in Nashville broke and without a recording contract. Within three years, he had a number-one single and an album that would eventually go multi-Platinum. That arc, from complete obscurity to industry-reshaping success in under four years, is still discussed in Nashville music business circles as one of the city's more remarkable achievements.
 
Brooks' impact on Nashville goes beyond record sales. He's been involved in community work and charitable initiatives through the [[Teammates for Kids Foundation]], which he co-founded with his wife Trisha Yearwood to support children's causes.<ref>[https://www.teammatesforkids.com "Teammates for Kids Foundation"], Official Site.</ref> His long involvement with the [[Grand Ole Opry]], where he was inducted in 1990 (the same year "The Dance" went to number one), has kept him connected to the institution's programming and identity across decades.
 
Brooks' presence in Nashville has inspired musicians across generations. Songwriters who came to the city in the 1990s specifically cite "The Dance" as proof that emotionally demanding material had a place in country music's commercial heart. That's part of Tony Arata's legacy too, running alongside Brooks' own.
 
== Live Performance Legacy ==
For over three decades, "The Dance" has been a fixture of Brooks' live shows, typically positioned near the end of a set when the audience is ready for something quieter and more demanding. Brooks has performed it thousands of times. The song doesn't get easier. He's said that the audience's familiarity with the lyric means they hear any hesitation or feeling he brings to it. There's nowhere to hide inside a song everyone already knows by heart.
 
Recently, something changed. For the first time in his career, Brooks didn't sing "The Dance" at a concert. He listened while someone else performed it.<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/LegendaryTuneTribe/posts/for-the-first-time-garth-brooks-didnt-sing-the-dance-he-listenedlast-night-didnt/122346109790003537/ "For the First Time, Garth Brooks Didn't Sing 'The Dance' — He Listened"], ''Legendary Tune Tribe'', Facebook, 2025.</ref> The moment spread online and attendees described it as unexpectedly moving. There was the artist sitting with a song he'd carried for thirty-five years, letting someone else carry it for a moment. Depending on how you read it, it was either a generous act or a signal of the weight the song has accumulated over his career.
 
== Attractions ==
Nashville offers visitors direct access to country music history through places connected to Brooks and "The Dance." The [[Grand Ole Opry]] is the most prominent. Brooks was inducted in 1990, which connects "The Dance" to the Opry's lineage in a formal, institutional way. The Opry has anchored Nashville's music identity for over a century. Visitors can tour the venue, catch performances, and encounter the history of the artists, Brooks among them, who've performed there.
 
Downtown Nashville's [[Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum]] provides the best context for understanding the song's role in the genre's history. Its exhibits on the 1990s country music boom document Brooks' significance in that period, including what his debut album and its closing single meant commercially and artistically. The museum's archives contain recordings, awards, and industry documentation that trace how a song written by an unknown Georgia songwriter in 1988 became one of the most-played country records of the following decade.
 
Just a few blocks from the Hall of Fame sits the [[Ryman Auditorium]], which hosts regular performances where "The Dance" gets covered frequently by touring and local artists. The Ryman's acoustics and its history as the Opry's original home give those performances particular weight. It's the room where much of the music Brooks grew up listening to was recorded and broadcast, and it's where his influence remains audible in the artists performing there today.
 
{{#seo: |title="The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy | Nashville.Wiki |description="Explore the legacy of Garth Brooks' iconic song 'The Dance' in Nashville, its cultural impact, and its connection to the city's music heritage." |type=Article }}
[[Category:Nashville landmarks]]
[[Category:Nashville history]]
[[Category:Nashville history]]
[[Category:Garth Brooks]]
[[Category:Country music history]]

Latest revision as of 15:34, 23 April 2026

"The Dance" by Garth Brooks — Legacy

Background and Release

Tony Arata wrote "The Dance." He was a Georgia-born singer-songwriter who'd moved to Nashville in the 1980s to try breaking into the industry. Back in 1988, Arata composed the song, and it just sat there, mostly ignored until Garth Brooks caught a performance of it at a small Nashville venue and immediately saw what it could become.[1] The track landed on Brooks' self-titled debut album, Garth Brooks, released in April 1989 on Capitol Nashville, not on his second album No Fences as some people mistakenly claim. Brooks released it as the fifth and final single from that debut record. It hit number one on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart in June 1990, where it stayed for two weeks.[2]

John Lloyd Miller directed the music video, and that's really what gave the song its staying power. The video showed footage of young people who'd died early: John F. Kennedy Jr., Keith Whitley, Lane Frost, and Thurman Munson. Through those images, the song's core message came through visually: that a short life isn't made less valuable by its brevity, because the living itself was worth doing. That stuck with American cultural memory in ways radio alone couldn't have achieved. Arata's lyric plus that video turned a country single into something that felt like a eulogy for ambition and risk.

Brooks himself had arrived in Nashville in 1987 with almost no money, sleeping on friends' couches before Capitol Nashville signed him.[3] "The Dance" was certified Platinum by the RIAA and helped turn Brooks into a serious commercial and artistic force in country music at a moment when the genre was working hard to compete for mainstream attention.[4]

History

When "The Dance" hit number one in 1990, something shifted. Country radio was suddenly willing to support something different. This song isn't a love song in any traditional way. It's a meditation on whether painful experiences justify themselves, and it answers with a quiet yes. That kind of emotional ambiguity was rare for country singles back then, and its commercial success proved listeners wanted it.

Brooks' rapid rise in Nashville changed how the city's music industry worked and what it aimed for. His success with the debut album, and specifically with "The Dance," happened during a period when the major labels were reconsidering what country music could actually sell. The song's chart performance gave producers and A&R people proof that introspective, narrative-driven material could move copies. That mattered. It had real consequences for which artists got signed in the years after.

The Country Music Association gave "The Dance" Video of the Year in 1990, marking one of its first major industry recognitions.[5] It was also nominated for the Academy of Country Music Award for Song of the Year. Tony Arata, whose name tends to get lost in casual talk about the song, won the CMA's Song of the Year in 1991 for it. That recognition mattered because it showed his contribution was compositional, not just interpretive.

In Nashville's music industry, the song's legacy connected to the city's infrastructure in concrete ways. Brooks' success through the early 1990s, built on that debut album foundation, helped keep Capitol Nashville strong during a period of industry consolidation. His later albums, including No Fences (1990) and Ropin' the Wind (1991), broke sales records partly because "The Dance" had already established him as an artist whose emotional sincerity people trusted.

Culture

"The Dance" has become something of a staple at American funerals, memorial services, and weddings. Few country songs have managed that kind of cultural reach. Why? The lyric doesn't claim that loss won't hurt. It only says that the experience before the loss was worth it. That's more honest comfort than most popular songs deliver, and people turn to it in hard moments because that honesty matters.

In Nashville, you hear it covered everywhere. Broadway honky-tonks play it. So do more formal venues like the Ryman Auditorium. Younger artists cover it not to show off their voice but to prove they can handle emotional material without overselling it. Brooks himself has described performing it live as one of the most vulnerable experiences of his career. In a 2024 interview with American Songwriter, he said he's "never been more scared" than when singing it in front of a crowd, because the audience's investment in it is so complete that any mistake feels like a betrayal.[6]

What Brooks did with "The Dance" showed that country music could tackle complex, introspective themes without losing commercial appeal. That lesson shaped how later generations of artists worked. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum includes Brooks' contributions, among them "The Dance," in its exhibits about the genre's evolution through the 1990s. In those spaces, the song works almost like a hinge: before it, country radio stuck to more straightforward narrative structures; after it, the space opened up for something more searching.

Tony Arata deserves more credit than he typically gets. He wrote it before Brooks ever recorded it, tried shopping it around Nashville without success, then watched it become one of the most-played country songs of the decade. His is a classic Nashville story: the songwriter who breaks through not by performing but by writing the right song at the right moment and having the right artist hear it.

Streaming and Accessibility

One major recent development in the song's life is that it's not available on most major streaming platforms. Brooks signed an exclusivity deal with Amazon Music, which pulled his catalog, including "The Dance," from Spotify, Apple Music, and everywhere else.[7] Music industry observers have criticized the arrangement for limiting the song's reach among younger listeners who discover music almost entirely through streaming.[8]

In practical terms, the impact is clear. A listener in 2026 who wants to play "The Dance" at a funeral or wedding can't just pull it up on their usual platform. They need an Amazon Music subscription or a physical copy. For a song that's always traveled through emotional word-of-mouth, that friction adds up. Critics of the deal argue that streaming exclusivity made sense as a short-term revenue move but works against the long-term cultural preservation of Brooks' catalog.[9] The song endures. But access to it has narrowed.

Notable Residents

In 1987, Garth Brooks arrived in Nashville broke and without a recording contract. Within three years, he had a number-one single and an album that would eventually go multi-Platinum. That arc, from complete obscurity to industry-reshaping success in under four years, is still discussed in Nashville music business circles as one of the city's more remarkable achievements.

Brooks' impact on Nashville goes beyond record sales. He's been involved in community work and charitable initiatives through the Teammates for Kids Foundation, which he co-founded with his wife Trisha Yearwood to support children's causes.[10] His long involvement with the Grand Ole Opry, where he was inducted in 1990 (the same year "The Dance" went to number one), has kept him connected to the institution's programming and identity across decades.

Brooks' presence in Nashville has inspired musicians across generations. Songwriters who came to the city in the 1990s specifically cite "The Dance" as proof that emotionally demanding material had a place in country music's commercial heart. That's part of Tony Arata's legacy too, running alongside Brooks' own.

Live Performance Legacy

For over three decades, "The Dance" has been a fixture of Brooks' live shows, typically positioned near the end of a set when the audience is ready for something quieter and more demanding. Brooks has performed it thousands of times. The song doesn't get easier. He's said that the audience's familiarity with the lyric means they hear any hesitation or feeling he brings to it. There's nowhere to hide inside a song everyone already knows by heart.

Recently, something changed. For the first time in his career, Brooks didn't sing "The Dance" at a concert. He listened while someone else performed it.[11] The moment spread online and attendees described it as unexpectedly moving. There was the artist sitting with a song he'd carried for thirty-five years, letting someone else carry it for a moment. Depending on how you read it, it was either a generous act or a signal of the weight the song has accumulated over his career.

Attractions

Nashville offers visitors direct access to country music history through places connected to Brooks and "The Dance." The Grand Ole Opry is the most prominent. Brooks was inducted in 1990, which connects "The Dance" to the Opry's lineage in a formal, institutional way. The Opry has anchored Nashville's music identity for over a century. Visitors can tour the venue, catch performances, and encounter the history of the artists, Brooks among them, who've performed there.

Downtown Nashville's Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum provides the best context for understanding the song's role in the genre's history. Its exhibits on the 1990s country music boom document Brooks' significance in that period, including what his debut album and its closing single meant commercially and artistically. The museum's archives contain recordings, awards, and industry documentation that trace how a song written by an unknown Georgia songwriter in 1988 became one of the most-played country records of the following decade.

Just a few blocks from the Hall of Fame sits the Ryman Auditorium, which hosts regular performances where "The Dance" gets covered frequently by touring and local artists. The Ryman's acoustics and its history as the Opry's original home give those performances particular weight. It's the room where much of the music Brooks grew up listening to was recorded and broadcast, and it's where his influence remains audible in the artists performing there today.

  1. ["The Story Behind 'The Dance'"], American Songwriter, 2019.
  2. "Garth Brooks Chart History", Billboard.
  3. ["Garth Brooks: The Road to Nashville"], The Tennessean, 1998.
  4. "RIAA Certification Search", Recording Industry Association of America.
  5. "CMA Awards History", Country Music Association.
  6. "Garth Brooks Shares His Most Vulnerable Moment on Stage", American Songwriter, 2024.
  7. "Garth Brooks Is Hurting His Own Legacy By Keeping His Music Off Streaming Services", Whiskey Riff, April 4, 2026.
  8. "Garth Brooks: Why His Music Legacy Faces Streaming Challenges in 2026", AD HOC News, 2026.
  9. "Garth Brooks Is Hurting His Own Legacy By Keeping His Music Off Streaming Services", Whiskey Riff, April 4, 2026.
  10. "Teammates for Kids Foundation", Official Site.
  11. "For the First Time, Garth Brooks Didn't Sing 'The Dance' — He Listened", Legendary Tune Tribe, Facebook, 2025.