What the Eye Hears

What the Eye Hears A History of Tap Dancing

First edition

Hardback (17 Nov 2015)

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Publisher's Synopsis

"The first authoritative history of tap dancing, one of the great art forms--along with jazz and musical comedy--created in America Most dance arises from an interaction between music and movement. Tap is both dancing to music and dancing as music. We don't just watch it; we hear its rhythms and feel them in our muscles and bones. Like jazz, tap was born in the United States. It's a hybrid of traditional African dances brought over by slaves and jig, clog, and other folk-dance forms from the British Isles. Brian Seibert's magisterial history illuminates tap's complex origins and its theatricalization in blackface minstrelsy. He charts tap's growth in the vaudeville circuits and nightclubs of the early twentieth century, chronicles its spread to ubiquity on Broadway and in Hollywood, analyzes its post-World War II decline, and celebrates its reinvention by new generations of American and international performers. It is a story with

Book information

ISBN: 9780865479531
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Imprint: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Pub date:
Edition: First edition
DEWEY: 792.7809
DEWEY edition: 23
Number of pages: vi, 612
Weight: 898g
Height: 231mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 48mm