The sayings "Easy as a piece of cake" and "It's a cakewalk" originated from this dance. The dance’s name comes from the cake that would be awarded to the winning couple. The dance would be held at the master’s house on the plantation and he would serve as judge. In many instances the Cakewalk was performance, and even competition. Couples lined up to form an aisle, down which each pair would take a turn at a high-stepping promenade through the others. Much bowing and bending were characteristic of the dance, which was more a performance than anything else. A send-up of the rich folks in the "Big House," the cakewalk mocked the aristocratic and grandiose mannerisms of southern high-society. Its origins in slavery and the plantation south, the Cakewalk was the sole organized and even condoned forum for servants to mock their masters. Cory is a piano scholar that studies Bach and other great composers.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |