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 Date:    Thu, 11 Oct 2001 23:19:05 +0200
 From:    "Kohlhaas, Bernhard" <bernhard.kohlhaas@SAP.COM>
 Subject: The Milonga Litmus Test ?
 
 Hello,
 
 kann someone provide me with a reliable method to distinguish between a
 tango and milonga, e.g.
 when listening to a piece of music.
 
 For most pieces this is not much of a problem, but especially with some of
 the faster, more rhythmical tangos I find it much more difficult (e.g. such
 as some of Roberto Firpo's pieces on the CD "Sentimiento Criollo".
 
 So what is the "litmus test" to identify a piece of music as a milonga?
 
 Looking forward to any answers/opinions,
 
 Bernhard
 
 
 
 
 
Date:    Fri, 12 Oct 2001 15:52:02 -0700
 From:    JeffryesSussex <doktordogg@YAHOO.COM>
 Subject: Re: The Milonga Litmus Test ?
 
 Hi Bernhard,
 
 The Litmus Test is the rhythmic pattern.
 
 Listen to the Habanera from Bizet's opera, Carmen.
 The habanera rhythm is identical to the rhythmic
 pattern of a milonga.  However, a habanera is slow and
 a milonga is fast.
 
 There's a historical connection between habanera and
 tango.  Indeed, old tangos (the kind that people feel
 inclined to dance "canyengue" to) often use the same
 rhythm as the habanera.
 
 Did you ever watch the old TV show "Dragnet"?  The
 first part of the Dragnet theme is the same as the
 habanera rhythm.  (DUM da DUM DUM)  That might not
 mean anything without musical notation, but that
 "dotted" rhythm (it's called a dotted rhythm because
 of the symbols that are used to notate it) is repeated
 non-stop in a milonga.
 
 Contrast that with a tango, which aligns more with 4
 heavy beats per measure (we tend to walk on every
 other beat).  This difference in feel is why people
 tend to like dancing traspie in a milonga.  That
 DUM-da-DUM-DUM, DUM-da-DUM-DUM repetition lends well
 to double time steps to accommodate the tiny "da".
 
 Did that help?  Or did that obscure things more?
 Listen to that Carmen aria.
 
 Jai
 
 
 
 
 
 
Date:    Fri, 19 Oct 2001 11:06:33 -0700
 From:    clayton beach <akumushi@ONEBOX.COM>
 Subject: Milonga Litmus Test
 
 A while back there was a short discussion of what the "litmus" test for
 a milonga was.  I noticed that there was a slight misinterpretation of
 the milonga rhthym.
 The rhythm described as a milonga rhythm was actually an older permutation
 of the tango rhythm.  Some of the first tangos written were adapted from
 habaneras or milongas (hence the tango-habenera or tango-milonga denotation
 on some of your discs).
 These older tangos, take el choclo for example, had a distinctive rhythm,
 very similar to the habanera.  That rhythm is the dum-da-dum-dum that
 was described earlier.  Or (1and)(a)(2) (and), the first note being 3/8
 of the measure, the second note being 1/8 and the last two notes being
 equal quarters.  As the tango evolved, this rhythm was dropped in favor
 of a simple (1) (and) (2) (and) with the 1 and 2 counts heavily accented.
 This discrepency is probably why songs that are older style tangos played
 quickly (take almost any tango by Quinteto Pirincho) are often confused
 with milongas.  You may be able to do some milonga style syncopations
 with the latter rhythm, but it does not a milonga make.
 The milonga rhythm is: (1) (and) (a) (2) (and)
 The first, 3rd and 4th quarter of the measure are equal, with the second
 beat divided into eighths.
 We still step on the 1 and 2 count, and normal syncopations on the ands,
 but the slow quick-quick slow-slow is what makes traspie so irresistable.
 That slow quick-quick slow slow is the rhythm that makes a song a milonga,
 and allows you to do the more complicated rhythm of traspie.  You could
 also hit the all of the beats of the older tango rhythm (it's hiding
 in there).  The poly-rythmic character of the milonga is what gives it
 its life and characteristic feel.  Some of the possible rhthyms to use
 are :From 1-e-and-a 2-e-and-a
 step on 1, 2
 step on 1,and,2,and
 step on 1,a,2,and
 step on 1,and,a,2,and
 Modern tangos only yield 1,2; 1,and,2,and while the older tangos add
 the possiblility of 1,a,2,and
 Anyway, hopefully that clears up any confusion, and will give you some
 more confidence the next time you hear a "milonga" that's fast enough,
 but just doesn't feel right.  I like to think of all of the possible
 rhythms that you can take from the music, vals is my next challenge.
 I'd love to hear any thoughts on possible uses of the vals tempo!
 For anyone who'd like to see what the differences i spoke of look like
 in the written music, go to todotango.com, look under library, sheet
 music and look at el choclo (an old tango) la beba (a relativly new tango)
 and then Bartolo (the only example of a milonga that they have).  It
 should be clear after that.
 My regards,
 Clayton from San Diego
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Date:    Mon, 22 Oct 2001 08:44:27 -0700
 From:    JeffryesSussex <doktordogg@YAHOO.COM>
 Subject: Re: Milonga Litmus Test
 
 --- clayton beach <akumushi@ONEBOX.COM> wrote:
 
 > A while back there was a short discussion of what> the "litmus" test for
 > a milonga was.  I noticed that there was a slight
 > misinterpretation of
 > the milonga rhthym.
 > The rhythm described as a milonga rhythm was
 > actually an older permutation
 > of the tango rhythm.
 
 Clayton,Continue to Giving Good Boleo |
ARTICLE INDEX
 This was an excellent post.  I've had a question for a
 long time about the connection between the old tango
 rhythm and the later milonga rhythm.  Your summary was
 bang-on, and you even made it clear in a medium in
 which you couldn't resort to musical notation.
 
 Thanks,
 Jai
 
 
 
 
 
 
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