Arua Comes Into Its Own as Neon Raves Crown Black

Arua Comes Into Its Own as Neon Raves Crown Black Dancers


By the time the first dancer stepped onto the stage, the tone for the night had already been set.
At Capital Lounge, crowds had gathered as early as 5pm, filling the venue ahead of the Tusker Lite Neon Raves. Around the space, dance crews stretched, rehearsed and fine-tuned their routines. Some came with props, others with carefully curated costumes and makeup — a signal that this was more than just a competition.
When the music finally kicked in, Arua delivered.
Galaxy Dancers opened with a routine built on breaking and locking, their sharp transitions balancing control with risk. From Koboko, Royal Dancers and Caleb Jean Foundation followed with performances that fused amapiano and soukous, blending intricate footwork with acrobatic flair. Their routines carried both technical precision and a strong sense of identity.
Tak Battle Warriors and Black Dancers leaned into crowd engagement, turning their sets into shared experiences rather than isolated performances. Their ability to read and respond to the audience drew some of the loudest reactions of the night.

For many dancers, the competition carried deeper meaning. “We prepared for weeks for this. It is more than dancing for us — it is representing our people,” a member of Tak Battle Warriors said, capturing the sense of pride that ran through the event.
The Arua edition builds on a growing Neon Raves circuit that has already passed through Hoima, Masaka and Mbarara, each stop shaped by its own local flavour. In Arua, however, the distinction went beyond dance.
Unlike previous editions that leaned on Kampala-based DJs, Arua spotlighted its own. DJs Man Patto and Ziggy Zagga, DJ Vizidy and DJ J.O.B Ug curated a set that blended kidandali, West African Afrobeats, soukous and hip hop into a seamless musical journey. The crowd responded to the familiarity, turning the night into a shared cultural moment.

Since its launch earlier this year, the Tusker Lite Neon Raves has positioned itself as a platform to discover and elevate Uganda’s dance talent. In Arua, that ambition found clear expression — not just in performance, but in participation and ownership.
Sandra Againe, the Tusker Lite Brand Manager, said the city captured the spirit of the platform. “Arua showed up in a way that truly reflects what Neon Raves is about — energy, creativity and community. When a city owns the experience like this, it becomes more than an event.”
At the end of the night, Black Dancers were named winners, earning a place in the Kampala finale. They were followed by Royal Dancers and AD Dancers as first and second runners-up.
One of the judges noted the depth of competition: “The standard was incredibly high. What stood out was the authenticity — the dancers were telling stories about where they come from.”
Beyond the results, Arua’s edition stood out for its sense of identity. For a few hours, the city was fully in its element — where music, dance and community moved in sync.

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, https://pmldaily.com/features/entertainment/2026/04/arua-comes-into-its-own-as-neon-raves-crown-black-dancers.html

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