Brotherhood in Rhythm, Constance Valis Hill
Brotherhood in Rhythm, Constance Valis Hill
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Brotherhood in Rhythm
The Jazz Tap Dancing of the Nicholas Brothers, 20th Anniversary Edition

Author: Constance Valis Hill

Narrator: Greg Campbell

Unabridged: 11 hr 41 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 08/09/2022


Synopsis

When the Nicholas Brothers danced, uptown at the Cotton Club, downtown at the Roxy, in segregated movie theatres in the South, and dance halls across the country, audiences cheered, clapped, stomped their feet, and shouted out uncontrollably. Their exuberant style of American theatrical dance—a melding of jazz, tap, acrobatics, black vernacular dance, and witty repartee—was dazzling. Though daredevil flips, slides, and hair-raising splits made them show-stoppers, the Nicholas Brothers were also highly sophisticated dancers who refined a centuries-old tradition of percussive dance into the rhythmic brilliance of jazz tap.

In Brotherhood in Rhythm, author Constance Valis Hill interweaves an intimate portrait of these great performers with a richly detailed history of jazz music and jazz dance, both bringing their act to life and explaining their significance through a colorful analysis of their eloquent footwork, their full-bodied expressiveness, and their changing style. Hill vividly captures their soaring careers, from the Cotton Club appearances with Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, and Jimmy Lunceford, to film-stealing big-screen performances with Chick Webb, Tommy Dorsey, and Glenn Miller.

About Constance Valis Hill

Constance Valis Hill is Five College professor emerita of dance studies at Hampshire College. She has taught at the Alvin Ailey School of American Dance, Conservatoire d'arts Dramatique, and New York University. As a choreographer, director, and mask specialist, she worked with the French playwright Eugene Ionesco; Czech scenographer Josef Svoboda; Romanian director Liviu Ciulei, and Toni Morrison on her play, Dreaming Emmett, directed by Gilbert Moses. She is the author of Brotherhood in Rhythm: The Jazz Tap Dancing of the Nicholas Brothers, which won the 2000 ASCAP Deems Taylor Award; Tap Dancing America, A Cultural History, which was awarded grants from John D. Rockefeller and John Simon Guggenheim Foundations, and the 2010 Bueno de la Toro Prize for outstanding scholarship in dance; and Tap Dance in America: A Twentieth-Century Chronology of Tap Dance on Stage, Film, and Media, a 3500-record database of tap performance for the Library of Congress.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Carly

The Nicholas Brothers were amazing tap dancers, and it was interesting to learn all about them, but I really didn't enjoy how the book was written. The author would go off on tangents that I found boring and they weren't really about the Nicholas Brothers.......more

Goodreads review by Jami

Admittedly based on the author's dissertation, it was almost too thorough. The author goes off on numerous tangents, over-describes choreography & occasionally revisits the tangents. It started feeling like filler, everything but the kitchen sink. Enjoyed the parts about the brothers' lives & career......more