Step Clogging and Clog Dancing
British Clog Dancing
Clog dancing or step dancing is at least two hundred years old and
was performed throughout Britain but survived the longest in the
northern counties, the Lake District and North East of England. The
steps are beats of the heels and toes on the ground interspersed with
swivelling and swinging movements of the ankles and legs at times at
great speed .
People
probably performed the dances for their own enjoyment in crowded pubs
for example where the performer would make up the steps as he went
along or repeat some favourite sequences. The steps and sequences
of steps have names such as Shuffle, Double Treble Shuffle, Long
Sidestep, Crunch, Swivelling Crunch and Hagworm Crawl. In these early
days people didn't travel far from their villages and towns and
consequently different parts of the country have their own
characteristic style and steps.
The
original step dancing was performed in hard soled shoes or clogs but
these days clogs are more common. The clogs worn by Cornucopia today
are no different to the traditional clog, which was still in everyday
use right up to 40 years ago. The sole is carved wood with a leather
upper attached to the sole by brass nails around the edge. Clogs worn
for dancing sometimes had patterns marked in the leather or were made
of more than one colour - the usual colour was and still is black.
Appalachian Step Clog Dancing
Appalachian-style clog dancing is called step clogging and is
closely linked to traditional old-time American music. In fact, the
dance becomes part of the music, as the sound of the dancers' feet
creates a driving, rhythmic background to the old-time tunes. Step
clogging is an American folk dance that has its origins in the southern
Appalachian mountains of the United States of America. While it has
strong ties to the step dance of the British Isles brought to the
region by European settlers, clogging is also influenced by the
traditional dance of Native Americans, and the solo "buck & wing"
dance of African Americans.
Appalachian Step Clog Dancing is a misnomer, since in the USA it is not performed in clogs but in tap shoes.
Appalachian step clogging can still be found in western North
Carolina, West Virginia, southwestern Virginia, and other places in the
southern Appalachian Mountains. Interest in Appalachian dance was
significantly revived in the late 1970's and early 1980's by the Green
Grass Cloggers. Cloggers in this style dance only to live music: either
string band music of the southern Appalachian Mountains, typically
featuring fiddle, banjo, and guitar; or to bluegrass music.
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