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Max Pollak: Tapped Into Rhythm
ByMax Pollak
dancerBefore he ever put on a pair of taps, Max was tapped in.
He asked his parents if he could learn to dance like Astaire. But there were no tap teachers in Vienna at the time. So Max did what any determined, rhythm-hungry kid might do: he watched old musicals whenever he could find them and started imitating what he saw. He made up steps. He created rhythms. And without even realizing it, he began cultivating a deep relationship with improvisation. For Max, making it up as he went wasn't just a necessityit became his artistic foundation.
When he was 14, everything changed. He met Carnell Lyons}, a master tap dancer from Kansas City who had moved to Europe during the civil rights era. Lyons had grown up alongside

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Eventually, Max moved to New York to study drums and pursue a life in music. At The New School, he joined

Bobby Sanabria
congasThat distinction challenged Max to reimagine what tap dancing could be. It wasn't just about dancing with the music, or on top of itit was about being the music. He began studying clave, singing, incorporating body percussion and Afro-Cuban folkloric rhythms into his practice. Eventually, he developed a new hybrid form he called RumbaTapa synthesis of tap, voice, percussion, and ritual movement rooted in Cuban tradition.
One night, members of Los Mu?equitos de Matanzas}the legendary folkloric group from Cubasaw Max perform in New York. Afterward, they approached him and asked: "Who taught you how to dance like that?" When he told them he'd developed the style himself, they asked him to teach them. That invitation led to collaborations in Cuba, performances in sugarcane fields, and moments of deep cultural communion.
Max has often described dancing with Los Mu?equitos as transcendent. "They make you levitate," he said. "Their groove is so deep. It's ancestral."
Max Pollak's upcoming performance at 92NY, featuring members of Los Mu?equitos de Matanzas, celebrates the 25th anniversary of RumbaTap. The event takes place this Thursday, April 24 and marks not just a milestone, but a living tribute to the traditions that have shaped himand the new traditions he continues to shape.
Sometimes, the rhythm finds you. For Max Pollak, it led him on a path that bridged continents, cultures, and art formsall united by the universal language of rhythm.
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