There seems to be
something missing in the tango world, something I can't find anywhere, and it's
foxtrot. We have it from older dancers, especially from Osvaldo and
Coca (in the MP interview I think - I don't have time to check it out) that
foxtrot was one of the dances that defined Argentine social dancing
in the 20s and 30s and 40s. I think Osvaldo said that any
'milonguero' who claims to have danced tango in the Golden Age and
can't foxtrot just wasn't really there. & yet...
where's the video of Osvaldo and Coca dancing foxtrot? I've never
seen a couple dancing anything that seemed to me remotely like
foxtrot during a jazz or rock tanda in Buenos Aires, and I've never
come across it in films of milongas either. If there is a video of
Buenos Aires foxtrot please let me know! I've looked but can't find
it.
It
was big! It's not just Osvaldo talking. Francisco Canaro recorded a lot of foxtrots like this, and also a charming foxtrot Chá para dos, better known in English as Tea
for Two: sadly,
the audio quality isn't great.
It's
curious
that Canaro's syncopation in
foxtrot is
really lively,
but he doesn't
use it much in the tangos he recorded around that time,
as if he felt it out of place. His
jazz band recordings started around 1923, and there are plenty of
them over the following years, although tango remained his main
output.
I
came across this video of Oscar
Casas and Ana Miguel.
The
title calls it 'La
colegiala (fox trot)'
. La
colegiala seems
to be a popular song from a Columbian band, recorded in 1983, but I'm
not sure
it's really
foxtrot music*.
As
to the dance, Oscar
would be in a position to have learned foxtrot
from
the older dancers, but
I think his dance resembles
tango as much as anything. But
perhaps
the two dances are similar?
Foxtrot
was one of the dances of the American jazz scene in the early 1920s, but it was taken
over and popularised
as
a ballroom dance at some stage, with
the characteristic open embrace. There are a few old Pathe clips of foxtrot on YouTube which suggest the original dance. To me,
this, danced in close embrace, remains the best: others are more
flamboyant and showy. It also seems to show patterns that aren't that
far from stuff that's danced in tango and I get the feel of a relaxed
musicality, although the bouncy tip-toe style is very far from salon
tango. These
Pathe videos are early all right, but that means from the silent era,
so the music was added later. &
there's a foxtrot lesson here, taught by 'Santos Casani, the well-known Teacher of Dancing', using an novel 'special glass floor', from
1931. Maybe something of the old version survived: the great photographer Don McCullin talks in a documentary about dancing foxtrot, 'the naughty kind, not the ballroom
version' when he was growing up in the UK in the late 1940s.
But
the Buenos Aires version? I'd be very interested to see it.
* See comments!
* See comments!
What about href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKTWiLu1MXk">that? The steps look for me like the steps taught by Santos Casani. And, by the way, La Colegiala was already recorded by Enrique Rodriguez.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Matthias!
ReplyDeleteAh yes, Rodriguez, of course. There are several Rodriguez versions of La Colegiala on YouTube: I like this one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-C_WEVIsA4 although the music seems to have moved away a bit from the jazz origins.
& thanks for your link to the dance, but it needs surgery. This version works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKTWiLu1MXk
It resembles Oscar's version, so maybe this is close to the earlier Argentine foxtrot. As I said, there seems to be common ground between 1920 - 30s foxtrot, and some of the patterns we use in tango. But I'd still like to see how Osvaldo and Coca dance it, a direct link to the Argentine foxtrot of the golden era.
Sorry TC, but you're giving credit where no credit is due.
ReplyDeleteOscar Casas started dancing in Toronto, where he met his wife Mary Ann Henderson. What he dances now as foxtrot was learned by watching the milongueros.
Osvaldo and Coca aren't old enough to have danced in the golden era 1935-1945. Better to ask Roberto Segarra who is 94 about it and others in their 80s.
You're making so many assumptions without doing your research.
Julio Alejo is 80.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88iavCchGLs
Alito is 85.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ial0to9mY6E
You're making so many criticisms without reading what I wrote. I said I'm looking for a video of 'golden age' foxtrot. I believe Osvaldo was born in 1938, so would have learned 'golden age' foxtrot, like tango, from his parents' generation.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the links. Both show dancers having a lot of fun, but is that 'golden age' foxtrot? Is it any kind of foxtrot? Looks like swing/jive to me, with perhaps a bit of tango thrown in.
& Oscar learned 'by watching the milongueros'? All credit to him, for that at least!
I don't believe you will find video of what you are calling "Golden Age Foxtrot". In Argentina there seems to be no evidence of the sort of naming and standardisation of dance prevalent in England which resulted in English way becoming the basis of most ballroom around the World.
ReplyDeleteTo all kinds of (dance) music they would have socially danced in any appropriate way they could and some still do to this day.
Thanks, JohnM. I get your point, but I don't agree that there's no naming and standardising of dance in Argentina. There's a dance called tango, for a start, and although there's no 'official' standard of it, it's fairly consistent from milonga to milonga in BsAs. & Osvaldo and Coca seem quite convinced there was a dance called foxtrot that wasn't the same as tango, and Canaro and others recorded the music.
ReplyDeleteAs to a film of it, that's another matter and I don't think any is publicly available, if it exists. A pity.
JohnM, sorry, can't follow your comments on Victor Sylvester. Please read my post again! I drew attention to Osvaldo Cartery's identification of a dance he called foxtrot that he danced when younger, and that people who only claimed to have been around at the time wouldn't know. I wondered what the dance was like and asked if anyone could point me to any video of it.
ReplyDeleteIf you think Osvaldo got it all wrong, take it up with him, not with me!