Parts of Tango Music.

Tango music consists of 3 major components: 1.) Beat. 2.) Pause. And 3.) Phrase. In that order, and nothing but that order. Most people get the 1st one, that there’s a beat there, they may not be able to hear it because they’re “Beat Challenged” (or think they are, or have been told that they are, they’re not by the way, it’s a fallacy). The next one most people have never heard of except musicians and it’s the one that takes a little bit of time to hear and then to learn to execute. And yet this is the one that everyone should know because it quite literally defines their dancing! And the last one, Phrases ? Most advanced Tango dancers have heard of this one, the beginner dancer may run across this idea and try to take a class on the topic and wonder and may pick up an idea, but quite honestly very few people understand and can execute this last idea. 

Let’s break this down a bit more.

First we have Beat, and this one is really easy to get, or so you would think. This is the one that most people understand that there is a pulse or ‘beat’ to the music. Frequently though they confuse their understanding of Beat for Rhythm or vice versa (and they’re not the same things) – Beat, for clarity, is a component of Rhythm, it is the base building block of the music. Still another confusion is Tempo. Which is the speed at which that beat is played, and thereby the speed of the music. There is the confusion of Tempo for Rhythm, and vice versa, and again, they’re not the same things at all. Tempo is a component in Rhythm but again, not the same thing. Beat is, in layman’s terms, is a linear series of accented or stressed musical notes that are equally distant from each other that occur at the same time, in the same place, every Xth note. Where if you’re counting 1 to 4, X is always 1. It never stops, it never goes away, it never disappears, it’s always there, it’s always constant, and it never changes, ever!

Skipping to the last one – Phrase is a bit more difficult. Hearing the phrases, takes time and patience and is the single hardest thing that you will do. Unfortunately a good portion of teachers have no concerted method for teaching this concept of ‘phrasing’ to hear the ‘phrase’ except for putting shoes on the floor to represent the places where something should happen. The hard part about Phrases is that the method that is usually taught is the repetition method of hearing the same piece of music 10,000 times so that you know it backwards and forwards and can hum along with it. While this method is useful and does have its place, it is exceptionally time consuming. The problem is that it only addresses one side of the equation – The Musical Phrase. So if that’s one side, what’s the other ? Phrasing. Or put simply. A Musical Phrase is what you hear. PhrasING is what you do with that phrase! And again, they’re not the same things, nor are they even close to one another. And yet this is precisely what is ‘taught’. The problem is several fold, which Today’s Tango Thought is not going to drill down into (For the drill down – > See: Teaching Musical Interpretation), however the biggest problem is the method itself, repetition, not to mention the arcane way that music is taught to begin with. There is another method that relies on the brain’s own natural method of cataloguing information and yet this method is not taught. Sadly. Put simply the Musical Phrase is a series of Pauses, which may contain a specific rhythmical element between the Pause elements. Typically Phrases and Phrasing are confused and commingled with each other. And again, they’re not the same things. 

It’s the second one that we’re interested in: Pauses.A student once asked “How do you hear something that isn’t ‘there’ ?”. Answer ? You’re listening for a specific ‘marker’ which oddly enough are in every piece of tango music. There 13 ‘markers’ in all, but only 5 of them are very common. That’s how. And once you learn what to listen for, it’s like a world opens up for you. We want and need to listen for those markers from a Leading perspective as well as from a Following perspective, both roles are required to hear the music the same way at the same time! And yet it is this thing, that most people have never heard of except in passing as an afterthought to ‘beat’. While Beat is important to be certain, it’s not the only game in town, and truthfully while you must hear beat, you almost must learn to hear the Musical Pause. Because that Pause IS the MUSICAL PHRASE that you want to begin to play with. However you must be trained to hear those Pauses and the 5 types. This site has that information that you so desperately need. However this is not a sales pitch. It’s simply to point out to you the following facts: 4 out of 10 dancers can not hear the Musical Pause, and 6 out of 10 can not correctly hit every pause. They’ll miss a few, and those few are rather important ones, usually they’re the 4th kind of pause – The Musical Paragraph. And without going into detail about what that is and why it’s important, let’s just say that the Musical Paragraph is the marker that defines an entire piece of music, and there are 4 to 5 in every piece of music, and they have a definitive beginning, middle, and end. And once you hear one, you can’t unhear it. 

These items comprise the idea of Tango Music as you understand it. More on this later…. 

MORE REMINDERS

Getting To Buenos Aires

You’ve been dancing for a while, and you keep seeing these posts about Buenos Aires. Your dream has slowly developed to go to Buenos Aires, to experience for yourself what all the fuss is about. First there’s the dancing, you’ve heard it’s the best. There’s the shoes! OMG the shoes. Then there are friends that have been and rave about teacher X or Milonga Y. You’ve see the videos of performances at Salon Canning (but didn’t know it was Salon Canning), the pictures from Milongas, and thought to yourself that it didn’t look all that challenging than your local milonga there are just more people. You’ve heard that Spanish isn’t necessarily a requirement because there’s a lot of foreigners that speak English, and a good portion of the teachers speak it too. So you if you went, you wouldn’t really need to learn Spanish. 

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Variation

Repetition is only good in horseshoes and hand grenades. Which is to say, that no one, absolutely no one, likes being led to the same thing over and over and over again. Variation is the key to success! Small variation, large variations that open doors to other ideas, other thoughts. But in the end, variation. Taking an idea and then reversing it, or slowing it down, speeding it up, speeding up a part of it (musically), slowing down a piece of it, taking off the beginning or the end and reversing their positions. This is variation.

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Tango Frustration

Contrary to what you may have heard, the reality of Tango for some people is, as a Lead as well as a Follow, is not all happy and lovely. The fact is that some of those dancers go to the Milonga knowing that they are going to sit, a lot. And that sitting leads a winding path through a host of emotions that ultimately lands them on the door step of Tango Frustration.

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The Former Salon Canning

There are very few places left in Buenos Aires that still evoke the majesty of Tango’s yesteryears, for many, that is Salon Canning. From the moment you walk in the door, down the long hallway towards the white double door ‘entrance’ to the dance floor, you know you’re in a special place. The walls are lined with pictures of dancers that have come and gone, artwork and photography from local tango artisans. The entry hallway almost looks athenian, almost. It may help that the columns outside add to that idea.

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New York

Our little summary of dancing in New York City for the World Traveler that will be landing in NY soon and looking for some place to dance.

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Spectrum of Ideas.

Because there are no ‘Standards & Practices’ in Tango, therefore ‘Right’/’Wrong’ are subjective, which are for the most part, based on your teacher’s point of view of how things should be done. And as a result you, the unwitting student, take one those ideas as your own because you believe that because X is teaching that they must be the soul of all wisdom. Very infrequently do tango teachers teach a fair and balanced, or well rounded point of view. They usually teach what their subscribe to in their Tango world view, what they agree with, and what their teacher showed them. Very infrequently will they teach something that is outside that world view.

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Tango Improvement

You say the words, “I want to get better”. You mouth them as you watch the latest performance tango video on youtube. While at the same time, the thought flashes in your mind that you should schedule a private or two with X. ‘X’ being the local variant that teaches what you ‘believe in’. This teacher is also the one that you have gone to before and from your perspective has ‘helped’ you.

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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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