In 2019, you could count Burleson's dedicated Krump dancers on one hand. Today, the city hosts three monthly sessions and two studios with Krump-only curricula. Whether you're learning your first chest pop or preparing for a battle, here's where to train — and how to choose the spot that fits your goals, budget, and schedule.
Studio Training
The Rhythm Room
Best for: Dancers who want polished technique with direct access to working professionals
Located just off Wilshire Boulevard, The Rhythm Room runs 90-minute Krump workshops every Tuesday (beginners, 6 p.m.) and Thursday (advanced, 7:30 p.m.). Drop-in rates start at $18; monthly memberships run $120.
The advanced track is led by Marcus Chen, a former America's Best Dance Crew competitor who regularly brings in guest instructors from Dallas-Fort Worth's battle circuit. Beginners get a slower build: footwork fundamentals, controlled bucking, and how to read a cypher before stepping into one. The studio itself features sprung floors and full mirrors — rare for Krump training, where concrete basements are more common.
Urban Pulse Dance Academy
Best for: Students who want a progressive, term-based curriculum
Urban Pulse structures its Krump program into 8-week intensives rather than open drop-ins. Each term covers a specific pillar of the style — chest pops and jabs, arm swings, floor work, or battle strategy and get-offs. Classes meet Mondays and Wednesdays, with levels ranging from Foundations (ages 12+) to Pre-Professional.
Tuition is $240 per term, with payment plans available. The academy emphasizes cross-training: expect supplemental sessions in musicality and freestyle recovery. This is the place if you want accountability and measurable progression rather than showing up when you feel like it.
The Krump Lab
Best for: Serious dancers ready to commit to intensive, culture-rooted training
Burleson's only Krump-exclusive studio, The Krump Lab operates more like a dojo than a dance school. Training runs Thursday through Sunday, with mandatory labbin' (practice circles) on Friday nights. Membership is application-based; interested dancers must attend two open sessions before being invited to join.
Monthly dues are $150, which includes unlimited classes and access to the studio's equipment: resistance bands for power training, a dedicated video review room, and a small library of battle footage from the early 2000s. Co-founder Trey "Riot" Okonkwo is a respected name in Texas Krump circles and emphasizes session etiquette and history as much as physical technique.
Session Culture & Community Spaces
The Underground Sessions
Best for: Dancers seeking raw energy, authentic cypher experience, and community connection
The Underground Sessions don't happen in a listed address. Locations drop 24 hours in advance via Instagram DM or a private WhatsApp group. What you get is an unfiltered Krump environment: concrete floors, portable speakers, and a circle where reputation is earned in real time.
These are not classes. There is no instructor in the traditional sense. Veterans give feedback through battle and call-out, and newcomers are expected to observe before entering the cypher. The energy is intense — chest-pounding, foot-stomping, sometimes running past midnight — but the community is protective of its culture. If you want to understand Krump as it developed in Los Angeles session lines, this is as close as Burleson gets.
How to join: Message @UndergroundSessionsTX on Instagram and request the next location drop. First-timers are encouraged to arrive early and introduce themselves to the session hosts.
Burleson City Community Center
Best for: Absolute beginners, families, and budget-conscious dancers
The Community Center offers the most accessible entry point into Burleson's Krump scene. Saturday fundamentals classes run 10–11:30 a.m. and cost $10 per session — no contract, no gear requirements beyond clean sneakers. Instructor Denise Alvarez focuses on safe conditioning, basic bucking mechanics, and the social history of Krump as a movement born out of South Central LA.
The atmosphere is genuinely inclusive: you'll find ages 8 to 48 in the same room, and Alvarez is explicit about the studio being a judgment-free zone. Several dancers who now train at The Krump Lab and compete at Underground Sessions started here.
How to Choose: Quick Comparison
| Spot | Price | Commitment | Atmosphere | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Rhythm Room | $18 drop-in / $120 monthly | Weekly workshops | Professional studio | Technique-focused dancers |
| Urban Pulse Dance Academy | $240 per 8-week term | Twice weekly, term-based | Structured academy | Progressive skill building |
| The Krump Lab | $150 monthly | 4 days/week + labbin' |















