Musicality Vs. Interpretation

What you’re about to read is a very radical concept for some people, one that will cause you to reject it out of hand, until you dig a little deeper and discover the why part. So radical in fact that you’ll dismiss it as the crackpot rantings of a delusional madman who’s delivering ‘alternative facts’ in Conway fashion.

The statement ? There is no such thing as ‘Musicality’ in Argentine Tango.

To be clear. Yes, there is a word in the English Oxford Dictionary which is defined as “Musical Talent or Sensitivity”. However, as you can see, with regards to Argentine Tango, one thing does not mean what it has come to mean when we reference this word. Essentially we have bastardized this word to come to mean something entirely different than it’s English dictionary cognate.

So what do we really mean ? “To place Argentine Tango vocabulary, sequences, patterns, and figures, in time to the musical beat, pauses, and phrases of a particular song so as to create, or convey another level of meaning of the song that is either not in the song literal or is implied directly in its emotional context”.

Hmmmm…does that sound like ‘Musicality’ to you ? Or perhaps something else…

Enter, the literal definition of the word ‘Interpretation’ which means, “the action of explaining the meaning of something.” or “a stylistic representation of a creative work”.

Hmmmmm….gosh, doesn’t that sound more like the definition of ‘Musicality’ than anything else ?

So what we’re really doing is actually ‘Interpreting The Music’. How’s that ? If you consider for a moment that when you are dancing, regardless of level, you are constantly listening to what’s happening in the music, making navigational changes (regardless of role), which in turn affect your vocabulary/patterns/steps/figure choices, which in turn affects how and when you can execute anything. That entire process of affectation is Interpretation.

You’re going to ask yourself, “Who the frak cares if it’s ‘interpretation’ or ‘musicality’ ? It all means the same thing, right ? Well, actually, you should. Here’s why: When you stop and think about it, when you’re talking to someone and use the word ‘Musicality’, what do you think comes to their mind ? Any one of a dozen different ideas ranging from its literal definition above, to possible vocabulary choices, or a specific figure, or dancing milonga, or, or, or….you see where this is going right ? Lots and lots of places for confusion. Instead, if we employ the phrase “Interpreting The Music” it creates a state of absolute clarity with your language and what you intend to mean. Further still, it also gives you creative license to keep doing what you’re doing because you’re ‘Interpreting The Music’ the way you hear it. Stating ‘Musicality’ as ‘Interpretation’ removes all doubt of your intent. This is why there is a need to be crystal clear with our verbiage/language here. When describing what we’re working on, or what we want to work on, or how we would like to dance, or describing a problem that we’re having, wouldn’t it be better to be precise than to be vague ? 

MORE REMINDERS

The Row of Men That Stand

There’s that row of men that stand at every milonga. They hover. They waver from side to side. They stand with their arms crossed. All by themselves. They never sit, and they seemingly never dance. There’s usually a row of them, more than 3 or 4. And no matter what happens, you almost never see them dance. There’s a reason for that. It’s because a good portion of the better Followers in the room has had a less than desirable experience with them.

Read More »

Being Criticized

The truth is that this is critical feedback, about what you’re doing and how you’re doing it. Hopefully that critical feedback or criticism is done with exacting detail, which is needed for analysis, breakdown, and then reconstruction or rebuilding your posture, walk, embrace, vocabulary, and/or musical interpretation. Without that critical feedback, you will continue to make the same mistakes over and over again thinking that everything is happy and lovely when in fact it’s not.

Read More »

Giving Up Tango

There comes a point in your Tango life for one of several reasons where you find yourself in an odd place – the want to give up Tango. The most common reason is that you’re just not getting the same thing from the dance as you used to get from it. You go to Milongas. You find yourself sitting more, talking more, and dancing less.

Read More »

The Walking Debate

A good portion of Follower’s close their eyes while dancing. The Lead, obviously, can’t close their eyes, but they do cast their eyes towards the floor to watch their Follower’s feet (tsk, tsk, tsk). They close their eyes for a variety of reasons: 1.) To be able to concentrate better. 2.) To ‘feel’ their partner in a more ‘connected’ way. 3.) To not be so distracted by the rest of the room. 4.) To feel more intimate. 5.) To tune out.

Read More »

Tango Reputation

No matter how hard you try (positively or negatively) you’re going to acquire a ‘Tango Reputation’. Meaning ? How you engage socially, how you dance, who you dance with, how ‘good’ you are, how often you dance, if you teach, where you teach, who you teach with, whether or not (if you teach) you dance only with your students or with others, if you teach others while dancing (tsk, tsk, tsk), whether or not you dance milonga, how good your milonga skills are, whether or not you lead and follow or not.

Read More »

The Practica

The idea of a Practica is ‘theoretically’ to Practice what you have learned. To try out what you have been shown, with multiple partners, as if you were in a class rotation. It is ‘theoretical’ because while the theory is nice, the reality is a little different.

Read More »

Follower Bashing

All too often a good portion of Followers get the short end of the stick as it were. They’re blamed for missing this or that, not having enough resistance (a major no-no), not pushing, not leaning enough (false apilodo another major no-no), not stepping in the right place, not keeping up with the lead, etc. They’re blamed for a host of things from walking, to musical interpretation. After a while they develop a complex of just taking responsibility for almost everything that happens that isn’t desirable in the dance, instead of the Lead taking rightful responsibility for what’s been led! This is known as ‘Bashing The Follower’.

Read More »

10 REASONS TO SUBSCRIBE

There are 4 Levels of Access: Free, Basic, Premium, and Premium+. Free pays nothing but gets a perk just for signing up. 

1.) Free Users get to see 5 of the 125 Different Tango Topics on the site. Plus you get access to the entire Tango Reminders and Tango Ideas sections of the site. These are short form Topic descriptors with a little detail about the topic and the video.

2.) 
Basic and Premium users Save A BOATLOAD of MONEY! Buying this stuff outright is expensive.

3.) Basic, Premium, and Premium+ users get access to the ALL ARTICLES and THE FULL ARTICLE which you can’t see right now.

4.) Basic, Premium, and Premium+ users have way better video resolution: Free = 420p, Basic = 720p, Premium = 1080p and 4K. 

5.) Basic, Premium, and Premium+ users get the ‘Dancing Perspectives’ & ‘The Soup’ sections of the document you just read (Lead, Follow, and Dancing) which are open to you. And that’s where all the good stuff is at. 

6.) Video Downloads! 

7.) Access to the Tango Topics Music Library (22 Curated Golden Age Orchestras)

8.) Access to ‘Tango Del Dia’ – Our Music Education System with access to 14 Days of Music, 30 Days of Music Education, and 30 More Days of Tango Del Dia. 

9.) We explain things, break the vocabulary down in a visual way, from multiple angles, showing feet, hands, and close ups! Yes there’s a lot of talking but we want you to understand what it is that you’re doing and why, not just steps, patterns, and figure

and #10:
No more annoying ads at the bottom of the page, begging you to subscribe! 

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!

The goal of YouTube videos is to get you to study with those teachers in person. The goal of Tango Topics videos allows you to work at your own pace, in the comfort of your own space, so that you can play them over and over again to improve your understanding of the vocabulary or technique being described to therefore better your dancing experience. The goal of classes and workshops is to get you to come back over and over and over again, thereby spending more money with that teacher. This website and the videos under it are here to act as a resource for you to help you to improve your dance. Pay once and you’re done.

Eventually, one way or another you’re going to pay for this lesson, either here and now, or with them. TANSTAAFL! The difference between that lesson and this ? Is that you get to play this lesson over and over and over again. Further still, there are supporting materials (other videos) that help to explain the language and the underlying technique of how and why things work, so you can easily reference those things in the corresponding articles that go with the material, and or any language in the Tango Topics Dictionary. 

DROP ME MSG HERE

Hide picture