David Gross et Matteo Santoro forment le duo Cooper & Voldo, issu de la scène hip-hop ils ont su à travers leurs visions artistiques développer une identité chorégraphique. Ces deux danseurs ont commencé avec les « Battles », ils ont remporté plusieurs titres nationaux et internationaux. L’identité du duo se trouve sans doute dans leur complicité, leur amitié et leur amour pour la danse, depuis leur rencontre il y’a 10 ans ils sont toujours restés liés Ils ont pu participer à plusieurs scènes comme la revue du Casino de Montreux, le show d’ouverture du Montreux Comedy Fesitval ou encore le gala du FC Sion. Mais c’est le 19 octobre 2019 que Cooper & Voldo ont créé leur première pièce d’une heure, écrite et réalisée entièrement par eux-mêmes au Théâtre du Crochetan (VS). C’est donc la persévérance et la détermination qui constituent les principales forces de David et Matteo.
_I already knew Rubix was gonna simultaneously blow me away and piss me off at the same time, and I mean that in the most respectful way possible. That moonwalk transition was unnecessary._
im not gonna lie, i dont see how rubix won here. I do believe round 1 for me was a tie, but round two definitely went to uub. His entire performance went with the melody of the song, even from going a little softer when the jazzier part came in and then stepping into a more robotic stance when that part came on. Both his rounds dances were complete, and he hit everything on point. Rubix round two for me was a little sloppy, and although i do think the DJ may have scuffed him by not offering more beat changes like uubs turn, but still, Rubix even gave up in frustration at the end and fell flat.
Lol. It should be clear though: higher difficulty level of moves, better musicality (even the subtle notes were hit), enough groove to tie that of his opponent, more freestyle feel (especially with innovation, flair, and experimentation, more range (notice how he incorporated amapiano moves into his hip hop groove in the second round just as was done by whoever mixed that beat). UUB did great but Rubix gave a master class. Even him wearing his cap at the end was ON beat lol. What you misinterpreted as frustration was actually him signaling he's done enough justice to the beat.
It's been a while since I last saw RUBIX dance, and I was once again impressed with how talented he is as a dancer. He increases his points by adding original techniques that add impact between his moves. Moreover, he uses them differently depending on the opponent's style. He thinks he has seen thousands of dancers, but he is in the top 1%.