Introduction to Clogging

What Do Cloggers Look Like?
What Kind of Music do Cloggers Dance to?
One of the best things about
today's clogging is that you can do it to so many different
kindsof music:
hillbilly, Cajun, Irish, boogie woogie, rhythm & blues,
rock. These days,
the huge success of country
music has made it easyfor "clogeographers" to
create new dances to the biggest top 40 hits. In the clogging world new
dances are being created and introduced all the time. A few of the hottest
clog routines created in recent years, for instance, have been "Down at the
Twist and Shout," "Bad," "Ghostbusters," and "That's What I Like About You,"as well as dozens of other dances to hits by artists such as Garth
Brooks, The Judds, and Paula Abdul. Not surprisingly, there are traditional
clog dance routines for traditional old American folk tunes, such as Turkey
in the Straw. Standards of a slightly newer vintage include Hambone,
Jambalaya and Cripple Creek. There are also plenty of well-known clog
routines done to top forty hits of recent decades: Oklahoma Swing, Cajun
Moon, and Wake Up Little Susie, to name just a few.
Footwear - NOT Wooden Shoes!
Many people who've never seen clog dancing up close are under the impression that cloggers wear wooden shoes. Though clog dancing probably has historical antecedents in certain northern European countries where wooden footwear was common, the only special appurt-enances on the feet of today's cloggers are extra-loud steel taps, sometimes called "jingle taps." Each tap is actually a loosely joined sandwich of two metal plates, which strike each other with each step. Most of the sound produced by these jingle taps is thus generated by the two pieces of steel striking each other, rather than just by the bottom pieces striking the floor. The taps are customarily attached to thany dancers have resortede toes and heels of leather-soled dance shoes - either oxfords or low-heeled pumps. Since so many clogging events these days are held in halls with cement floors, most cloggers either add spongey insoles to their shoes or try to find some kind of footwear that will do a better job of absorbing shock than regular dance shoes do. In the last few years, m to thick rubber-soled athletic shoes - Nikes, Ree-boks, etc. They fasten their taps on with a sports shoe adhesive such as Shoe Glue or Goop.

A recent issue of Double Toe Times, a cloggers' magazine published in Florida, listed almost 600 dance groups in 50 states, plus Germany, Canada, Belgium and Australia. The Northern California Clog-A-Gram, another clogger's magazine, shows almost 40 member clubs in that area alone, each club with at least 100 people. Fairs, festivals, conventions and competitions are staged almost weekly, and virtually year 'round, culminating in December with the Sands International Dance Festival in Las Vegas, which hosts the world clogging championships - the last word in competition-level clogging for individuals, duets, line teams, precision teams, and exhibition teams.
The Popularity of Clogging Today

But, like other ethnic folk dancers, the overwhelming
majority of
cloggers aren't
in it to compete or put on shows - they
just want to have fun dancing. In Southern
California
the number of cloggers must be in the thousands, since
almost that many attend the Southern California Clogging
Association Convention at Riverside, held every year
over the Labor Day weekend. You can also see Southern
California cloggers turn out for annual get-togethers
like BuckShot Shindig, held in Ventura each October, and
Possom Trot, held in Victorville ever year in March.
More than two dozen clogging clubs meet weekly (or more
often) at schools, parks, playgrounds and recreation
centers all over the Southland
Where Does Clogging Come From?
A recent article in Folk Dance
Scene referred to square dancing and contra dancing as cousins. If those
dance forms are cousins, clogging shouldn't be thought of as any more than a
friend of the family. Even though clogging has grown up along side square
dancing, and seems to share square dancing's musical sounds, costumes, and
country style, the origins of the two dance forms have surprisingly little
in common.
Unlike square and contra dancing, whose lineage can clearly be traced to
England and France, the dance form we know today as clogging probably
springs from a blend of several sources, with very little agreement about
the extent of the contributions made by different national groups. It is
fairly well-accepted, however, that one of the primary roots of clogging
must be the folk dance of the British Isles, starting with the Irish jig.

As long ago as Saint Patrick's time - the fifth century - cultural historians believe the Irish pagans were enjoying lively "step dances," primitive versions of what came to be known as the Irish jig. "Step dancing" - a broader classification than clogging - usually means a kind of dance where attention is focused on the legs and feet, the movements of which keep time and accentuate the beat of the music. In Irish step dancing, the dancer kept his arms glued to his sides, and held his head and torso erect - almost wooden - while all the dancing took place below the hips. The feet of an expert doing an Irish jig moved faster than the eye could follow, in an intricate pattern of heel, toe, step, kick and scuff movements that are reputed to have tapped the floor as many as 15 times per second.
Although
fast, repetitive tapping was an essential element of the
Irish jig, it was traditionally performed with very
light steps and soft shoes. Indeed, it wouldn't have
been possible to execute those staccato patterns in
anything but light, slipper-like footwear. Nevertheless,
we know that at some point the jig gave birth to another
dance performed in a heavier kind of shoe - the Irish
clog dance. The same kinds of steps found in the "soft
jig" were adapted by dancers with heavier, noisier,
harder-soled footwear. What was sacrificed in speed and
lightness may have been compensated for by the addition
of the "shoe music" - the percussive use of the feet and
shoes as a musical instrument. (Today, this dance is
known as a "hard jig" or "double jig"; the shoes have a
stiffly built-up patch of leather at the toe end of the
sole, sometimes with metal nails or brads hammered in,
but they don't actually have steel plates or taps like
the ones cloggers or tap dancers wear.)

Wooden shoes were, of course, also worn by peasants and artisans in many parts of northern Europe - Belgium, Holland, and France. From those nations, too, came dances that create their own percussive accompaniment that may have emigrated to North America; to French Canada, for example, where clog dancing is well-known. This only leads to further speculation though, since in a general sense any historical dance involving foot stamping - the Portugese fado, for instance, or the Spanish zapateado, which were frequently performed atop the tables in cafes - could be considered a precursor of today's clog dancing and tap dancing.
Of special interest for purposes of our story, however, was a particular kind of wooden shoe that made its appearance, not in the boggy countryside of Ireland or in northern Europe, but in the English steel mills in the mid-18th century during the industrial revolution. The story goes that in Lancashire, England, dancing in these heavy clogs became a popular pastime among the steel mill workers. Competitions came to be held to see who could generate the greatest variety of sounds and rhythms in these clogs. The dance was performed on cobblestones, and was a lot like a jig in that the upper body stayed motionless while the legs and feet did all the work of the dance.

'
By the turn of the 20th century, all these influences had culminated in what we know today as tap dancing. Famous early tap dancers are still among the most revered legendary figures in the history of show business: George M. Cohan, Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, etc.
While clog dancing was undergoing its transformation within the mainstream of American popular culture, the name Irish-Scots dance heritage was also thriving in more remote sections of our young nation. Dance historians tells us that in the Appalachian Mountains, descendants of the Irish, English and Scots settlers kept the Irish jig, Scots Highlander and other step-type dances alive in forms that didn't deviate quite so far from the "original."
Irish
and English clog dancing and their American derivatives
continued to evolve in this country throughout the 19th
and into the early 20th century, in vaudeville, minstrel
shows and the various other tent shows, road shows and
touring companies that travelled the length and breadth
of the States.
Once it
was established in this country, what had started out as
clog dancing received its next biggest contributions
from African Americans. The rich African dance heritage,
nurtured and encouraged for the entertainment of white
society during the years of slavery, blossomed anew as
many more blacks headed for the cities after
emancipation. The infusion of black styles and rhythms
gave clogging two dance elements it had thus far lacked:
syncopation and body movement.
Clogging in the U.S.A.
The "Lancashire Clog," as it became better known, attracted bigger audiences. The competition grew intense. The dancers finally realized that the heavy wooden clogs on their feet were a hindrance to faster footwork, so they switched to leather which provided some flexibility (and was safer, too). To make up for the sound volume lost with the wooden soles, someone came up with the bright idea of nailing copper pennies to the toe and heel.
Imported to the United States, the "Lancashire Clog" became the grandaddy of tap dancing. It was featured in U. S. theatres as early as 1840, and took American audiences by storm; there were soon as many styles and spin-offs of clog dancing as there were performers, including the variation that abandoned the percussive footwear altogether to become known as the "soft shoe."
We
know that square and round dancing were the most
universal dances done by country folk in 19th century
America, and their history is fairly well-documented.
Where, then, did clogging fit in? Well, it's a common
occurence at informal dances in any society for young
people to want to get out on the floor and show off; in
the Appalachians it was apparently no different. It
seems that whenever there was a town dance - at corn
husking time, at christenings, barn raisings, church
socials, or whatever - during the breaks between sets or
at the end of the evening when the regular guests left
the floor, it was the custom for the younger, more
exuberant crowd to take over. It must have been these
energetic souls that preserved the old clog and jig
styles, doubtlessly with plenty of their own personal
touches thrown in. Though they had some common roots,
the steps these Appalachian virtuosos did
were only remotely related to the new, syncopated,
sophisticated kind of dance that was coming into its own
among professional minstrels and vaudeville
entertainers. Compared to the new tap dancing, clogging
was becoming the country cousin. (That's how clogging
comes to be better-described as a relative not of square
dancing, but of tapdancing.)


What we know today as clogging is the heir to these "purer," personalized and regionalized step-type dances. As recently as twenty years ago cloggers had not yet developed a common terminology - for the basic steps or even for the dance form itself. When cloggers in rural areas of the Southeastern United States travelled over the mountains or into the next state, they might or might not recognize the local steps. Clogging wasn't even neccesarily called clogging in all regions; it was known variously as flat-footing, foot-stomping, buck dancing, jigging, and other local terms. In 1927, in Asheville, North Carolina, a lawyer and cultural historian named Bascom Lamar Lunsford founded an ambitious folk arts festival - the Mountain Dance and Folk Festival - where he planned to gather and preserve Southern American music and dance. In 1938, at Lunsford's annual festival, a group with a unique style won the dance competition. This group - Sam Queen's Soco Gap Dance Team - didn't do square dance steps at all. In fact, cloggers today recognize Sam Queens team as the first official cloggers.
Sam Queen's dancers, interestingly, did not call themselvers cloggers - they most probably used the term "flatfooting" to distinguish their kind of dancing from traditional mountain square dancing. By whatever name, though, Sam Queen and his group were such a hit that it was clear a new, non-square dance category was going to be needed from then on to accommodate other groups like them - those who did flatfooting, foot-stomping, or whatever they wanted to call it.

So how and when did the term "clogging" finally catch on? According to Ira Bernstein, clogging authority and author of "Appalachian Clogging and Flatfooting Steps," cloggers have no less than King George VI and Queen Elizabeth of England to thank for the currently-used term.
Bernstein's research turned up the little-known fact that, during a 1939 state visit to the White House where Sam Queen's Dance Team were among the guest artists, those royal personages commented that Sam Queen's group reminded them of the clog dancers they'd seen in the north of England.
After World War II, clogging was positioned to hitch a ride on the coattails of square dancing, which became the national craze in this country throughout the 1950's. From movies to radio to the record store, and from stars like Bing Crosby to Roy Rogers, everybody was going square dance crazy. Wherever square dance festivals and jamborees were held, there would naturally be a place to feature exhibition dancers, and often as not, those fancy steppers would be doing clogging steps.
On a more local, neighborhood level, square dances were held wherever folks could find a hall, a fiddler and a caller. As the ranks of square dancers grew, there was a natural interest in expanding the repertoire of steps and styles. Like their predecessors in Appalachia, there invariably seemed to be someone who knew a few clogging steps and was only too glad to show them off during the breaks between sets. It's from these clogging interludes and demonstrations - professional and amateur, formal and informal - that today's clogging eventually spread from coast to coast and beyond.
Today's Clogging Styles

The name "clogging" may have caught on, but that doesn't mean clogging has crystallized into one common form yet. Lots of different styles of clogging still survive, and vary considerably, especially between east and west. For instance, cloggers in California are much more apt to dance in unison - the "precision" style of clogging; in the southeast, there's a great deal more improvisation, even doing a routine written to the same song.
"Buck
dancing" was one of clogging's early names because it
was simply a generic name for any kind of fast-footed
solo (and is still used among old-time tap dancers to
describe a kind of easy, flat-footed tap style). Among
cloggers, buck dancing now refers to a special fancy
kind of clogging in which the dancer does the basic
clogging steps, but with the addition of extra little
kicks, shuffles, taps, etc. to generate two or three
times as many sounds per beat as the steps make when
conventionally executed.
The essential characteristics of clogging - in other
words, the dance elements that make it clogging even if
it's called something else in a particular area or is
disguised by fancy styling - are (1) the loud, fast
footwork, usually with steel plates on the shoes; (2)
the fairly rigid torso; and (3) the up and down knee
motion.
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