Another
excellent evening of
dance at Carablanca.
The
music was much appreciated, and set me wondering just how a DJ
manages to keep us
all
on the floor all evening. The answers are pretty much on his website: ensuring
that the tanda begins well, which means an extensive knowledge of the
music from a dancer's point of view, and meticulous technical
understanding of, and attention to, sound quality. I found the sound
was particularly remarkable: the music felt warm and rich, with an
excellent spacious feel to it, although the tracks are mono. The various lines of melody and
rhythm were clear, without the slightest discernible distortion. When
you've got sound and a selection of music like that, you feel you can
relax, trust it and enjoy it. Bernhard has played in that hall
before, so
he knows it and the speakers there, and knows how to make the most of
it. In any case, it's
a good space for music.
As
for the dancing, I'm sure it's a lot calmer and smoother than it was
a few years ago. I've never seen Carablanca seriously crowded*, but
it can feel that way when people aren't
skilled in dancing on 'una baldosa' – on a single tile (as they say
in Buenos Aires milongas). Out of the dancers there, there were perhaps only one or two with that skill. If everyone had that skill you could just about double the number of dancers and it would still feel perfectly comfortable.
(*On
one occasion – but that was virtually a private party.)
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