Heel vs. Toe (Lead) ?

Today’s Thought is a very old debate in the Tango world. The Debate ? To step forward as a Lead with a Heel strike first OR a Toe point first.

The Heel Strike Side: This side of the debate says that you can and should, when stepping forward, step forward as if you were walking on the street, normally. You would use the heel in a natural way, allowing it to strike the pavement or the floor (in the case of dancing) as you would normally. There’s nothing about this idea that is new. This is something that you don’t necessarily need to learn a whole lot about, as it just ‘happens’. There’s not a lot to it really. 

The Toe Point Side: This side of the debate says is all about the visual and not necessarily the functional. Unlike the Follower, who are in an elevated position and they must accommodate the heel by turning their foot to the 5th metatarsal, the Lead in this case, is all about creating a visual line, and that visual line starts with pointing one’s toe! Everywhere! Put simply, the Lead is the visual representation of what the Follower will ultimately express, so the thinking goes, and that starts with creating nice sharp lines, and detailed junctures or in this case, points! Every time that a Lead steps forward or side, they want to point their toe, defining what the Follower will ultimately fill in. They’re creating a shape, and the Follower fills that shape

Which is better ? Quite honestly neither is ‘better’. It’s what happens. This debate has raged for years, and you’re going to hear a lot of language about how X points his toe and here’s the video proof, or that Y uses a Heel strike and there’s the video on youtube. Yup. Both of those things happen. However the reality is this, that both have their place. It’s not one over the other, but rather a range of ideas that sometimes require you to do one over the other. Put another way this is about vocabulary and musical choices. One idea works better than another under certain conditions that allow for the expression of a particular piece of vocabulary under the condition of a particular musical phrase. So in other words, it is, as in the case of the same plight for the Follower, entirely situational! Leaning both would seem to be the better option. And yet, that’s not what’s advocated sadly.

The Rodriguez ‘Pop’: This particular thought would be remiss if one particular dancer, was not mentioned. One who really set a trend for many younger dancers to follow was/is Javier Rodriguez. He accentuated an ideal of a Lead walk that many, many dancers emulated and put into their dance. One reason for the emulation was that it was striking, visually appealing, and singularly unique. For most people it seemingly settled the debate entirely of which is better because he accentuated BOTH ideas in one. You could easily argue (and many have) that he’s pointing his toe as he extends, and at the end of the point, he’s landing with heel strike (which incidentally results in the aforementioned). When in fact, what Javier was doing was a perfectly natural ‘pop’ off the floor as a result of his heel strike! However that didn’t stop a fair number of people attempting to emulate what Javier was doing.https://www.youtube.com/embed/Gl32aaB136g

Tango Topics Opinion.  The Lead steps forward, depending on the context of the floor, about 40 to 60% of the time. They spend most of their time, in modern tango, turning or invoking one of 8 types of Turns. And if we’re being honest, really honest, a good portion of them spend most of their time stuck in a Parallel Walking Argentine Rock Step, or Argentine Parada Loop!

Two Sides of the same Coin ? The line of reasoning is that if you’re going to spend that much time doing something, you should probably learn to do it well. Unfortunately, that’s not what happens. What ends up happening is that a good portion of Leads learn just enough to get around the floor and not go any further than that. Why bother ? Right ? No one is complaining, or the feedback has stopped (mostly because they stopped asking for it), so why bother going any deeper ? The fact is that you absolutely must go deeper, you must go beyond your original programming and honestly find out why this stuff works as indicated and not just accept that X is true. It’s not. Not until you figure it out for yourself. The reason ? Is because more than likely you will actually start to discover that what you’ve been doing all along may not be in your best interest and that with a little judicious behavior and forethought that you can improve the quality of your dance, which thereby improves the experience of the Follower!

The 1 Thing Not Mentioned: The Knee! In the case of the Toe Side of the Argument, the Knee does NOT want to bend a lot or the flex of the knee is very, very, very slight as we want to create long, clean, straight lines with this methodology, and therefore bending or flexing the knee breaks that convention. In the case of the Heel Side of the Argument, the knee can and does want to flex! Just so you’re aware of this stuff, Tango Topics does have an extensive video on both of these ideas that is available to subscribers.

MORE REMINDERS

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’.

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Giving Feedback

This is probably one the most important things in Argentine Tango that you can do for yourself and the people that you dance with. Giving constructive, clear, concise, clean, direct, and most of all, honest feedback. It is what is required. While feedback is subjective, it is not personal, it’s what is going on for you in the construct of the dance, the walk, the embrace, and how someone moves in relation to you.

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On My Balance

Frequently with Argentine Tango we use language that we think is descriptive of what we’re doing but in actual fact is either not that or so far from the mark it is more confusing than anything else. Before we go any further, it is possible that in reading this that you may not see the issue at all. That you know what the speaker meant, and that’s the important part, right. Wrong. That’s the problem right there. The inference. If you have to infer that X or Y is occurring then there’s far too much ‘wiggle’ room for errors in understanding to crop up.

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Moscow For Leads

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It’s Too Late

Frequently most dancers after they ‘learn’ something will fail to solo practice it, as well as use it at a social practica, which as a result fails to deepen their fluidity when dancing so that when X, Y, and Z is led or followed they ‘miss’ it and hesitate. Thereby creating the impression that they’re inept dancers.

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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.

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The Birthday Song

The Benefits of a Birthday Song. There are a few, but important, benefits to having a Birthday Song for one or more people at the Milonga. 1.) From an organizational position, the Milonga Organizer can use this as a way to advertise the weekly Milonga. "It’s Miles’ Birthday, Come and Dance with him into the wee hours!". That sort of thing. 2.) It’s a way for the Community to come together and support one of their own.

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Social Dancing

Social Dancing’ means going out with friends, or to meet friends, at a Milonga, for the purpose of getting together to dance Argentine Tango (or most any other dance) better known as ‘Social Tango’. The emphasis is on the social part, and not the technical part.

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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.

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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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