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i tap dance
do you?
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I used to, but I kept falling in the sink.
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hmm yes it happens.... how long did you dance for
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I did :D
I was pretty good too, only I didn't enjoy doing it so I stopped. Every once and a while I'll tap dance a bit. |
These three ladies tap dance as openers for many a rock show in town here.
I give you the Shim Sham Shufflers. http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm...did=117 55591 ![]() |
There is a band called Tilly And The Wall, they have a tap dancer instead of a drummer I think... check them out!
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james iha used to tap dance on stage...
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Derek Bailey released a CD from when he performed with a tap dancer, didn't he, improvising to the guy's taps. |
On feet like these:
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Flip Flops?
et tu, porky? NOOOOO! |
Nah i meant that i tap dance on the feet of someone who wears that type of abhorrent footwear.
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Dodged a bullet there.
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Should i get that Mother Gong album then?I didnt know that they were in any way related to Gong themselves.Two quid is not a lot of money,is it?
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No, it's not, but I have some Mother Gong and it's not so hot.
Maybe you will get lucky though. I would spend the extra money and get Gong's "You." |
The tap dancer who Derek Bailey peformed with was Will Gaines. There is an album called Rappin' and Tappin' on Incus, reviewed like this by Volcanic Tongue:
Will Gaines & Derek Bailey Rappin & Tappin Incus CD55 Rappin & Tappin is an inspired and rewarding set, joining the dots between two improvising talents who manoeuvred their way to freedom from the heart of dancebands (Gaines was a member of Cab Calloway’s Cotton Club Revue and opened for people like Eartha Kitt, Nat ‘King’ Cole and Sammy Davis Jr) and further expanding Bailey’s radical concept of totally free improvisation by way of his sonic responses to the unlikely raw material of Gaines’s percussive codes. The first few tracks feature Gaines alone, moving from bombastic two-foot build-ups that almost sound progressive to beating out trap patterns straight out of Art Blakey’s songbook. Alongside the tapping, Gaines reminisces about his time working with various jazz musicians in clubs and the combination of rhythm demonstrations and oral testimony means this part of the disc lines up nicely with Baby Dodds’ Talking And Drum Solos set. However, it’s the second half of this live recording that’s the real gravy, with Bailey playing an amplified acoustic with a pedal, accompanying Gaines’ dancing with warped metal wows, ramping chords and delicate – almost swinging – patterns. It’s always weirdly illuminating to hear Bailey working with a percussionist who plays time, and there are points here where Gaines’ footsteps sounds like Han Bennink’s floor work, while at others it sounds most like the rain on Bailey and Min Tanaka’s great Music And Dance recording. Either way, this is a consistent dazzler. (I've edited this because I think the Volcanic Tongue review is better than the one from The Guardian that I originally posted) There is apparently footage of the two of them HERE. I say apparently because there is a firewall between me and the relevant site. |
hmm.....i have a lot of stuff that still needs proper listening and it's sitting at home but i'm hopeless when it comes to record buying.I'd rather go without food.
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i would love to hear that........... |
If it's the first Mother Gong LP, which is actually called "Mother" and is billed as being by Gilli Smyth as opposed to Mother Gong per se, that one is pretty good. The rest is dodgy, but occasionally cool.
The lowdown on Mother Gong: http://www.planetgong.co.uk/maze/blu...thergong.shtml Apologies to tapdance enthusiasts worldwide for the thread hijack. |
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fuck mothergong |
it's this one.Should i risk it?
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