Keith,
You conveniently misunderstand.

I am a VERY competitive person (in fact, almost pathologically) in ANYthing. 
I'm not against tango competitions by any means. I simply echo Russell's very 
valid observations:

i.   That "it seems completely against the spirit of the improvised social 
dance, especially in the hallowed Buenos Aires";
ii.  "equally perplexing is that Janice is reporting about it, someone I have 
long considered to be a guardian of the milonguero ethos..."

Furthermore, is there a way of assessing/marking how each partner feels of the 
other within the dance? No? Being that a HUGE part of the dance is the 
passion/emotion conveyed between the two dancing together, it seems to me that 
competition not only initiates the demise from improvisation but also may prove 
to eventually kill the important emotional input in tango... ie tango itself. 
Perhaps the natural progression is for authentic tango (ie Argentine) to end up 
in the clinical basket currently inhabited by that rubbish Ballroom 'tango' (or 
so-called)...?

Further, furthermore, I am being drawn into a ridiculous argument I don't want 
to be in as it's so silly.
 
Very best wishes
Dani ~
`El Zorro de Tango' >:-)))))
 
~Tango*La Dolce Vita~
 
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: http://www.tango-la-dolce-vita.eu
Yahoo Group: http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/clubtango-ladolcevita
Online photogalleries: http://www.flickr.com/photos/club_tango-la-dolce-vita/
http://www.flickr.com/people/club_tango-la-dolce-vita/



----- Original Message ----
From: Keith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, 6 August, 2007 12:42:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Tango Competition in Buenos Aires


Dani and Russell,

You may not like Tango competitions and you may think they're against the 
spirit of Tango. But you'd better get used to them because I'm sure it will be 
a growing trend. It was interesting to read Tete's interview recently. He said 
that when he first learned and danced Tango in the 40s and 50s, there were 
Tango competitions in Buenos Aires almost every week, so it's not a new 
phenomenon. 

The standard of Ballroom Dancing has reached incredible heights because of the 
competitive element. But not everyone chooses to be a competitor. So why should 
anyone be against Tango competitions? If you don't want to compete, you don't 
have to - just stick with your Social Dancing; what's the problem? A lot of 
people enjoy competition, especially when they've worked hard at something and 
think they're better than the rest. Why shouldn't they be given the opportunity 
to prove it?

Keith, HK



On Mon Aug  6 17:27 , Club~Tango*La Dolce Vita~  sent:

>>What I find equally perplexing is that Janice is reporting about it, someone 
>>I have 
>>long considered to be a guardian of the milonguero ethos...
>
>Hear, hear, Russell...!
>...particularly the last sentence of your first paragraph.
> 
>Very best wishes
>Dani ~
>`El Zorro de Tango' >:-)))))
> 
>~Tango*La Dolce Vita~
> 
>
>----- Original Message ----
>From: Russell Ranno [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [email protected]
>Sent: Monday, 6 August, 2007 8:11:58 AM
>Subject: [Tango-L] Tango Competition in Buenos Aires
>
>
>What is the deal with these tango competitions?  I understand it from a 
>Ballroom perspective but it seems completely against the spirit of the 
>improvised social dance, especially in the hallowed Buenos Aires.  What I 
>find equally perplexing is that Janice is reporting about it, someone I have 
>long considered to be a guardian of the milonguero ethos...
>
>Does anybody have an interest in what kind of boleos are "allowed"?
>
>Russell
>


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