Dance HistoryTap Dance
T-TAPUnited States · 1800Present

Tap Dance

An American percussive dance in which metal-plated shoes make the dancer an audible rhythm-maker; it fused African and African American step traditions with the Irish jig and British clog and Lancashire step, and split into a grounded, jazz-rooted rhythm (hoofing) style and a lighter, presentational Broadway style.

4 dance styles in this genre

Historical Origins

Tap dance developed in the United States across the 17th–19th centuries from the collision of West and Central African step and body-percussion traditions with the Irish jig, the English and Lancashire clog, and related British step dancing, in settings ranging from plantations to the minstrel stage. The mid-19th-century dancer William Henry Lane ('Master Juba') is a pivotal early figure, blending Irish step with African American rhythm. Vernacular forms such as buck-and-wing and the soft shoe circulated through minstrelsy, vaudeville, and Black musical theater into the early 20th century. Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson brought tap 'up on the toes,' dancing on the balls of the feet for clean, light, rolling sounds, while a parallel jazz-rooted line—John Bubbles and later the bebop-era hoofers—pushed tap into dense, grounded, improvised rhythm. Metal taps on the shoe became standard in the early 20th century. After a mid-century decline, tap revived from the 1970s–1980s; Savion Glover's percussive 'hitting' style and shows such as Bring in 'da Noise, Bring in 'da Funk (1996) renewed rhythm tap for new generations.

Cultural Significance

Tap is one of the defining American vernacular art forms, born from the exchange and forced proximity of African and European peoples and inseparable from the development of jazz. It carries a complicated history—its early commercial life ran through minstrelsy and its racial caricatures, even as Black dancers created and advanced the art and frequently went uncredited. Tap has no single governing body; its lineage has been transmitted largely person-to-person, from the hoofers of the Hoofers Club through master teachers to today's rhythm-tap community, and its scholarship (notably Constance Valis Hill's work) actively documents that oral tradition.

Musical Characteristics

In rhythm tap the dancer is a musician: the feet are a percussion instrument improvising with or against a jazz rhythm section, typically over swung 4/4. Broadway tap is more often set to show tunes and arranged accompaniment with the rhythm serving choreography and presentation. The soft shoe is performed at an easy, lilting tempo, sometimes on a sand-strewn floor for a brushed sound, and class tap exercises are counted and phrased to support clarity of sound.

Core Movement Principles

Tap technique centers on producing clear, articulate sound with the feet through named elements—shuffle, flap, ball-change, time step, cramp roll, wings, pullbacks—executed with relaxed ankles and weight management so that each tap reads distinctly. The two major styles diverge in orientation: rhythm tap (hoofing) is grounded, weighted, and improvisational, dancing 'into the floor' with emphasis on stamps, drops, and complex syncopation, and aligns itself with the jazz tradition; Broadway tap is lighter and more upright, oriented to line, travel, and visual presentation in musical theater. Soft shoe is the smooth, gliding, low-volume idiom that precedes and underlies both.

Modern Usage

Tap is taught in studios worldwide and remains a fixture of musical theater, while rhythm tap thrives as a concert and jam-session art with a strong improvisational, jazz-aligned community. Festivals, university programs, and master teachers sustain the form, and figures such as Savion Glover, Michelle Dorrance, and Dormeshia have kept rhythm tap at the center of contemporary American dance.

Tap Dance FAQs

An American percussive dance in which metal-plated shoes make the dancer an audible rhythm-maker; it fused African and African American step traditions with the Irish jig and British clog and Lancashire step, and split into a grounded, jazz-rooted rhythm (hoofing) style and a lighter, presentational Broadway style.