[Tango-L] Close all the time vs all ranges debate
Aurora Nemirow
anemirow at pdx.edu
Fri May 5 04:29:38 EDT 2006
I take a class at my university for beginning tango. This is my
second term, and I wanted to share a few observations and ask your
thoughts:
Last term was my first ever tango class and my teacher began with
open embrace. We learned more figures and even got to touch on rad
things like ganchos and boleos. Around the 8th week of class, we
began doing close embrace. The leads in class found it very difficult
(vocally! ;) to do any of the figures they had learned in open, in
close. I think starting in open allowed a bit of "cheating" with
posture, use of arms (as in shoving-me-around-the-floor-with-arms use
of arms), and what my teacher calls duck-walking (cartoon cowboy
walks for those who have not had the pleasure).
This term, we've begun with close embrace. Personally, I'm thrilled
because my friends that continued from last term get to work on all
the things they know in close embrace. BUT, the learning curve is so
different! It seems to take longer for the brand new dancers to
understand the connection in close embrace (and every figure is first
taught in close), but once they get it, they can dance it in open.
One of the leads even mentioned to me that he totally got how the
thing he was doing at the time (the cross maybe? I forget) could
easily be B.S.ed in open. But at our weekly practicas I've danced
with him in open a few times and he, as with all the leads new this
term, can lead it just fine. The thing about beginning with close
embrace is that we have spent more time working on getting the
connection that we have learned very few figures. Its definitely a
trade off.
This all leads me to think that perhaps close embrace is a good way
*to begin* teaching AT. Like Christopher said, it really forces the
dancers to understand what a good connection feels like. For those of
us that are just jumping into the dance, the idea of connection is so
foreign that, I believe, it may be more constructive to shove it
under our noses at first. Only once we understand what it is that is
being asked of us, we can back off and use arms, legs, earlobes for
connection. I know for myself that having begun in open and then
spent this whole term in close, I have a much stronger understanding
of my connection in any embrace.
To me this is similar to many things. For instance, few people could
take an integral without understanding the concept of a tangent line.
What do you think about this? I would love to hear stories about
other beginning classes, or your own experience beginning with one
type of embrace. And what you thought about another kind when you
branched out. Thanks a ton guys!
Aurora @ PDX
p.s. sorry about how long that was - didn't mean to write a novel! Whew!
p.p.s. Tine a while back you asked about people at other
universities? Me! Me! Portland State U. is simply brimming with new
tangueros. Can I hit you up for ideas and such?
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