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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Who Actually Invented The 'Moonwalk?'

Thirty years ago today, Michael Jackson took a few stylized, receding(prenominal) steps, igniting a global dance phenomenon.

The King of Pop's first general moonwalk occurred during the airing of a Motown 25th anniversary special on March 25, 1983. The now-legendary move came at the end of a implementation of his hit song “Billie Jean,” and it elicited shrieks from the enthusiastic crowd.

Although Jackson certainly launched the moonwalk's peculiar shuffle to international fame, he did not discover the move.

Rolling Stone notes that James Brown had been moonwalking years before the Motown tri bute, but the origins of the dance actually date further back than Brown. (Some source a tap dancer named Bill Bailey with coining the move.)

But Jackson whitethorn have learned the move from '80s dancer Jeffrey Daniel, a penis of the soul trio Shalamar.

Yahoo!'s Chris Willman points to an interview in which LaToya Jackson admitted her companion was taught the dance by a "Soul Train" dancer. At the time, the dance was known as "the backslide," however.

"There was this dancer [Jeffrey], who was incessantly doing the Moonwalk on that show," Jackson told British television host dog Skinner in 2004. "He taught Michael how to do it."

Whatever the argument, one amour remains certain: While the move was not on the dot original, "Jackson executed [the dance] with stunning perfection," Rolling Stone writes.

And the hoi polloi will always associate the King of Pop with the prevalent move. After the singer's death in 2009, for example, hundreds of people gathered in London for a moonwalk flash mob tribute.

Visit Yahoo! for an in-depth guess at the moonwalk.



Materials taken from The Huffington Post

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