Couple Exercises

(notation: There’s a full article and video on this topic.)

There are lots of really good tango exercises for your feet, your balance, your stability, but there aren’t so many for the couple to practice. Or so you would think. The really obvious ones are 1.) The Molinete Together Exercise. 2.) The No Arms Exercise. and  3.) The Walk Together Exercise.

However more than likely you haven’t considered that there are variations to those ideas, and a few more that you haven’t even considered.

Let’s start with that 1st one: The Molinete Together Exercise. Truthfully that’s the Molinete/Giro Exercise Together. Just because it’s called the Molinete exercise, the Lead tends to think that the Follower has to do all the frakkin’ work. That’s not the case. The reality is the Lead has to do the same amount of work and still work on the same issues only a from a slightly different perspective but it still works for the Lead. An important variation of this exercise is for both parties to engage in the Molinete together, meaning that the Lead will do the Follower’s typical steps with the Follower. And if you’re thinking that there’s no reason in the world for the Lead to do this kind of work. Think again! There’s every reason in the world!!!!!

The next on this list is the No Arms Exercise. This is where the Lead and the Follower attempt to dance without the Embrace. You’re going to think to yourself “WHY ?”. And you’d be right to ask that question. What’s the point of practicing dancing without the use of the Embrace ? That’s it right there. If you can dance without NEEDING the embrace then you’re onto something. Usually, the embrace is the place where 50% of your issues come to the forefront. So what would happen if you removed the embrace component ? You’d start to see the other 50% of your issues that you’re not seeing. So what’s generating that other 50%…your walk! It should be noted that in this exercise, the goal is to walk on the beat, to the pauses, within the phrases. This is WALKING, and nothing more than that. An important variation on a theme with this exercise is to dance with all the vocabulary you can and to watch your anxiety levels as you want to grab onto your partner.

The seemingly last exercise on this list is the Walking Together exercise. You would think that this would be simple, easy. Not. The goal of this exercise is to walk to 40 beats per minute, not more than that. The slower the better. This one will challenge you in ways you haven’t even begun to imagine. You’ll have a want to use your embrace to communicate pushing and pulling to your partner. You’ll have a want to hang on your partner even more. You’ll have a want to engage micro-stabilizations with your hands and more importantly with your fingers. All of that you have to be aware of…and more. Remember this is about walking slowly with your partner. An important variation of this exercise is to halve the BPM to 20! Good luck.

Ok, that does it for the obvious exercises.

What about the not so obvious ?

a.) The Argentine Cross. Did you not see this one coming ? While it may be the most used piece of vocab in Tango, a couple should practice this in open and in close embrace, as well as Parallel System crosses as well as Cross System crosses! 🙂 And if they want to try to take things to next level, they should take a crack at the 256 Variations of the Argentine Cross:

b.) Walking Transitions. A couple should practice the four common walking transitions that are available from Parallel Walking: 1.) PW into Milonguero Ochos. 2.) PW into Traveling Ochos. 3.) PW into Molinete/Giro. and 4.) PW into The Milonguero Turn.

c.) Ocho Transitions. For all the same reasons above, a couple should practice the transition states between Ochos, and the 4 common ones: 1.) Milonguero Ochos into The Milonguero Turn. 2.) Traveling Ochos into The Molinete/Giro. 3.) Milonguero Ochos into the Molinete/Giro. 4.) Traveling Ochos into The Milonguero Turn.

These are just some of the things that a couple should be practicing on a regular basis.

Frequently when we practice, we practice dancing. As if we were on a social dance floor. That’s not the only thing you should be practicing. The stuff above is the interstitial stuff, that stuff that binds that ‘social’ dancing together. Which is to say that it’s the glue that holds everything together, and you absolutely need to practice this stuff religiously.

MORE REMINDERS

Wine & Tango

Stop and think about something for a moment: Wine is alcohol (duh). Alcohol is a depressant, not a stimulant, it lowers our inhibitions, and ability for rational thought. It allows for us to do things while under it’s effects (inebriation) that we wouldn’t normally do. Like for instance, ‘drunk dial the ex’, or taken to the extreme – driving while intoxicated (tsk, tsk, tsk). Typically the average ‘wine’ drinker never gets beyond the tipsy stage….they can ‘hold their liquor’ as it were.

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The Powerful Follower

What is a Powerful Follower ? A Follower that has first and foremost a.) the force of the Follower’s muscles (legs – quads & glutes specifically) engaging with acceleration, power, and strength….

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Private Lessons (Part 1)

Private Lessons, or ‘Privates’ as they’re called sometimes, can really help you, can change you. Sometimes. And sometimes not. There are several reasons why private lessons won’t help or change you. 1.) Is the teacher you’ve chosen isn’t really a didactic teacher. What’s that ? It’s a teacher that is focused on dancing with you for an hour and pointing out all your flaws with very little actual correction instead of focusing on your foundation and fundamentals, like walking, stability, balance (which are not the same things by the way), your embrace, your body position and body placement, your understanding of the beat and engaging the musical pauses, just to name a few. A didactic teacher can really change you, and up your game. 2.) You. And the thinking that private lessons can the magical fix all. They’re not. You actually have to, god forbid, work! And then here’s the hard part: Practice!

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Good/Bad & Dancer/Teacher

At the beginning of our Tango lives, most people go to a Tango Class to learn how to dance Tango. Some people throw caution to the wind and just go to the Milonga and ‘learn’ on the dance floor sometimes with positive but most of the time with disastrous results. And some people take the route of skipping group classes all together and start with one-on-one sessions to begin their Tango journey.

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Cake!

Should you eat before, or after a milonga, or not at all ? Some people say “before, so that you don’t get hungry during the milonga”. But then they complain that they can’t move as freely. Some people say “After! Because I’ll be ravenous”. But then these same people quite factually ‘grumble’ (meaning their stomachs are growling because they’re hungry) while they dance with you. Some people are in the ‘not’ at all category! They can seemingly contain their exertion and not require sustenance before, during, and after a milonga.

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Alternative

There is another option as it’s referred to in the Tango world, Alternative Tango. Sometimes Alternative Tango is known by it’s other names “Neo” Tango or “Nuevo” Tango (which is a misnomer, as this was name that Astor Piazzolla gave to his musical genre that changed Tango music forever). Frequently “open embrace” is lumped in there as well due to the fact that a good portion of the vocabulary of Alternative Tango seemingly comes via an opening of the embrace.

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Age (Women)

The fact is that the younger and prettier you are, the more physically attractive you are, the more likely you are to get dances. That’s fact. I mean we’re dealing with ‘men’ here so … well do the math! However just because said younger and prettier girl gets the dance does not necessarily mean that said Follower will keep it. A good number of better leads, will actually over look said younger and prettier girl because they know that said Follower can barely walk, turn, embrace, or for that matter breathe properly. That is, unfortunately, only about 10-20% of the available L/leads in the room.

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The Importance of Two Millimeters

Contrary to what you might believe or think, distance, space, and rightfully precision absolutely matters when it comes to Argentine Tango. Let’s back up a bit and define a few things before we delve too deeply into today’s Tango Thought. Precision as defined by Webster’s Dictionary (2017) is a noun as derived from the English word ‘precise’ which is itself an adjective meaning “definitely or strictly stated, defined, or fixed”. Clear ? Not. In short, ‘Precision’ means that there is an area of exactitude, and/accuracy, finite accuracy, finely tuned acute and tight accuracy. And that just about sums up what has to happen with regards to Argentine Tango.

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Floorcraft

What is Floorcraft ? In it’s simplest form, as there layers and layers to this stuff, it is how to navigate the floor while dancing with your partner and not hitting the couples ahead, or behind you. As well as not touching the tables, and chairs. All the while interpreting the music, concurrently interpreting the beat and the musical pauses to fit the tango vocabulary while maintaining the spacing between the couples.

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The Blame Game

The dance starts out on an even footing. It’s quite clear two steps later that one of you is clearly better than the other. Usually the Lead believes that they’re all that, and the Follower is just trying to survive the compressive embrace, let alone actually dance. In reality…well let’s just say that no one is perfect and leave it at that, shall we ?

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Keep something in the back of your mind: What you’re seeing in a youtube video is a couple that is performing for the 15th row for a room full of people. They’re not social dancingWhereas this website is all about ‘Social Tango’  or how to make things function on a social dance floor. Social Dance floor ? Your local milonga! They are showing you flashy moves as a presentation, to show off! But not stopping and talking about how this works which is what you need to see. This website and all of it’s content show you the how and  why you’d want to put that piece of vocabulary there, or how to make things work. This website is all about those things and more!

You could watch Tango YouTube videos and thereby spend your time, trying to infer, and figure out how things may work in that particular situation. Bend your body this way or that, twist and force this position or that. Place your foot here or there and figure it out. This is known as Tango Twister.  Which can be a lot of fun, but more than likely it won’t help you, because you’re missing something: The explanation from an experienced teacher showing you how to properly excute this stuff from a Leading Perspective as well as from a Following Perspective!

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