Tango Accents

You may not realize this but you have an accent. The place that you live in, the people that you dance with, the teachers that you have studied with, and last but not least, the variation of those ideas from the original, creates a local tango ‘accent’. Every city where Tango is danced has an accent which is specific to that place and to that place alone. Boston, San Francisco, Paris, London, Berlin, Moscow, etc. They all have one, up to and including Buenos Aires, especially Buenos Aires! The difference between your local flavor of Tango and say Boston, Paris, and London, is like night and day within a spectrum of ideas. 

If you’re thinking that Tango is Tango, an Ocho is an Ocho, a Molinete is a Molinete, a Cross is a Cross, Close Embrace is Close Embrace no matter where you are, think again. It’s not. Not by any stretch of the imagination. There are variations on ideas that are popular within a given geographic area based on a number of relevant factors that you may or may not be aware of: Not the least of which is the popular teaching person/couple, the things that said teacher(s) talk about, the way that person(s) dances, and the people that they they dance with regularly, these are all influences that contribute to where a given populace gravitates towards dancing wise. Now add to that the ripple effect of those influences, and then the people that don’t necessarily study with X or Y, but either witness X or Y, and or their surrogates, and those people see what’s popular and then they’ll try to emulate it. All of this affects the line of dance, their dance partners, their choice of dance partners, which in turn affects the line and lane of dance (floorcraft), and really the people dancing in the room,. Now add to that the dancing venues themselves, the size of the floors at these venues, the quality and choice of the music being played, the quality of dancers at those venues, and even the event atmosphere itself, all of this contributes to the psychology and movement of the dance, which all comes down to a local tango ‘accent’.

Some moves are popular, some embrace ideas are popular, some styles of music get played more often than naught. All of this contributes to the ‘flavor’ of tango that is danced in a given geographic region. Believe it or not this ‘accent’ shapes you, forms you, changes you whether or not you are conscious of it or not. It creates blind spots in you, it creates your idea of tango, it creates places in you where you are familiar with an idea but maybe not all of it’s complexities (for all the reasons listed above), it creates spaces in you that in some places are desirable, and other places it’s not.

What does this mean ? Is all of this ‘bad’ or less than desirable ? Yes and No. ‘Yes’, because it limits you to your available options. And ‘No’ is a very subjective idea. The subjective idea is that we want to be as versatile as humanly possible and then some. To be able to dance with everyone, no matter their ‘style’ or in this case ‘accent’ of tango. So the question arises, should you avoid the local tango ‘accent’ ? Yes. The next question is “how” ? Mark Twain once wrote, “Travel is Fatal To Prejudice…”, the same is true here. To avoid the less than desirable, to avoid the tango doldrums, to avoid complacency, you must, must, must, must travel for Tango as often as is humanly possible, and dance with as many people as is humanly possible. They say it takes a village to raise child. Well the same is true of Tango. It takes many, many, many voices (not just one) to raise a Tango dancer to be desirable everywhere they go! In short, you must get out of Dodge City constantly.

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MORE REMINDERS

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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Wood Floors

The toy of choice for most dancers is a ‘Sprung’ floor! That’s a work of art, science, and pure magic. Sprung floors are to dancers, what honey is to bees.  A ‘Sprung’ floor ? What’s that ? A Sprung floor is a dance floor that easily absorbs shocks, giving it a softer feel. Such floors are considered the best available for dance and indoor sports and physical education. They enhance performance and greatly reduce injuries.

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Sweating

Tango can be, and usually is, a sweaty business for a variety of reasons. Not the least of which is the fact that in many places there are noise ordinances that prevent Milonga organizers from opening the windows. Or the venue where the Milonga is held, their air conditioning units are not up to the task, and are easily overwhelmed by more than 50 people in a room for sustained usage.

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Lethargy (Moving Too Slow)

Lethargy is moving too slow for the intended lead’s request (‘lead’ is the action, and not the person). What this really boils down to is the reaction time of the dancer that is a.) a lag from the time at which a request was sent to the time it was received. and b.) way in which it is done (the real speed issue). Note what’s missing from this definition, the roles of the dance! There is no blame in this definition. None what so ever. However, that is seemingly about to change. It’s not, but your perception of it will until you get to the end.

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Good Lead ?

There are many things to look for in a ‘Good’ Lead. Like for instance, the ability to keep time within the beat structure meaning that they’re placing their Follower’s on beat and not necessarily themselves. Still another is their posture which is reflected in the Follower’s posture as well. Still one more is the ‘cleanliness’ by which they execute a particular piece of vocabulary. That said ‘execution’ is done sharply, with snap and polish, and shows off their Follower, and in doing so, themselves. 😉 Those are some good signs of what qualifies as a ‘good’ lead (the action, not the person).

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Architecture

Architecture. There are certain things we want to do with our bodies in relation to Argentine Tango and Social Dancing, one of them is to ‘close our fingers’ or bring our fingers together in every possible place where we lay our hands on our partners or they come into contact with our partner’s bodies.

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Magical Improvement

“She’s not magically going to improve just because you ‘show’ her what she’s supposed to do at that moment.” To make this non gender specific, because this axiom applies to both genders, and both roles. As well as teachers and students. Some teachers know this truth, some teachers learn it the hard way. Clarity: The – “supposed to do” part above. This idea frequently occurs where you have a male Lead that has an expectation of X being followed properly, where X is Traveling Ochos, Volcada, Milonguero Turn, etc. And when it doesn’t they stop their dancing and then show the Follower what was intended. And here’s the magical part, they keep showing them, hoping that it will change the Follower’s behavior and frequently it doesn’t.

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Rejection

What follows relates to the verbal ask for a dance and the rejection, this thought does not talk about the reject from a failed cabeceo or mirada. Let’s lay out some facts before we get to the heart of this stuff. Fact: The ask, no matter how ‘sly’ you think you’re being, is going to be awkward.

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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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