Commonwealth Dance Relay launch
Inviting young dancers across the Commonwealth to unite through music and movement Find out more hereThe Commonwealth Resounds is launching the Commonwealth Dance Relay, an international celebration of what becomes possible when people move, create, and share together. Bringing music and dance into the same joyful space, the Relay invites communities across the UK and the wider Commonwealth to connect through rhythm, imagination, and a shared sense of purpose.
Inclusive, welcoming, and simple to join, the Relay encourages participants to watch the demonstration videos, create their own dance, and upload a recording, adding their voice to a growing chain of contributions from around the world. Every submission becomes part of a wider story of collaboration, showing how creativity can travel between friends, schools, clubs, families, and communities.
At the heart of the project is a single dance track woven from five musical voices representing the Commonwealth’s regions: Africa, Asia, Europe, the Caribbean and the Americas, and the Pacific. Each section has its own character and energy, giving groups the freedom to dance the full track as one continuous journey, or choose a single region that speaks to them and let it spark their choreography.
Why this kind of project matters
Across the world, access to the arts is still shaped by geography, race, and socio-economic background. The Commonwealth Dance Relay challenges those barriers by offering people a genuine pathway from local creativity to global visibility.
A soundtrack built across five regions
The Dance Relay music began with five outstanding young composers, each invited to create a short musical extract based on a shared theme, shaped by the cultural character of their region. Those extracts were then brought together into a complete, continuous dance track by young composer Cole Lam, forming a soundtrack designed to be interpreted in countless ways by dancers worldwide.
To launch the Relay, celebrated dancer Shevelle Dynott worked with students from the Royal Ballet School to choreograph demonstration videos. These films provide inspiration and a starting point, while encouraging participants to create their own movement style and interpretation.
Any style, any group, any location
A key aim of the Commonwealth Dance Relay is to remove barriers to participation. Dancers can take part solo, in pairs, or in groups, and submissions can come from schools, youth companies, clubs, community groups, families, or individuals.
Participants are encouraged to film wherever feels right, whether that is at home, in a playground, on a street, in a studio, on a stage, on a pitch, or in a park. The emphasis is on creativity, joy, and connection, not expensive equipment or professional production.
Shevelle Dynott & Sebastian Loe
The Commonwealth Dance Relay launches with choreography by Shevelle Dynott and Sebastian Loe, two experienced ballet artists and choreographers whose work spans major stage productions and creative projects.
Shevelle and Sebastian both trained within the UK’s classical ballet pathway. Shevelle achieved success at the Royal Academy of Dance’s Genée International Ballet Competition and went on to dance with English National Ballet, performing a wide range of roles and working with leading choreographers. Sebastian followed a similar route with Northern Ballet before receiving a children’s Bafta for creating a ballet of The Ugly Duckling in collaboration with CBeebies. In recent years, both have continued as freelance artists, combining performance, creative development around the world, and work with young dancers.
To start the Dance Relay, Shevelle and Sebastian worked with students from The Royal Ballet School to create a set of clear, inspiring demonstration videos. These films are designed as a starting point: a way to share motifs, musical cues, and movement ideas that groups can build on in their own style. Your choreography can be completely different from the demonstration, and that is encouraged.
The students featured in the Dance Relay videos represent the next generation of talent, sharing their dancing in a way that is ready to be reimagined by dancers everywhere.
Our partners
Alongside the young composers, dancers, and schools taking part around the world, we are grateful to a brilliant group of partners who are helping us to bring our relay to reality share the Relay widely and make participation as open and accessible as possible.
- Cloud9Media are experts in video content creation for a modern world. They have kindly supported the project with high quality film production, helping to capture the Relay’s launch content clearly and professionally, ready for sharing across digital platforms and partner channels.
- CHOGM 2026 (the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting) is a major moment in the Commonwealth calendar. The Dance Relay is part of a wider programme of creative activity that celebrates youth voice, connection, and collaboration across the Commonwealth.
- Revere Arts empower artists and organizations by offering management, production, and advisory services to bring creative projects to a global audience. They are supporting the project as creative and industry partners, bringing expertise in arts projects and audience development, and helping us connect the Relay with wider networks in the cultural sector.
Simple filming guidance
To help groups create clear, shareable recordings, The Commonwealth Resounds has published straightforward filming tips:
- Film in landscape (hold your phone sideways so the video is wide, not tall)
- Use steady, simple framing (prop your phone on a shelf, chair, or tripod if you have one)
- Make sure we can see your whole body (step back so hands and feet stay in shot)
- Choose good light and a clear background (face a window if possible and keep the space uncluttered)
- Use the original track audio (play the official Dance Relay music while you film so it’s clearly captured, and do not replace or alter the audio)
Groups may add live instruments to play along, provided the original soundtrack remains clearly audible and unchanged, and the tempo, structure, and harmony are not altered.
A growing map of participation
As the Relay progresses, The Commonwealth Resounds will track participation and showcase how the project travels between communities, schools, and countries, building a visible picture of connection through shared music and movement.
The project continues the spirit of the organisation’s previous international relays, including the Commonwealth Music Relay, which brought young musicians, singers, and composers together across the Commonwealth through creative responses to a shared original song.
How to take part
The full project hub includes the main film, separated regional sections, Shevelle’s advice, filming tips, and the upload form.
To join the Commonwealth Dance Relay, visit:
https://www.commonwealthresounds.com/dance
Participants are encouraged to share the page with other groups and invite them to contribute, helping the Relay travel further and reach more communities.

