2009 m. sausio 13 d., antradienis

Petroleo



Interview by Sergio Criscolo
Dancer(1912 - May 1995) True name: Carlos Alberto Estévez
t the time of this interview, Petróleo was nearly 80 years old, born in 1912 he started to dance in 1928.
He was a bank clerk for 36 years and lived in the neighborhood of Villa Devoto.
In 1988 he gave up dancing because of an ailment in his knees, since then he is living of dreams.
«I was called Petróleo because I used to drink too much wine. I was a drunkard. It´s been a time I´m having fizzy drinks, but it is worse, it rusts.
«I was always fond of uncomplicated tango. I changed tango dancing.
«I invented the turn, the contrafrente, the change of postures, the boleos.
«Furthermore, I separated sex from dancing. Some time before, a man was after a leg not a female dancer, to squeeze not to dance. I was after dancing.
«Getting to know your dancing partner through rehearsals is very important, in such a way one knows the handling.
«I met my best partner, with whom I later lived, at a ballroom, it was in 1930, her name was Esperanza Díaz. We rehearsed a lot. We danced together until 1949 and one year later she was gone. Congratulations!. I didn´t want any other.
«When there was some show I got on together with la negra Martita who used to dance at the Agusteo, on Sarmiento and Uruguay streets, also at Unione e Benevolenza, which was round the corner and the owner was the same person.
«In Villa Devoto I danced at the Club Rosa de Abril and in Villa Urquiza, at many ones: Pinocho, Sin Rumbo, etc.
«At the club Atlanta I met Juan Carlos Copes who then was around twenty.
«In the dancing parlors dancing with corte was forbidden, if we did somebody would come near and tell us: "Go to the ticket office" and there we were recommended or dismissed. We were called compadritos.
«There were times when we, the dancers, organized balls for prisoners when they were released. In reality, those who danced tango were all thieves or would-be thieves. If one had been imprisoned for a year, each one put ten or twenty pesos until collecting five hundred and handed them to him so he could start walking again.
«When the police began to appear at those parties we stopped organizing them.
«Around 1930 there were made parties which lasted a week. For la Parda Lucia´s birthday, Nicolás "El Buchón"´s partner (because of his breast shape like that of a pigeon) a milonga was held in Parque Petricios. As usual, there they went cirujas (tramps), pickpockets, cart drivers and milongueros. The dancing ground was made with a canvas stolen from the railroad company, one of those used to cover the train cars. We stretched it on the floor and scrubbed it with a candle to wax it and to achieve a better sliding. Everybody helped with some peso for the wine and meat for the barbecue. The women were cabaret covergirls, whores, shop thieves. When somebody was sleepy, he lay down on a mattress of those we placed there and slept a couple of hours. The seventh day we held a tango tournament.
«Among us there was too much competition, we did not talk to each other. The dancer is selfish, he thinks he´s the best. I thought I was the best.
«I liked one called Mendieta, he was phenomenal. El vasco Orradre was the best to interpret D'Arienzo´s orchestra. A guy called Méndez stood out with the figures, he was very fast with his feet. El Cachafaz was good, but there were better ones. Virulazo was also good, he danced in Antonio Todaro´s way, who is the same teacher who taught Miguel Ángel Zotto, the one I like most among the new because he has a handsome posture.
«I met Gardel at the 25 de Mayo theater of Villa Urquiza, undoubtedly, the best singer. He was good because he told you what he felt. But he didn´t know dancing, he made a few steps, he was "maleta" (clumsy), besides being somewhat fat.
«One can learn to dance, but there is a lot of work to be done and also one has to feel the music. Tango does not come all of a sudden. I was taught by a professional, Navarro, he gave me his steps, later I made up mine.
«Tango is a refrained emotion which later bursts. It can´t be said tango is danced this way or the other, one dances it as one feels it, it´s a creation.
«Tango is a sad feeling, it´s true, but at times it depends on how the orchestra takes it. My preferred orchestra was Carlos Di Sarli´s and, when Anselmo Aieta had his, he was a terrific musician.
«I never went out on tour because I had my work at the bank, but even though I made about two thousand exhibitions.
«My dream always was to dance better than anyone. I invented many figures, I transformed tango, but I ought to have made more. I lacked inspiration to create true tango. Today I would do it differently. As each tango lasts three minutes, I would divide it into a prologue, a development and an epilogue.
«Besides tango I had a craze for playing the horses, I was going to the races everyday, I won a lot and lost a lot.
«When I retired from the bank I sold my house and with that money I went on betting on horses. What did I want it for? Tangos, races and some woman. You don't have to take life seriously. I lived as I wanted to. You can live seriously with work and honesty, but it's not so funny.
«One has to live his dreams, there´s the truth».

Fred Astaire



Biography:
Though on screen Fred was most often associated with a top hat, white tie and tails, in real life he detested formal dress and looked on his signature costume as work clothes.
FREDERICK AUSTERLITZ was born on May 10, 1899 in Omaha, Nebraska to Frederic E. Austerlitz, an Austrian immigrant and traveling salesman, and his wife Ann Geilus Austerlitz. His sister Adele, older by eighteen months, showed a talent for dancing at an early age, and although only four years old, young Fred accompanied his sister to ballet school. In 1904, Mrs. Austerlitz moved with the children to New York where they were enrolled in a performing arts school run by Ned Wayburn, one of the pioneers of modern tap dancing. The following year Fred and Adele made their vaudeville debut on a stage in New Jersey as a miniature bride and groom, and began touring on the Orpheum circuit in an act called "Juvenile Artists Presenting an Electric Musical Toe-Dancing Novelty." Though Fred sporadically attended public school in New Jersey, most of his schooling came on the road under his mother's tutelage.
With the advent of World War I, the Austerlitz's anglicized their name to "Astaire" and the teenage brother-sister hoofers began to make the new name famous. In 1917 the pair made their Broadway debut in a musical revue called "Over the Top," and although the show itself didn't fare well, the Astaires received very positive notices. Though they seldom had any lines, Fred and Adele danced their way through a number of musical revues until in 1922 they were cast in "For Goodness' Sake" with songs by George and Ira Gershwin. Although they had sixth billing, they stole the show.
Throughout the 1920s, the Astaires danced their way to stardom by way of such triumphs as "Funny Face," "Lady, Be Good!" and "The Band Wagon." However in 1932, Adele retired from show business to marry Lord Charles Cavendish, and Fred was left to fend for himself. Because his sister was usually regarded as the better dancer of the two, and the plots of most of their shows together accommodated the fact that they were siblings in real life, Fred was not regarded as a much of a romantic leading man. In 1932 however, he struck out on his own with a new partner, Claire Luce, starring in Cole Porter's comedy musical "The Gay Divorce" in which he introduced the song "Night and Day." "The Gay Divorce" would be Fred's last stage musical.
That same year, anxious to escape his reputation as Adele's brother, Fred made a screen test for RKO and was signed by studio head David O. Selznick despite doubts about his physical appearance and acting ability. Because RKO had no projects ready for him, Fred made his film debut on loan-out to MGM in DANCING LADY (1933) with Joan Crawford and Clark Gable. He had one number. Still without work at RKO, Fred went to London to tour with "The Gay Divorce." When he returned, he was cast as an accordion player in a musical love-triangle story starring Gene Raymond, Dolores Del Rio and Raul Roulien called FLYING DOWN TO RIO (1933). His female counterpart in the film was an up-and-coming RKO contract player named Ginger Rogers, and after their one dance number together stole the picture from the three stars, Fred and Ginger became the silver screen's most popular dancing duo.
Astaire and Rogers made a total of nine musicals together at RKO between 1933 and 1939, and though Ginger made several other comedies and solo musicals between her films with Fred, Astaire made only one film without Rogers -- DAMSEL IN DISTRESS (1937) with Joan Fontaine. It was the only film of his career to lose money at the box-office. More than just a dancer in his films with Rogers, Astaire proved himself an accomplished choreographer. With the help of RKO dance director Hermes Pan, he spent months experimenting with new moves and developing fresh routines for the films. The easygoing air that became his trademark both in his tap solos and tap/ballroom numbers with Rogers resulted from hours of painstaking work. Astaire was frequently described as a perfectionist, and Adele had even nick-named him "Moaning Minnie" for his workaholic ways.
The results spoke for themselves however, and Fred and Ginger's musicals were some of the biggest money-makers of the Great Depression. As their first starring vehicle, RKO adapted "The Gay Divorce" (retitled THE GAY DIVORCEE (1934)) which proved a huge success. And though the pair was second-billed behind Irene Dunne in ROBERTA (1935), for TOP HAT (1935) and subsequent films including FOLLOW THE FLEET (1935), SWING TIME (1936) and SHALL WE DANCE (1937), they appeared above the title. By the time THE STORY OF VERNON AND IRENE CASTLE was released in 1939, Fred and Ginger's popularity had waned and both decided to go their separate ways. Fred was wary of the possible repercussions of being again known only as part of a pair, and Ginger was anxious to try her hand at more serious dramatic acting.
His contract at RKO having run out, Fred spent the next several years free-lancing at various studios, dancing with a variety of new partners. Though BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940 with Eleanor Powell received mixed reviews, YOU'LL NEVER GET RICH (1941) and YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER (1942) helped rocket Columbia starlet Rita Hayworth to stardom. However, after the lackluster box-office performance of YOLANDA AND THE THIEF (1945) with Lucille Bremer and BLUE SKIES (1946) with Bing Crosby, Fred announced his retirement from motion pictures and began to concentrate on opening a chain of Fred Astaire Dance Studios around the country.


Fred's retirement was short-lived however. When Gene Kelly broke an ankle playing touch football and was unable to make EASTER PARADE (1948) with Judy Garland and Ann Miller, MGM asked Fred to fill in. He did, and the film's success lead to a contract with Arthur Freed's musical unit at MGM and a decade more of Astaire films. The following year he was reunited with Ginger Rogers for their tenth and final musical, THE BARKLEYS OF BROADWAY (1949). During this second phase of Astaire's film career, though the quality of plots and songs varied, Fred continued to develop inventive dance routines. In ROYAL WEDDING (1951) with Jane Powell, he danced one number with a coat-rack and a second on the walls and ceiling of a hotel room. Other notable partners from this period included Cyd Charisse (THE BAND WAGON (1953) and SILK STOCKINGS (1957)), Vera-Ellen (THREE LITTLE WORDS (1950) and THE BELLE OF NEW YORK (1952)), and Audrey Hepburn (FUNNY FACE (1957)).
In March 1950, Ginger Rogers presented Fred with an honorary Oscar on behalf of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for "his unique artistry and his contributions to the technique of musical pictures." In 1959, Fred made his dramatic film debut in ON THE BEACH, and though he made one more musical, the unsuccessful FINIAN'S RAINBOW (1968) with Petula Clark, the remainder of his films showcased Fred as an actor. Most notable among these later pictures were THE PLEASURE OF HIS COMPANY (1961) with Debbie Reynolds and THE TOWERING INFERNO (1974) for which he received a Best Supporting Actor nomination. Fred also kept busy in television, appearing in his own special, "An Evening with Fred Astaire" which earned nine Emmy awards, and in 1959 he published an autobiography entitled Steps in Time.
Astaire stopped dancing professionally about 1970 when he was already over 70 years old, explaining that his age restricted his ability to perform at a level acceptable to him. He continued to make appearances however, and in 1976 teamed with Gene Kelly to host THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT! II, a sequel compilation of film clips from the great MGM musicals. In 1973, Fred was honored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center in a two-and-a-half hour gala featuring 40 dance excerpts from his films which he picked himself. In 1981, the American Film Institute presented him with its ninth Life Achievement Award.
Married to Phyllis Livingston Potter (who had a son, Peter, from a previous marriage) in 1933, Astaire had two children: Fred Jr., born in 1936, and daughter Ava, born in 1942. Phyllis Astaire died of cancer in 1955, and in 1980 at age 81, Fred remarried. His second wife, Robyn Smith, then age 35 and a former jockey, shared with Fred a life-long interest in horses. Fred had been a stable owner and avid horse-racing fan for over 30 years. Astaire made his final film appearance in GHOST STORY (1981) and died of pneumonia in Los Angeles, California on June 22, 1987 at the age of 88.






True Name: Jorge Martín Orcaizaguirre(10 October 1926 – 2 August 1990)
e was enjoying the full boom of the show “Tango Argentino” in Nueva York. He lived at a luxurious hotel on the Fifth avenue, when one morning his strong voice resounded along the corridors, he was angry: «Tell that old maniac that if he wants tango at ten in the morning he´d better dance it himself!... Ah! If he wants to see me he has to come to the theater...»
That old man, who had been at the premiere, moved heavens and earth so that a special show for the following morning was organized, and the disgust sprang out when Virulazo was told that due to protocol reasons, the special show had to be ad-honorem. And he added always shouting: «And tell him that for free I don’t dance for anyone!» And so it was, that old man was Henry Kissinger.
By then the dancer was 61 years old, he had 5 children and six grandchildren.
The nickname VIRULAZO appeared when he was 18 and played the game of bowls for money and the back of the grocery stores of his town, San Justo (a city in the Buenos Aires suburbs).
A little old Italian permanently encouraged him: «Mandale el virulazo, mandale el virulazo» («Give it the virulazo»), he had adopted that word as a synonym for “bochazo” (strike with a bowl).
His birth name was Jorge Orcaizaguirre, of Basque ancestry and Italian on his mother’s side. He was brought up by his grandparents because his parents separated very soon.
«I owe everything to my grandfather, he gave me the highest degree I achieved in life, that of man. I adored him.
«The few pesos he earned at the railroad company were not enough, I helped him by doing anything but three things: being a gossip-monger, vile and a creeper, the worst defects a man may have. I was a street vendor of any kind of things,I worked as a shoeshine boy at the whorehouses doors, I sold sausage sandwiches, I bought hair in Entre Ríos to bring it to Buenos Aires to sell it to wig manufacturers. Later I began as laborer at a slaughterhouse and ended as foreman and livestock buyer.
«Since I was thirteen I liked to dance tango at the clubs of the zone or neighborhood of Mataderos. Once “el Negro” Celedonio Flores (author of tango lyrics. See Section “Poets”) and the singer Carlos Acuña saw me dancing tango and they told me: “Boy, you can’t go on dancing for free”. The following day I debuted at the café “La Armonía” on Corrientes avenue, afterwards the cabarets “Chantecler”, “Tabarís” and all the classy places.
«In the year 1952 the Águila chocolate company organized a big national contest for tango dancers. 157 dancing partners participated and the finals were held at the radio Splendid auditorium. I won it. Thanks to that the tours throughout the country began and lasted until the hard times of the 60s when the rock programs on television made us terribly starve, we danced for a few coins. Only Juan Carlos Copes and I resisted. A life of bohemia is nice but you have to die of starvation.
«In the 70s we started to come out again, the first time it was a tour accompanying Hugo Del Carril. In the early 80s I made up my mind to give up dancing, but soon I was told of the idea of “Tango Argentino” and it aroused my enthusiasm.
«I am a professional only because I´m paid. Deep in my heart I keep on being an amateur, I don´t stick to a choreography, that´s what the dancers do and I am a milonguero, one of the few who dance tango-tango, that´s why they call me from everywhere.
«With the money I earned in the latest tours I bought three houses, a truck and two cars, for my kids, now I go out a few times more, I collect some dollars and, so long!, I quit. Each tour means five or six months and for me it is an ordeal, it´s like being “encanutado” (in jail) in Alcatraz. I suffer the worst a man can endure, to be alone in a crowd. In Japan I stood up on the corner of a street and I was surrounded by two hundred million “ponjas” (Japanese), and I didn´t understand a damn shit what the hell they were saying. I got into a restaurant, asked for a sausage and they brought it with honey, it was crazy! They eat uncooked fish as the indians do. Don´t pull my leg! I never ate so much chicken and spaghetti as in Japan. There are people who like that, but I don´t. I enjoy a good wine, a barbecue with friends, the little goldfinches I have in my own backyard.
«When I´m on tour, when I don´t perform, I sleep, I don´t care for anyone, I take with me a pile of pocket books of detective and cowboy stories and so I´m OK. They fucked me with Venice. But what´s Venice? The Chacarita cemetery but flooded, and please that Chacarita forgives me. I´m fed up by those who start shouting for the sake of status or snobism: Ay, how beautiful is Venice! The pampa is beautiful!, there you can see the trees, the animals, the colors of the grass in the immensity, it is not a city that is sinking and, each time that a gondola with an Italian passes by, it leaves such a smell of decay; then the Riachuelo (a bad smelling river), in comparison with that, smells like Atkinson lavender water.
«My weight now is 128 kilograms, but I don’t care; with a black suit, a bow tie in Gardel’s fashion and smart clothes I feel as I were relieved of that excess.
«In Broadway during a performance, I was hearing a voice that shouted at me: Bravo, gomina, bravo, gomina! (a sort of gel to straighten men’s hair). It turned out to be Nureyev. Anthony Quinn and Robert Duvall became friends of mine. The latter, each time he comes to Argentina, comes here to my place to eat some little barbecue.
«I love my wife Elvira, I idolize her, if I should lose her..., I don’t know, me tiro bajo el tren.
«I’m a sentimental, I can’t stand to be alone and even less without a partner like her. It means 28 years of going to bed and getting up together. But it’s more, because we have been lovers for 44 years. Elvira was my first fiancée, but I don’t know why we didn’t marry. Each one led one’s own life, but one day in 1959, I was already separated from my first wife, when I was riding a horse somewhere in La Tablada, I saw a bus passing by with Elvira in it, I made gestures for her to get off, but to no avail, then I galloped after the bus until she finally got out, otherwise I would have followed her up to her house. We talked and here we are.»
LOOSE PHRASES BY VIRULAZO
«Rudolf Valentino was a brazen faced guy, he didn’t know dancing».
«Tito Lusiardo, a good comedian, but as a dancer, he’s a scarecrow. But anyway, he was with Gardel, who’s gonna argue about?»
«Travolta. A sissy. Just like that Michael Jackson. Those things do not become history. That’s not dance, dancing is Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly.»
«A tango dancer? Petróleo. Just a few know him, only those who go to the milongas.»
«The tango I like most is "Berretín", by Pedro Laurenz. And as for lyrics "El motivo" by Pascual Contursi
«I don’t listen to new Argentine music, not even if I were mad. Those are young guys who are empty. In tango you will always find something that portrays your life. Did it happen to any of you that your girlfriend fell into a cesspit? That’s what those boys say in one of those lyrics. Maybe no one has stories to tell. People who get up at six in the morning to go to work all day long, should not be cheated. Those people deserve art like the one Gardel offered to them. Those people are not touched by four assholes who don’t work and smoke marijuana.»
«I was never involved in politics, but I always vote for democracy. In this country the military men and the priests are a cancer... Ah, I have a dream, I wish I died dancing a tango.»
Originally published in the daily paper Página/12 of Buenos Aires.



By Javier Firpo
Dancer and coreographer(May 31, 1931)
is feet, like wings, remind us of Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly, two kings of musical comedies. For Juan Carlos Copes, they were his paradigm, his masters, his models.
The dancer, eyebrows knit together, hair slicked back, glossy with hair cream, and wearing an impeccably ironed suit is sitting on the stage border, a symbol of his autobiographical musical, Copes tango Copes, where he makes a synthesis of his 50 year long career.
He appears together with his daughter Johanna, the "Copes Tango Danza" ballet group and tango singer Maria Graña. The musical shows the dancer's artistic development from his early start dancing at Atlanta football club, his participation in dancing contests in the Luna Park sports center, his trips through the American continent, his meetings with masters Piazzolla, Troilo or Pugliese, and even international celebrities such as Barishnikov, Liza Minelli or his very much admired Gene Kelly, who in Copes's words: «he was my idol, the person who gave the key to what I had to do, the one who made the deepest impression on me». Suddenly, he becomes silent. He sits quietly, staring blankly ahead, probably flying back to the moment he met Kelly in Broadway back in 1985, after his presentation of Tango Argentino. An anecdote comes to his mind: «One evening, after the show, Gene's daughter approached and told me her father was not very well, but he wanted me to go to his place in Los Angeles the following day. I almost fainted. I felt thrilled, just like him in "Singing in the Rain"».
Copes has put up innumerable shows, but butterflies are still there in his stomach, before each performance. «They are ageless. The older you are, the deeper the fear to go wrong». He doesn't want to appear arrogant, which he certainly is not, and is deeply concerned about the fact that for the first time his name is the name of the show. «Even though I've already accepted it, it sounds like a trademark, as if it meant something beyond the words», explains the dancer.
Copes knows that in Argentina he is "the" tango dancer, but he vigorously rejects the nickname. «It's too old and conservative to say such a thing. It takes two to tango, and a lot of passion. The rest is mere technique and it comes alone».
Endowed with a profound energy, Copes looks like a man without age, but he does not deny his age. Quite the contrary: «I was born on May 31, 1931. It's in every dictionary», he comments with a smile.
A pro tango dancer, as he likes to introduce himself, he has been awarded many important prizes such as the Toronto and New York Awards, the Argentine ACE, for "Entre Borges y Piazzolla", and the American Choreography Award for the best choreography for a film called "Tango" (directed by Carlos Saura).
«Many people believe that legs and feet are most important when dancing. I don't think so. I believe it all starts above, in the mind, and it goes down to the heart. The feet are just the consequence», is the explanation that this 70 year old Porteño gives when he describes how to dance tango. And it surely is like that, for Copes's legs and feet have a very exclusive language capable of drawing silent shapes that reveal what words fail to do.
«It's the only dance that gives full vent to imagination and creativity to tell in only three minutes a story of love or hate. But it's a portion of time that makes you forget about all problems whatsoever, if there is a close body connection». This is what he feels when he dances the tango, which certainly has some other virtues. «I believe its virtues are many, but if I had to mention one, I'd say it is its capacity to adapt itself to any time».
Many years have gone by since the time a thin young man dazzled the girls in Mataderos and Villa Pueyrredón, two traditional Porteño quarters. At that time, in 1951, this young man who doubted between taking up tango or electronic engineering won a dancing contest at the Luna Park sports center, out of more than 300 couples. That night proved to be a turning point in his life. The time to make decisions. It was early in the 1950s and his partner was the woman who would dance with him most of his career: Maria Nieves Rego. They were the perfect couple, the prototype which imposed its image and started the legend of the quickest legs. Copes and Nieves were partners, mates, lovers. They loved each other, later on they divorced and hated each other. He married somebody else, had two daughters, but kept on dancing with Nieves. Until they could not stand it any longer, they separated professionally and he found a new partner in his daughter Johana.
A most coherent professional, open minded and reasonable, the artist explains he would never change his way of feeling tango. He is loyal to his essence and does not believe in tango for export. A creator in the vanguard, whether people like it or not, Copes does not stick to stereotypes. Even though he defends traditions and the "old times", he is not a conservative, he also expresses his modern perspectives.
He is one of those Porteños who believes that tango lovers need not live with their hats on and a white scarf round their necks to be considered porteAo malevos, some kind of fearless rogues. «If I thought that way, I would be dead», he states. When asked about for how long he is planning to dance, Copes answers with a touch of mischief: «Until my hucklebones let me. Dancing is for me the best therapy ever».
Published in "Argentime. The Argentine Review", Sidus laboratory, May 2001.

2009 m. sausio 3 d., šeštadienis

Organic Tango


The Organic Tango Cookbook and Homer's personal philosophy...This section contains bits and pieces of basic ingredients and recipes that may help you on your road to tango self-discovery. Eventually we all must answer the question - "What is Tango to me?" -

i.e. discovering your own tango structure & style, musical taste & interpretation, social intentions & interactions, etc.
"Homer's" Philosophy:
To help build an open-minded and strong social dance community.
Offer very affordable group and private study (especially for those interested in multiple lessons) while maintaining a high standard of teaching quality.
Simply stated, Homer's three goals in life are to be a good social dancer, a good teacher of social dance and a good husband (not necessarily in that order!).
What is Organic Tango?
(Homer's long-winded version!)
Organic Tango is more of a philosophy and approach to learning and dancing tango then it is a structure or a style of dance. The need for a title of "organic" came about after over five years of involvement in the dance and trying to understand what it really meant to me. I realized that each teacher had their own interpretation of how the dance should be done (which is not necessarily a bad thing)!
What really got to me is how a few members of the tango community (teachers and dancers alike) negatively influenced the growth and interpretation of this dance in the United States. Out of my desire to discover my own tango - several key points kept making themselves more and more appearent...
To this day, there is no clear distinction between "structure" and "style." Furthermore, some folks try hard to contain tango in a box and enforce their views on others. And lastly, the lines between stage & social dancing, past & present, and the Argentine vs. non-Argentine way are not very clear and, unfortunately, on more than a few occasions - have been abused.
My reasons for using such a title (Organic Tango) will one day, hopefully, not exist and new students will just simply learn the "Tango" - or whatever our society is calling this social dance at that point (although several of us will probably be forever labeled as the "organic tango" groupies)!
Several of the main ideas behind the organic-tango-approach to learning are captured here as follows...
Organic Tango Dance Philosophy:
You own your own dancing, nobody owns the Tango.
Dance the most natural and comfortable way for your own body and that of your partner's.
Keep an open mind and respect for yourself and others.
Appreciate and learn from the past, dance in the present, and allow the future to unfold.
Some Basic Ingredients (That may or may not be present, at different degrees, in your tango - listed in no particular order!):
Posture
Grounding
Balance - on & off axis
Relaxation & Breathing
Core Movement
Elastic Energy Transfer
Linear & Torsional Energy
Impulse & Momentum Transfer
Connection
Musicality
Style
Creativity
Social Awareness
Open mindedness
Some Recipes for Learning...