This thread seems to have evolved into a discussion on dancing tango to non 
tango music, so here goes.

Tango music has been written and beautifully arranged and performed 
specifically with tango dancers in mind. Lets take Biagi's Quejas De Bandoneon. 
First you have the keyboard chomping rhythms, so suggestive of strong walking, 
boleos, sacadas, cortadas. Then the violin kicks in and you have beautiful 
ochos, gentle turns, long pauses, small volcadas. And so it goes with amazing 
textures, contrasts, pauses, right up until that final rolling piano brings on 
fast turns, tiny americanas, linear grapevines etc etc. Just thinking about 
this is making me want to go and find my wife and change my shoes :-).

Realistically, no matter how much you might like a piece of non tango music on 
examination you will find it is just paced wrongly, bland, two dimensional (for 
tango purposes) or alternatively overly complex by comparison. There certainly 
should not be any rule against dancing tango to non tango music. Dancing and 
singing are a way of life in Argentina and I am familiar with that mindset from 
Spain. You just walk out into the street and start dancing, so rules are a bit 
stupid in that context. It's a dance of the people right. On the other hand, 
there are some non tango songs that seem to work ok and this isn't just a 
foreign phenomenon. I have seen Argentineans dancing tango to Zitarrosa, for 
instance. And there are plenty of old time waltzes to which you can dance tango 
vals. But do you dance to this alternative music all the time or even the 
majority of the time?

Say you drive a race track in a delivery van. Sure you can do it and maybe make 
a decent fist of it and make it entertaining, but it is never going to feel the 
same as doing the same track in a sports car. Tango music is perfectly suited 
to the dance and Biagi (for me) is the Ferrari of tango music. So why someone 
would walk past the Ferrari to get  into the delivery van is what I am 
wondering. You might do it occasionally for fun and a bit of a break, but if 
someone starts to want to do it all the time, because they think it handles 
better than the Ferrari, that would be a little strange.

Victor Bennetts

>"Feeling" is one of the characteristics of A. Tango, if you change the feeling 
>then you are dancing something that is >similar to tango but that it is not 
>tango.


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