I
Skype a friend visiting Buenos Aires: she's been to classes with
Alicia
Pons.
Was
it about hyperactive ankles? I joke (badly).
'No,
she
talked about how we must relax into the embrace of our partner'.
In
a flash it occurs to me that this must
be
the
elusive difference between the embrace of partners I've danced with
in Buenos Aires, and the
embrace of many
dancers elsewhere, that
ability for
total
relaxation.
Really total.
Not as in 'relax because we're dancing tango and that's how it should
be danced', but a complete
relaxation into the other. Perhaps
it's the secret of the fabled 'milonguero embrace', person
to person, so
complete that
even
the
awareness of dancing
tango doesn't come between.
It's
not necessarily
a
matter of whether you hold your arm higher or lower, whether your
weight is further forwards
or back, or
whether
your
posture is
more or less upright,
although
these might be helpful.
It's
personal.
I've
really felt a different embrace there, and I'm sure it
must
be in the quality of that relaxation, completely giving yourself to
the other without
hesitation or fear.
Surely
that's
tango, not double backwards 'estilo
milonguero'
ochos with saccadas thrown
in, or
whatever the
dance teachers offer.
Tango is personal contact, really personal: it's
as
if the
dance is there to enable that
personal contact,
not to disrupt it. &
the embrace, like
the dance,
has no absolutely specific codified form: it's just whatever works to
get two people very close so
they can move together
with
the music.
I
remember what an old tanguera
says
in the film Tango, Nuestro Baile: tango is when you feel your
partner's heartbeat.
But
we know what a warm embrace is, to
give yourself to someone else, even if it is just for a tanda. Tango
says you can enjoy this.
Perhaps
not a
passionate embrace, but an
embrace without warmth, without any commitment (however temporary)
just isn't tango. Well,
this is a personal view, it's not the kind of tango I'd enjoy dancing.
(I've
just noticed Patricia of Tango Adelaide wrote
on this recently, and links to a lovely video of one
of her
– and my – favourite milongas,
Lujos
at the new Plaza Bohemia on Alsina.
Good to see the
floor
busy, to
see familiar faces, and
to watch again that beautiful dance, surging effortlessly
with the music... under good lighting too!)
Lovely clip of Lujos.
ReplyDeleteIt's easy to forget that Tango is the embrace when there are so many classes teaching all those steps...
Thanks Francesca! Yes, I watched it several times and it made me feel really warm! Great track, too. I'd really like to hide a camera in there and film a whole evening! Put it on YouTube, all six hours of a real milonga! Well, forget the camera, I'd just like to be there.
ReplyDeleteHope you'll be there soon. Let me know how it is. Or... forget that. Just enjoy it!