[Tango-L] N.U.E.V.O.--oldies are goodies
Alberto Gesualdi
clambat2001 at yahoo.com.ar
Thu Oct 8 10:41:07 EDT 2009
I receive from a friend a CD of a tango singer, named Vayo . It seems the man is from Uruguay, although his voice is a bit brazilian , I am not sure.
the fact is , he says he makes different tangos, and arrangement of known tangos as la cumparsita .....
frankly speaking , this arrangements are not danceable in a milonga night . They lack the tempo, the beating, they are longer than what an average track of a tango could be ( 3 minutes is more than enough for a track).
so I can t see how this music could be introduced into a milonga night without changing the atmosphere of dancers,. Maybe it could be a good music to have die hards ( the one that danced even the cortina ) , stomping away at the end of the milonga night, on the small hours...
Anibal Troilo once said that there was not such a thing that tango nuevo or tango viejo, it simply was a mattr of tango played well or bad.
Bajofondo, Tanghetto, Gotan project .... they simply are not tango traditional and if played ,as said
________________________________
De: Laura V <laura at lavatop.com>
Para: Tango-L <Tango-L at mit.edu>
Enviado: jue, octubre 8, 2009 7:34:17 AM
Asunto: Re: [Tango-L] N.U.E.V.O.
Not every tango community is large enough to support separate
traditional and nuevo milongas. When I dj, I usually throw in a couple
of alternative tandas, because I know some of the dancers love it. Not
everyone dances to these, but surprisingly, more and more people try it,
just to let loose a bit. If they don't want to, then they can use the
time to get a drink, chat with friends, etc. We also have dancers using
open embrace and larger figures during traditional tunes, not a problem
if everyone respects the line of dance and space involved.
The dancing in the video clip from Portland is pretty wild - because the
music called for it and there was space for it. I didn't see any bumping
though...nuevo dancers don't walk backward in the line of dance, do
they? I also noticed at least a few couples in close embrace. Possibly
they were hoping for the song to finish and something a bit more musical
to take its place, who knows. This was after all just one random song at
an unspecified time of the evening; I would be surprised if the entire
milonga was of exactly the same flavor, as a good nuevo dj should vary
the mood and intensity during the evening just as a traditional dj would.
Most milongas and festivals I've attended in Europe (Sweden, Holland,
Germany, UK) seem to accommodate a mix of traditional and nuevo, but the
traditions (the tandas, cortinas, cabeceo, dance direction, etc) are
still very much in place, as they should be. These "rules" (more like
guidelines) have developed over time for a reason...to keep the evening
running smoothly.
Just my observations!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lS9sMTtozZI
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