18 – 22 June Online and In-Person. Workshops, presentations, discussions and live music tap jam!

Tickets £6 – £40 with discounts for students and low-income

Tap dance research takes many different forms: sifting through archives, developing creative practice, building artistic ideas or engaging with written and oral stories. At TDRN UK we ask how can we approach research in a way that honours the values, traditions and aesthetics of tap dance as a cultural practice and art form. What are the challenges and opportunities when working in an academic system or as an independent researcher?

Now in its 3rd year, the TDRN UK Research Festival showcases research connected with tap dance taking place both inside and outside of academic institutions. The sessions feature practical research projects exploring pedagogy, improvisation dramaturgy, and practice research. We share and explore ways of doing and thinking that have helped to shape these research projects and respond to the need for a ‘tap-centered’ approach. The Festival is an opportunity to bring tap dancers from around the UK and the globe together, and enjoy this dynamic and ever-growing community.

Tickets: 20% discount for students and those with low income on all tickets

  • Research Festival ticket includes all online and in-person events £40
  • Online ticket £6 for both event links (Research Festival Network Session is FREE)
  • Tap Jam ticket £5

Getting Here: Trains arrive into Manchester Piccadilly and Manchester Victoria. All stations connect with the tram route which can take you directly to Old Trafford in 15-20 minutes.

Map to Venue

 

What's On - Online

Online event 1. Research Festival Network Session: Duke Ellington’s Dancers – The Women (Part II) with Allana Radecki

Tuesday 18 June 2024 19:00 – 20:00 BST | 11:00 PDT | 14:00 EDT | 20:00 CEST 

FREE Network Session

In this follow-up event from the April TDRN UK Online Talk Series: Duke Ellington’s Dancers – The Women, Allana presents more of her research into the careers of Duke Ellington and his collaborators. Featuring oral histories and a focus on archival research, Allana reflects on the process of her research and what she has learned about the fascinating life stories of Aida Overton Walker, Elida Webb, Fredi & Isabel Washington, Marie Bryant and more! Learn how their different careers evolved beyond the stage, spanning performance, teaching, social activism and building communities. Read more

What's On - Saturday 22nd June 2024 10:30 - 20:30 @ ShockOut Arts, Manchester

As always, the TDRN UK Research Festival is a social space to make connections and celebrate coming together to tap dance! Lunch is provided and at our festival closing party there will be a live music tap jam and improvisation workshop.

Reading Jazz Dance Practices: with Jreena Green and Annette Walker of Jazz Dance Collective

Through this Jazz Dance Collective practical workshop, co-led by Jreena Green and Annette Walker, you will embody the journey of authentic jazz from the plantation rhythms of Juba/Giouba, through to Harlem in the 1920s right up to the present day. The forgotten history of jazz will be explored through the work of Marshall Stearns, and the Labanotation of authentic Jazz dance movements contained in his book Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance. The section of the workshop led by Annette Walker will look at the way Fredrick Ashton’s choreography was influenced by the work of original tap pioneer Buddy Bradley. Read more

In Step with Culture: A Journey Across Tap Pedagogies and Historic Performance Pieces with Dr Trish Melton

This presentation and practical workshop will take the audience on a rhythmic and cultural exploration through various tap dance teaching methods (pedagogies) while also delving into the historical context of one iconic performance piece within the tap dance genre. Trish will provide insights into the way a tap dance class could be taught based on classical, cultural, and critical pedagogies and do so while teaching historic repertory that you can learn. Read more

Tap Dance and Music Collaboration: a dramaturgical thinking approach to creating performance with Jess Murray

This practical workshop with live music, will share different creative approaches to improvisation and creative process informed by the idea of dramaturgical thinking. Jess will lead you through a range of activities that explore collaboration, and develop your own performance ideas in a creative and supportive environment with others. Have fun with different creative tasks to get you thinking and experimenting, get some ideas to take back into the studio and enjoy being a part of a creative collaboration. Read more

Celebrating New Performance Work with Sole Rebel Training Company, Kerry Tap Ensemble and Shockout Tap Company

The UK and Ireland have a growing number of opportunities for young people and early career performers to train, perform and gain pre-professional experience. We shine a light on the work of three exciting performance companies and learn more about what they offer, how they work and how others might get involved. Each company will perform original choreography and share their experiences of learning, creating and performing it.

Tap Dance and Music Improvisation Workshop

Tap Jam Closing Party with Live Music hosted by Junior Laniyan

Who's Involved

Jess Murray is known in the UK for her work as a tap dance performer, educator and tap jam host (Tap Rhythm Project, London Tap Jam, Tap Dance Festival UK). She is interested in the relationship between dance and music collaboration, improvised performance and dramaturgy and is currently undertaking a practice research Ph.D funded by Midland4Cities at De Montfort University exploring this. Jess has appeared as part of London Jazz Festival in Finding Synaesthesia and with the Michele Drees Jazz Tap Project with whom she also performed at Ronnie Scotts Jazz Club. Jess performed as a Clog dancer with The Lock In Dance Show for 3 UK tours, Glastonbury Avalon Stage and the Edinburgh Fringe. She worked for Les Commandos Percu, performing in France, Belgium, Holland and collaborating to create On the Night Shift for the Olympic Opening Ceremony at Windermere and Paralympics Closing Ceremony in 2012. 

She works collaboratively with musicians to create original performance work such as Tap Rhythm Project, SoundMoves, and outdoor arts show Sound Catchers. Jess was lead choreographer for outdoor performance ‘tap dance and story-telling extravaganza’ Tappin’ In, for the Commonwealth Games and Birmingham International Dance Festival in 2022.

Annette Walker is an accomplished, multi-talented performing artist who has appeared in a variety of theatre, film, television and concert productions. Her tap dance features include the BBC Proms 2019 Duke Ellington’s Sacred Music concert at the Royal Albert Hall, Swinging at the Cotton Club (UK tour) and the short film, Dateleap (2022).

Annette’s passion for integrating music and dance continues off stage as a researcher and educator and she has taught at many dance and music institutions including, Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts, Royal Academy of Dance, The BRIT School, National Youth Jazz Collective and Tomorrow’s Warriors. She led the Renegade Stage (tap improvisation workshop) at the London Tap Jam for over 15 years, and is currently a co-director of Tap Dance Research Network UK. Annette is a fully funded AHRC PhD researcher at Royal Central School of Speech and Drama researching the influence of African American choreographer, Buddy Bradley, on the British musical stage.

Dr. Trish Melton is a tap dance educator, researcher and choreographer. She runs a community-based dance school and a tap dance performance group: The Kerry Tap Ensemble. Trish also runs a global project management consultancy. A professional background in teaching and training in project management is entirely transferable to all aspects of her professional life.

Her key research area is tap dance pedagogy. She completed an MA (Distinction) in dance education with the RAD/Bath University. Her research explored the narratives of tap dance teaching: the oral history passed down through the Tap Masters and reviewed what this means for teaching today through practical action research. Her current research interests continue to be tap dance pedagogy with one area of focus being the use of tap dance repertory in teaching and how the historical and cultural perspectives can enhance the learning experience. She is currently undertaking a PhD in Tap Dance Pedagogy at The Centre for Dance Research (C-DaRE) Coventry University UK.

Jreena Green is a professional choreographer, dance teacher and ‘practical dance historian’. She has previously developed a module entitled ‘Charleston To Hip Hop’ that explores the links between current urban dance styles and African American dance styles from the 1920′s. Jreena has taught authentic jazz at many of the leading dance conservatoires including Rambert, Trinity Laban and Mountview and published several articles on jazz dance history in Britain. She is a co-founding member of the Jazz Dance Collective.

Allana Radecki is an artist, educator and performer, Allana Radecki has a BA in Fine Arts and MA in African American, African Diaspora Studies from Indiana University. Her research focuses on the interlocking roots and culture of jazz music and dance through autobiography and oral history. Her current book project examines the multi-faceted relationship between Duke Ellington and jazz dance, with an emphasis on tap dancers. A noted teacher of Hatha Yoga, Rhythm Tap and Modern Dance since 1986, she has taught thousands of classes to thousands of people of all ages. As a jazz tap dancer, Allana loves to improvise and also explores West African and Afro- Brazilian percussion including many years with Women of Mass Percussion and five seasons with the Indiana University Brazilian Ensemble.

Junior Laniyan is the founder of the London Tap Jam. Junior Laniyan trained at The Sylvia Young Theatre School. He has performed at the Queen Elizabeth Hall with Tobias Tak in Out Of The Blues, and New York on Tap, Cross Currents Turned on Tap as well as Finding Synaesthesia which was for the Salzberg & London Jazz Festivals with Canada’s Heather Cornell. He also performed the Mr Bojangles solo in Robbie Williams Live at the Royal Albert Hall. International credits include Copasetics (Switzerland), Feet Fusion Tap Concert (Finland), Los Sones Negros (Spain) with Flamenco legend Juan de Juan, In La Serana Festival Internacional de Jazz with Cristián Cuturrufo, and Riverdance (Germany, Ireland, Korea, UK and China) where he filmed Riverdance Live From Beijing DVD.

Junior was a member of the Michele Drees Quartet performing at at London’s 606 Club, 2013’s London Jazz Festival, as well as opening for Jazz legend Jon Hendricks at Ronnie Scott’s and being invited to perform at the Ernesto Nazareth Chorinho Festival (Brazil). His tap choreography credits include Sky 1’s Louis Spence’s Show Business, Net A Porter’s online Autumn Winter Shoes Campaign a commercial for Zain in Lebanon and Dance consultant for London’s 2012 Olympic opening ceremony.