Showing posts with label "Tango Blogs". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Tango Blogs". Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2022

Top 30 Tango Dance Blogs and Websites To Follow in 2022

Interesting that I'm ranked #7 in the "Top 30 Tango Dance Blogs and Websites To Follow in 2022" - from Feedspot - looks like ranked by traffic first. Not sure how my little 'ol blog-o-drivel managed that. El link-o-rama down there at the bottom if you want proof.

I guess I'm honored. I guess I should be proud. But I'm so god-damned humble. Plus Arthur Murray is on the list, so I'm not sure what I think.

Definitely not taking this to the bank.

Thank you?

No, okay, seriously dear reader/follower, thank you for reading, following, supporting this blog. Surely in all my traffic there is some reading viewing pondering and such going on. And that does make me feel good. That does make me feel some level of pride. That does give me sense of some sort of "job well done" ish ness.

You love me! You really really love me!

Big shit-eating grin y'all.

I love all y'all.

#upcloseandpersonal
#awardwinningtangoblogs
#tootingmyownhorn
#selfpromotion


https://blog.feedspot.com/tango_blogs/


Sent from my iPad

Monday, November 11, 2019

Visions of tango - Tango Mentor


Visions of tango

Visions of tango? This topic is highly explosive. So, before I begin, I ask you for patience and, if you disagree with me, for respect: we all love tango, but not all of us have the same vision or the same taste.

Let me start with this article as an experiment. Take a look at the video and give some thought to the dancing you see there. Some of you will like it, but the majority will think of it as bad dancing.


What if I tell you that I like it? Would you believe me?

And why do you think others have a completely different opinion?

Well, this article is about just that. My intention is not really to start a discussion, more to shed light on the countless discussions in the tango world. People take a stand often for personal reasons, but most of the times there is a deeper reason that is connected to how people view tango.

I have to warn you – I'm not an objective observer. I take sides in this discussion! I have strong opinions about these things – you will see below which one (if you haven't already). I consider it my mission to help those who agree with me, those that feel that there is more to tango than just performing.

Of course, things are not always black and white. One cannot draw a strict line between the two different ways but that should not stop us thinking about the differences. That is a necessary condition of learning.

In tango, the lines are often blurred and there are several reasons:

Sometimes they are purely financial – teaching the more acrobatic shiny variety of tango is more lucrative.

Other times, they come from the artistic mindset of the teachers who come to the world of social dancing with an artistic background or ambition. These two reasons can of course exist at the same time but the reason can also be completely different.

In this article I will talk about four dichotomies. I have formulated four questions that will help every dancer to find out what his or her vision of tango is, or rather, where one should stand if one wants to become a social tango dancer.

And here they are, so ask yourself:

1. Where do you dance?

Why do you take classes and where are you going to use this knowledge?

If you are a social dancer your answer will be "At milongas of course!" So, what kind of knowledge do you need to be able to dance at milongas?

It is interesting that often when I share my article "Practice less, dance more" so many people disagree with me and the polemics start.

Some people think that you can't learn to dance just by dancing more at milongas – because their goal is not dancing at milongas – their vision of tango is stage tango, and I agree, it is impossible to learn how to dance stage tango at milongas. That is where you learn to dance social tango (which some people call tango milonguero).

2. Why do you dance?

The question here is do you dance for your partner or for those who watch?

Dancing for your partner is called social dancing. Dancing for a public is called show (escenario).

In my opinion, if you are a social dancer your foremost goal should be to be able to connect with your partner. Everything you do is testing or supporting that connection.

On the other hand, if you are more of a showy dancer, you will probably consider the connection a tool that will help you with the steps.

This is the reason I believe that competing (for example the Tango Mundial) is bad for the development of social tango. Being a champion, in my opinion, is not a good recommendation. Competitors dance for the judges – which is dancing for the observers. And, dancing for the observers requires that you develop a different style than what is required when dancing in a milonga.

I believe the only judge relevant when social dancing is your partner.

3. How do you dance?

Everything you do in tango has its purpose.

For example, some insist on using large steps and a lot of energy. Why? In my opinion, that approach was developed by the stage dancers. When you perform and you have a large crowd in front of you, you need them to see what you are doing, even those seated in the back row. That is why everything you do has to be large.

You also have to move a lot and take up a lot of space, because if you don't, you will look small on the big stage.

It is similar with stage actors. They have to make big movements and speak loudly – on the stage you can't notice subtle gestures and face expressions.

Dancing social tango on stage would be boring for the crowd.

Here I believe one should think in dichotomies like large vs small, loud vs soft, grandiose vs subtle, showy vs discreet…

I consider those who sign up as members of the inner circle – those with whom I feel free to share deeper insights and more comments than I am allowed to share in my articles. I consider the members of my list as "my tribe" or "my people"… so, I care more when they have something to ask or to share with me. Sign up here:

4. What kind of dancer are you?

Are you an artist/performer or a social dancer?

They both belong to the tango world, but are located in different places. Art in my mind means inovating, dedicating time and energy to be original and mastering the techniques to achieve what you imagine in the best way possible.

On the other side you can find social dancers who are not artists, but artisans (check the lecture by Osvaldo Natucci).


This is why I think social tango is not really that hard to learn. Learning social tango is easy and necessary. Learning to perform on stage is hard and unnecessary.

Teaching all your students to dance show tango is like teaching all swimmers to become Olympians. 99% of them will never compete, but 100% of them will swim in the sea. The goal should be to make them float and not drown 🙂 You learn to swim foremost by entering the water, not by taking countless classes or having hardcore workouts.

I always advice fellow teachers to prepare their students for dancing at milongas, not to perform. 99% of them will never perform on stage, but 100% of them will dance at milongas.

I know, there is a big chance you might have a different opinion and, if that works for you, I have no saying there. But if you agree with me, help me spread the word by sharing this article with your friends. Thanks for that!




Sunday, November 3, 2019

A beginner reviews ‘Our Tango World’ | journey of a trainee tanguero


A beginner reviews 'Our Tango World'

Our Tango World, 1: Learning and Community is an oddly prosaic title for an extremely poetic and impassioned book. I couldn't help but feel that it deserves something more akin to Twelve Minutes of Love.

But the fact that I'm writing this review a little over 24 hours after taking delivery of the book is testament to the fact that this was my sole disappointment …


I've written before about being inspired by Iona Italia's blog, so when I saw that she had a book on the way, I ordered it the moment I saw it was up for pre-order. (And in doing so, robbed Steph of one of her planned xmas presents for me; she sent me the link, intending to judge from my reaction how interested I would be in reading it, only to find that, 30 seconds later, I'd ordered a copy.)

Iona devoted a decade of her life to tango in Buenos Aires; I'm a three-month-in beginner. Parts of OTW are like hearing tips for constructing the Large Hadron Collider while I'm still trying to construct a lever using two pencils on a desktop. But it's testament to her communication skills that almost all of the book is accessible to someone who had to Google some of the terminology.

When she talks about feeling a leader's smile as she wordlessly draws his attention to a violin part he'd never before noticed, that is something so far beyond my imagining that it might as well be written in, well, Spanish. And yet, rather than making me feel depressed that I was three feet from my front door on a walking circumnavigation of the globe, I felt inspired to see just how far the tango journey could take me, should I have the desire, dedication and deftness needed to reach such a level.

Part of that is perspective, of course. Remembering, as someone recently commented on an earlier post, that tango is a journey, not a destination. But much of it is in the way Iona makes you view the infinite levels to tango as an opportunity, not as a series of steps that must be climbed.

It's full of advice that seems equally useful to a beginner as to an intermediate dancer. I'll give just one example of many. Dissociation is one of the harder challenges for beginners – or British male ones, at any rate. Understanding how is key; but Iona's simple description of the 'why' is one which really helps me think about what I'm trying to achieve – the sensation I'm aiming to create.

In tango, everything begins with the intention of embracing. Dissociated, spiralling movements start from a desire to reach around and encircle your partner.

My copy of OTW is not yet 36 hours old, and is already full of turned-over corners, highlighted sentences and vertical lines alongside paragraphs. On a second reading (for this is not a book to read only once), I'm sure it will acquire more of each. It's written so beautifully, part of me feels like I'm defacing a work of art. But, for me, it's testament to the quality of a book.

This has always been my approach to books with things to teach me. They are tools which demand to be used. There is so much value that would be lost if I relied on the optimistic idea that these ideas will somehow seep into my dance at just the right time. Iona talks much of the value of practice. This is no different. These are nuggets which need to be revisited and consciously infused into my tango. Letting these things go forgotten would be so much uglier than yellow streaks on the page.

I will be photographing each of those highlighted passages, and pasting them into my tango notebook. Picking out one at a time to act as a second focal point for my lessons each week.

In some ways, OTW is a textbook. There are thousands of words of practical advice applicable, I suspect, to dancers of almost every level. It's a guidebook to the tango world. But it's also a poetic journey into that world, lived through the observant eyes and thoughtful mind of a devoted traveller.




journey of a trainee tanguero :: ben lovejoy blog :: ben goes to BsAs


Next stop, Buenos Aires!

Everyone says it's only a matter of time. Take up tango, and at some point you're going to want to go to Buenos Aires.

I'm fortunate enough to have some local guides. Steph has been before, so knows her way around a bit – and, handily, speaks Spanish. Diego kindly gave us a literal day-by-day milonga schedule, with a taste of everything from uber-traditional at one end through casual porteño to 'underground.' I'm having a lesson and a drink with Iona Italia. And a friend who visits often has put us in touch with someone who is taking us to a barrio milonga a little way outside the city …

Continue reading




Thursday, September 20, 2018

Twenty Tango Lessons :: Andrea Shepard's "Life Is A Tango Blog"


Oscar Grillo Artist

From Andrea Shepard's blog "Life is a Tango"...she's in Montreal...

I took my very first tango class in 1997. It is now 2017, so that means I have been officially dancing tango for 20 years! And what a journey it has been.

So, has it all been worth it? Absolutely.

Has it been easy? Of course not.

Over the years I have learned many things. I have learned confidence and humility, I have learned to let go and to stand up for myself, to be both tougher and more understanding, to lead and to follow, to express myself and to listen, to be engaged and relaxed, to think ahead while living in the moment, to follow the rules while thinking outside the box.

In no particular order, I have come up with 20 things I have learned in 20 years of tango. In an effort to keep my posts both shorter and more regular (it has been months since my last post!), my plan is to publish one "lesson" a week for the next 20 weeks.

Lesson No. 1: Tango evolves and so must we. Tango has changed in the 20 years since I was a beginner. The dance has changed, the trends and customs have changed, my city has changed and of course I have changed. Back then, tango learning was all about the steps. By the time I had finished Tango 2 I think I had learned ganchos and boleos, barridas and sacadas. Teachers were not really talking about following the line of dance, or the ronda -- beyond mentioning the fact that things moved in a generally counter-clockwise direction on the dance floor -- most local DJs did not play cortinas to separate the tandas and nobody used the cabeceo. The Broadway show Forever Tango was touring the world while Sally Potter's movie The Tango Lesson and Carlos Saura's Tango were just being released. All around us were showy moves and dramatic music. Pugliese instrumentals and show soundtracks were played everywhere. In a couple of years, this new group called Gotan Project would bring an entirely new, equally dramatic and thoroughly modern sound that would be a big sign of things to come. Meanwhile, tango shoes from Argentina were not yet readily available so we all danced in whatever kind of dance shoes we could find. Montreal was already a major player on the North American tango scene, and you could dance seven nights a week even then, but each night there was one milonga on offer, so the whole community knew where to go, came together and most events were a guaranteed success."


Click here to read the complete "Part One" post...and then click on each successive of the Parts 2-20 at the bottom of each post...

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Tango Addiction :: A not-so-new tango blog

red embrace
[Photo by Leone Perugino]

Boy do I feel like a putz. A real wanker. I've been so "disassociated" from this blog that I haven't added a link in the sidebar for one of my favorite blogs. One of the few I actually make time to read. And not that I would ever believe this blog, ATF, is "all that" and is somehow the standard bearer for all links to all tango blogs.

Quite the contrary. I'm sure that there are at least a dozen or two new blogs that I am missing in my links sidebar. I'm pretty sure I'm quite incomplete and out of date that way. I just like to include the good ones, blogs of note, blogs of tango friends (who I've never met and never danced with, and may never), blogs with good writing and good humor and astute/keen observation. This blog, from Terpsichoral Tangoaddict, a friend through Facebook.

She's a follower, living and dancing in Buenos Aires.

Please accept my most humble apologies, kind Muse.

In her latest post, "The Oestrogen Cloud", she describes the feel of a particular type of follower thusly: "...that the best of them feel as light as pedaling a bicycle downhill; as soft as my old velveteen teddy bear with one missing eye; as responsive as a thoroughbred horse; and yet as tranquil as an aged labrador...".

It's the "pedaling a bicycle downhill" that got me. This is an almost perfect analogy of what it feels like to dance with these women. I've weakly characterized it before as "dancing with a butterfly", which obviously no one can know what that feels like, and can only imagine.

I first felt it in an epiphanous (not a word?) dance with a porten~a teacher in a private lesson in the frigid Masonic Temple in Glenwood Springs, Colorado. Epiphany, breakthrough, come-to-jesus, hallelujah, whatever you want to call it. It was a seminal moment of seminal moments. With none of my usual sophomoric innuendo whatsoever.

Reading her post simultaneously transported me back to BA (where I was one of those foreign guys within an estrogen cloud of two, if that counts...dutifully doing the promotional/advertising tandas with/for them...and failing miserably with my Quasimodo cabeceo, scaring the local women no doubt, finally resorting in the wee hours to getting drunk on vino tinto and stuffing empanadas in my pie hole...), and back to that two hours with Gabriella in Colorado. Anyway, Gaby and I were "just" dancing during that private, and she would stop to correct me, correct my lead - explain what I was doing wrong (or not doing), and explain how it felt (wrong), and how she wanted it to feel. Little tweakages here and there. Nuances. Ever-so-slight. Ever-so-light, but without doubt of intention. So I'm babbling again. Driveling. My point is that this light-but-with-clarity-and-purpose-and-sublimely-connected-responsive feeling is reciprocal in both follow and lead. Mutuality.

Unfortunately, in my world, rare. I only know it exists through luck and happenstance. I know it exists because I have felt it. Because I have danced it. Because I have had it danced unto me. Into me.

I miss it.

For me, that's the sign of good writing. Writing that communicates a concept, a moment, an experience, a dance, a feeling - and dredges up your own memories - touching, poignant, whatever. Memories, and feelings. Dredged up to feel it all over again, sitting wide awake at 4am in a seedy motel next to a refinery in Odessa, Texas. (The dickweeds who woke me up are sound asleep now...)

I may owe my lead to Gaby. My elusive lead, the "I'm not sure if it's still there" lead.

Anyway, check out Tango Addiction. Dig back into the archives.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Day One In Buenos Aires: "Oh God"

Here's a guest post from my good friend Rigoberto about a new blog he found - Bora's Tango Journey:

"Over the last few years there have been a number of blog posts about first visits to BsAs--mostly women, but a few men. This one is written by a young woman, and chronicles each day of her month long visit. She's about halfway through the trip, and posts each day. It really is a fascinating look at tango culture there now--the milongas, people, classes--as seen from a visiting dancer's perspective. This is the first post from a couple weeks ago. They make more sense, of course, if read in order. At the top right of each post, you can click on the next day's post. She's up to Day 17."

http://borastangojourney.com/2010/11/30/day-one-in-buenos-aires-oh-god/

Monday, November 8, 2010

Get it while it's hot! :: Melina's Two Cents

New bloguera & professional tango teacher Melina Sedo...of Melina & Detlef fame...is trying her hand at a blog...

Before she changes her mind, check out her first post...

http://melinas-two-cent.blogspot.com/2010/11/good-news-really.html

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Today in Tango :: a new blog

A new blog, based in Rome...they cover a historical event in tango the tango world that happened on a particular day...way back when...in the Golden Age...and possibly more recent events I suppose...

Cool concept. Check it out. "Today in Tango".

http://todayintango.wordpress.com/

Sunday, September 13, 2009

New Blog :: Poesía de gotán ::The Poetry of the Tango

I just ran across this on Facebook. Check it out.

http://poesiadegotan.wordpress.com/


Derrick Del Pilar has extensive experience studying the history and language of tango in Buenos Aires. He also has a B.A. in Creative Writing and Spanish & Portuguese from the University of Arizona, and is currently working on an M.A. in Latin American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. His specialties are Argentine literature and Iberian Linguistics.

Mission:
To foster an appreciation of the poetry of the Golden Age tango lyricists in Anglophone dancers.

Products:
Freely available translations on the web! Just visit the blog.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Movement Invites Movement :: A New Tango Blog

My thanks go out to Jorge* & Mrs. Red Dress (very nice dress by the way) for adding this blog to their blogroll. They just started blogging this month, and have no doubt already created a stir by unequivocally stating that "Nuevo is NOT Tango".

My kinda folks!

Although, I must admit that this past weekend, at the Gustavo y Giselle Atlanta workshop (who some, including a good tango friend of mine...) view as "Nuevo" dancers), during a class, I broke into about one minute of FauxNuevo. It was my own little joking parody of memyselfandI if I were a Nuevo dancer. It made her laugh, so it musta worked.

Anyway, check out the new blog here.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Updated blogroll link :: Joe Grohens/The Topic is Tango

Joe's blog has been listed in my blogroll for some time now, but the link was orphaned/outdated. Joe contacted me with the correct information.

Check it out!

http://blog.cu-tango.com/tango/

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Damn! Why didn't I think of that!? :: TangoEros :: New Blog

This is Lily...an architect/tanguera from Hong Kong...she's in Buenos Aires for three months...

I like the name "Tangoeros"...I love the play on words...it looks like "tangueros" misspelled at first...

http://www.wretch.cc/blog/tangoeros

Monday, April 28, 2008

New Blog :: Niki & Scott

Brand spanking new, launched earlier this month, just a few posts. Looks like they will be blogging about their tango trials and upcoming sabbatical in Buenos Aires.

Have a look.

http://tangotrails.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 17, 2007