Cakewalk

Cakewalk

:"This article is about the form of music and dance. For the musical notation program, see Cakewalk (sequencer).
For other meanings, see Cakewalk (disambiguation)."

Infobox Music genre
bgcolor=goldenrod
color=white
name=Cakewalk
stylistic_origins=African American music
cultural_origins=US
instruments= banjo, piano, small bands
popularity= c. 1890 - 1910
derivatives=Ragtime
subgenrelist= []
subgenres=
fusiongenres=
regional_scenes=
other_topics=

Cakewalk is a traditional African American form of music and dance which originated among slaves in the Southern United States. The form was originally known as the chalk line walk; it takes its name from competitions slaveholders sometimes held, in which they offered slices of hoecake as prizes for the best dancers.cite web |url=http://www.streetswing.com/histmain/z3cake1.htm |title=Cakewalk Dance |accessdate=2007-04-01 |work=Streetswing Dance History Archive ]

Traditional dance

The dance was invented as a satirical parody of the formal European ballroom dances preferred by white slave owners, and featured exaggerated imitations of the dance ritual. One common form of cakewalk dance involved couples linked at the elbows, lining up in a circle, dancing forward alternating a series of short hopping steps with a series of very high kicking steps. Costumes worn for the cakewalk often included large, exaggerated bow ties, suits, canes, and top hats.

Vaudvillian Tom Fletcher heard the following account from his grandfather, "The cake walk, in that section and at that time, was known as the chalk line walk. There was no prancing, just a straight walk on a path made by turns and so forth, along which the dancers made their way with a pail of water on their heads. The couple that was the most erect and spilled the least water or no water at all was the winner." [Steppin' on the Blues. by Jacqui Malone. University of Illinois Press. 1996. page 43. ISBN 0-252-022114]

Ethel L. Urlin writing in the 1912 "Dancing, Ancient and Modern" stated that "It originated in Florida, where it is said that the Negroes borrowed the idea of it from the war dances of the Seminole...The negroes were present as spectators at these dances, which consisted of wild and hilarious jumping and gyrating, alternatingwith slow processions in which the dancers walked solemnly in couples. The idea grew, and style in walking came to be practised among the negroes as an art." [page 13 text available at this url [http://www.archive.org/details/dancingancientmo00urlirich] ]

The Cake Walk was an adapted and amended two-step, which had been spawned by the popularity of marches, most notably by John Philip Sousa. It has no African counterpart. [Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance By Marshall Winslow Stearns, Jean Stearns Contributor Brenda Bufalino. 1994. Da Capo Press. page 11. ISBN:0306805537] The Cake Walk was more fluid and imaginative than the established two-step, it was nevertheless a regularized form, more improvisational than its previous form, but highly formalized compared to later dances such as the Charleston, Black Bottom and Lindy Hop. [Scott Joplin the Man Who Made Ragtime by James Haskins with Kathleen Benson 1978 Doubleday and Company page 74 ISBN 0-385-11155-x]

In July 1898 the musical comedy "Clorindy The Origin of the Cakewalk" opened on Broadway in New York. Will Marion Cook wrote ragtime music for the show. Black dancers mingled with white cast members for the first instance of integration on stage in New York. [African American Dance] [ [http://www.theatredance.com/mainstage.html Black Broadway web site] ] Cook wrote, "My chorus sang like Russians, dancing meanwhile like Negroes, and cakewalking like angels, black angels! When the last note was sounded, the audience stood and cheered for at least ten minutes. This was the finale which Witmark had said no one would listen to. It was pandemonium... But did that audience take offense at my rags and lack of conducting polish? Not so you could notice it!" [Will Marion Cook, "Clorindy, the Origin of the Cakewalk" (1944) Will Marion Cook, "Clorindy, the Origin of the Cakewalk" (1944). Printed in Theatre Arts (September, 1947), pp. 61-65.] [ [http://homepage.mac.com/rswinter/DirectTestimony/Pages/187.html on line excerpt from book] ]

"Dusky troopers march & cake walk" was written by Will Hardy and published in 1900. [http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/hasm.b0319/] Sheet music covers for more cake walks can be viewed here. [http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/hasm/browse/1900-1909/?q=duke.collection:hasm+AND+duke.category:1900-1909&rows=32&start=256] [http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/hasm/browse/1900-1909/?q=duke.collection:hasm+AND+duke.category:1900-1909&rows=32&start=352]

Performances of the "Cake Walk", including a "Comedy Cake Walk" were filmed by the American Motoscope & Biograph Co.in 1903. Prancing steps were the main steps shown in the "Cake Walk" segment, which featured two couples, and a solo dancer. All dancers were African American. [America Dances! 1897-1948. 2003. DanceTime Publications. segments of the same name. DVD] 1903 was the same year that both the cakewalk and ragtime music arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Leaning far forward or far backward is associated with defiance in Kongo. "We are palm trees, bent forward, bent back, but we never break." Another interpretations of these motions were "melting" to the beat, or protecting what is new (leaning forward) with the past (leaning back). The appearance of the cakewalk in Buenos Aires may have influenced influenced early styles of tango. [Tango The Art History of Love. Robert Farris Thompson. 2005. Pantheon Books. pages 8, 89, 108. ISBN 0-375-40931-9]

Dances by slaves were a popular spectator pastime for slaveholders, evolving into regular Sunday contests held for their pleasure. Following the American Civil War, the tradition continued amongst African Americans in the South and gradually moved northward. The dance became nationally popular among whites and blacks for a time at the end of the 19th century. Most cakewalk music is notated in 2/4 time with two alternate heavy beats per bar, giving it an ooompah rhythm. [The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz Revised Edition 1987 Smithsonian Institution Press page 14,15] The music was adopted into the works of various white composers, including Robert Russell Bennett, John Philip Sousa and Claude Debussy. Debussy wrote "Golliwog's Cakewalk" as the final movement of the "Children's Corner" suite (1908).cite book |last=Crawford |first=Richard |title=An Introduction to America's Music |year=2000 |publisher=W. W. Norton & Co. |location=New York City]

Modern times

The term "cakewalk" is often used to indicate something that is very easy or effortless. Though the dance itself could be physically demanding, it was generally considered a fun, recreational pastime. The phrase "takes the cake" also comes from this practice.

Along the lines of this "easy or effortless" meaning, there is the modern Cakewalk (carnival game) which requires no dancing skill at all to win.

Today, one version of the cakewalk is kept alive by traditional Scottish Highland dancers. The cakewalk is sometimes taught, performed and competed within the Highland Dance community, especially in the southern United States.cite web |url=http://www.electricscotland.com/dance/intro.htm | title=Introduction to Highland Dancing |accessdate=2007-04-05 |author=Kirsty Duncan PhD |work=Electric Scotland] In addition to the Highland Dance community, a version of the cakewalk seen in vintage film clips from the early 1900s is kept alive in the Lindy Hop community through performances by the Harlem Hot Shots and through cakewalk classes held in conjunction with Lindy Hop classes and workshops.

On the June 2008 Law School Admission Test (LSAT), a passage discussing the origins of the Cakewalk was featured in the exam's Reading Comprehension section.

Quotations

References

External links

* [http://www.ragtimepiano.ca/rags/cakewalk.htm Cakewalks in the Ragtime Era]
* [http://search.eb.com/blackhistory/article-9018592 Britannica] Brief article on the cakewalk
* [http://www.ragtimepiano.ca/rags/cakewalk.htm#3 Online Cake Walk Sheet Music]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7sDnVIeSn_k Cakewalk Dance Clips on Youtube.]


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  • cakewalk — ☆ cakewalk [kāk′wôk΄ ] n. 1. an elaborate step or walk formerly performed by blacks in the South competing for the prize of a cake 2. a strutting dance developed from this 3. something easily accomplished, won, etc. vi. to do a cakewalk… …   English World dictionary

  • cakewalk — s.n. Dans afroamerican cu ritm sincopat, cântat la banjo, care se dansa cu paşi iuţi şi mărunţi şi ale cărui câteva figuri au fost preluate în dansul şimi. [pron. chéic uoc. / < engl. cake walk – mersul cozonacului (câştigătorul dansului era… …   Dicționar Român

  • cakewalk — (n.) 1863, Amer.Eng., from CAKE (Cf. cake) (n.) + WALK (Cf. walk), probably in ref. to the cake given as a prize for the fanciest steps in a procession in a Southern black custom (explained by Richard H. Thornton, 1912, as, A walking competition… …   Etymology dictionary

  • cakewalk — (izg. kȇjkvȏk) m DEFINICIJA glazb. ples crnačkog stanovništva SAD a, nastao oko 1870, kasnije popularan u jazzu ETIMOLOGIJA engl. ≃ cake: kolač (bio je nagrada za najljepši korak na zabavama na kojima se rađao cake walk) …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • Cakewalk — Der Cakewalk ist ein Gesellschaftstanz, der um 1850 entstand und zunächst Chalk Line Walk (englisch für „Kreideliniengang“) genannt wurde. Von 1895 bis 1905 wurde der Tanz dann auf der Grundlage von Ragtime Musik als Cakewalk zum bekannten… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Cakewalk — Cake|walk 〈[kɛıkwɔ:k] m.; od. s, s; Mus.〉 1. 〈urspr.〉 traditioneller Rundtanz nordamerikan. Sklaven um einen dabei zu gewinnenden Kuchen 2. 〈danach〉 (zu Anfang des 20. Jh. in Europa eingeführter) mit Jazzrhythmen unterlegter Gesellschafts u.… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • cakewalk — cakewalker, n. /kayk wawk /, n. 1. (formerly) a promenade or march, of black American origin, in which the couples with the most intricate or eccentric steps received cakes as prizes. 2. a dance with a strutting step based on this promenade. 3.… …   Universalium

  • cakewalk — noun a) A contest in which cake was offered for the best dancers. Just as common as she is, a cakewalk sort of a name. b) The style of music associated with such a contest. Nah. The first step’s a cakewalk. We can beat the hell out of a… …   Wiktionary

  • cakewalk — cake|walk [ˈkeıkwo:k US wo:k] n [singular] [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: cakewalk walking competition with a cake as first prize (19 20 centuries)] AmE informal a very easy thing to do, or a very easy victory = ↑piece of cake ▪ The game was a… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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