1
Round my parts we got a thing often referred to as flatfooting, never learned meself.
Here's a video demonstration from Youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=[YOUTUBE]xyqcHMPa1O8[/YOUTUBE]&feature=related
From wiki:
Solo dancing (outside the context of the big circle dance) is known in various places as buck dance, flat-footing, hoedown, jigging, sure-footing, and/or stepping. These names vary in meaning from place to place, and dancers do not always agree on their use. The term 'buck', as in buck dancing, is traceable to the West Indies and is derived from a Tupi Indian word denoting a frame for drying and smoking meat; the original 'po bockarau', or buccaneers were sailors who smoked meat and fish after the manner of the Indians.[12] Another source states that the word "bockorau" can be traced to the "Angolan" word "buckra', and was used to refer to white people,[13][14] which is disputed.[15] Eventually the term came to describe Irish immigrant sailors whose jig dance was known as 'the buck.'"
One source states that buck dancing was the earliest combination of the basic shuffle and tap steps performed to syncopated rhythms in which the accents are placed not on the straight beat, as with the jigs, clogs, and other dances of European origin, but on the downbeat or offbeat, a style derived primarily from the rhythms of African tribal music.[16]
Buck dancing was popularized in America by minstrel performers in the late 19th century. Many folk festivals and fairs utilize dancing clubs or teams to perform both Buck and regular clogging for entertainment.
Traditional Appalachian clogging is characterized by loose, often bent knees and a "drag-slide" motion of the foot across the floor, and is usually performed to old-time music.
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