If you're looking for TV shows similar to Step Up: High Water on Starz, look no further. Finding a show with a similar taste can be tough job, but we have compiled you a comprehensive list of best similar drama shows on this page. Using the similars list below, you can easily find your next binge, your next favorite series to watch after Step Up: High Water.

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About Step Up: High Water

When twins Tal and Janelle relocate from Ohio, they find themselves thrust into a world where every move is a test. As they attempt to navigate their new world— on and off the dance floor— they'll discover just how deep they're willing to dig to realize their dreams and seize their moment.

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Shows Like Step Up: High Water

If you liked Step Up: High Water, you will also enjoy watching the following series!

FOX · 2016

A trio of women form a musical group in Atlanta.

Shows By Genre: Music

The series follows eight celebrities - Brie Bella, Corbin Bleu, Tyler Cameron, Cat Cora, Howie Dorough, Antonio Gates, Anjelah Johnson-Reyes and Loni Love - as they fully immerse themselves in the ultimate "Dirty Dancing" experience.

This limited docuseries looks back on the group's career, combining intimate and reflective interviews from each of the nine living members with never-before-seen archival footage and performances. Their ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit brought them together to overcome the poverty, violence and oppression of their New York neighborhoods. But it was music and their shared lyrical genius that allowed them to form the most recognized musical movement in the world, all while walking the tightrope that links business with brotherhood.

FOX · 2017

Hosted by Jamie Foxx, "Beat Shazam" is an interactive game show that pits teams of two against the clock and each other as they attempt to identify the biggest hit songs of all time. In the end, the team with the most money banked will go against Shazam, the popular song identification app, for the chance to win up to $1 million. Actress, model and writer Corinne Foxx, daughter of Jamie Foxx, acts as the show's DJ.

Welcome to Babble Bop! A foot-tapping, hand-clapping, baby-bottom-wiggling, sing-along world of music, dance, and preschool play. Join the fun on Peacock Jr. where you can find lovable characters, world-class animation, nursery rhymes, and curious monkeys.

A love letter to the diverse musicality of New York, it explores the universal journey of finding your authentic voice in your early 20s.

A love letter to the diverse musicality of New York, “Little Voice" explores the universal journey of finding your authentic voice in your early 20s. Sara Bareilles (“Waitress”) will provide original music for this fresh, intensely romantic tale of the search to find your true voice … and then the courage to use it.

The series centers on the day-to-day lives and loves of two shepherds-turned-musicians, Jemaine and Bret (Jemaine Clement and Bret McKenzie, playing fictionalized versions of themselves). They have uprooted themselves from their native New Zealand to try to make it big as a folk duo in New York City. The two have frequent appointments with their officious and ineffectual band manager, Murray Hewitt (Rhys Darby), a Deputy Cultural Attaché at the New Zealand Consulate. Jemaine and Bret constantly fend off the amorous attentions of Mel (Kristen Schaal), a married woman who is their sole fan and stalker. Their friend Dave Mohumbhai (Arj Barker) works at a pawn shop and advises them on dealing with American women and culture.

An intimate docuseries that explores the life and career of France's rock icon through archival film and interviews.

Features interviews with several female pioneers in music and pays homage to those who have stormed the stage and wielded their instruments.

During "The Four," four finalists are selected. New contestants then challenge the finalists each week to steal one of the four slots. The winner is named in the season finale.

Unable to leave his home, Burnham performs in a single room. He gives periodic updates about the time that has passed while he worked on the special, with his hair and beard growing throughout. After singing "Content" and satirizing white male comedians in "Comedy", he finds the motivation to begin making the special. He performs "FaceTime with My Mom (Tonight)", a song about the frustrations of FaceTiming his mother. He then sings "How the World Works" to teach children about nature, but the sock puppet he introduces begins to sing about various controversial topics, including historical genocide and worker exploitation, before criticizing Burnham for explaining the issues through his perspective.