[Tango-A] Milwaukee WI: July 29th Workshop

Nina Tatarowicz ninatanguera at gmail.com
Mon Jul 23 10:18:49 EDT 2007







The African Roots of Tango
with Ernest Williams
Sunday July 29th, 2007 in Milwaukee, WI

3:30--4:40pm:  Candombe Music and Dance: The African Roots of Tango.   
How Candombe influences Milonga.
Candombe is an Afrocentric dance and music tradition that is  
considered part of the African roots of Tango.  Although only  
sparsely practiced in Argentina, Candombe is still actively practiced  
today in Uruguay in weekly gatherings, special events and especially  
in the grand Carnival celebrations of Montevideo.  In the tenements  
and countryside along both sides of the Rio de la Plata (river that  
separates Uruguay and Argentina) freed slaves, poor European  
immigrants and Cuban visitors combined their cultures and created  
what eventually became the milonga and tango.

4:50pm--6pm:  Canyengue

Canyengue means “to be tired” or “to melt into” as you can imagine  
being after a long bout of Candombe.  This is the early version of  
tango and had many Afro-Argentines considered to be amongst its  
greatest dancers.  It is characterized mainly by its “cortes y  
quebradas” or sudden stops and bent posture.  Many famous band  
leaders such as Francisco Canaro and Roberto Firpo played tangos in  
the early 1900’s in a very rhythmic style making the tango “swing”.   
This was the main method of dancing tango before tango took Paris by  
storm after 1914.  Canyengue is now enjoying a resurgence in interest  
among tango dancers and will soon be regularly danced around the world.

In the US, some of his most notable performances include the musical  
“Candombe: Tango Negro”
in Washington, DC, the opening performance of the 18th Annual  
Washington DC International Film Festival focusing on films from  
Argentina, the Latin American Festival in Richmond VA, “Living  
Tango,” a performance for the Dancing for Schools benefit in  
Philadelphia, PA. and
performance at the Trinity Artist Series: Live Tango Concert by the  
Gerardo Perez Tango Trio in New Orleans.

Ernest has spent 6 months of 2005 in Uruguay and Argentina  
researching the African roots of Tango including Milongón,  
Candombe,and Canyengue. The black experience and Uruguay’s influence  
on tango is a part of his research.  As a result of his research, he  
has co-written,
choreographed and performed excerpts of Tangó: The Black Dance  
Experience (La Experiencia Negra en la Danza)  a dance theatre  
production, working in conjunction with many artists, historians,  
cultural and governmental organizations based in Uruguay and Argentina.
He has been a three-time featured tango performer on “La Ciudad de  
Tango”, a live national TV show in Uruguay and a two-time featured  
candombe dancer with the high- profile
candombe organization La Gozadera in Montevideo.

Including an appearance on the popular "Solo Tango" television  
network in Buenos Aires, Ernest is recognized and celebrated as a  
social dancer in many milongas,and other social events and has  
received many requests to give demonstrations of his unique style of  
dancing.  He was recently invited to give special exhibitions in  
milonga con traspie and salsa at the famous
milonga Viejo Correo in Buenos Aires.

Ernest William’s mission is to use dance to influence the world's  
vision of the unsung beauty of Afro and Latin cultures.






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