Date:    Sun, 17 Feb 2002 02:41:29 -0800 
From:    "Larry E. Carroll" <larrydla@JUNO.COM> 
Subject: Tango and Fanaticism 
 
The "Argentine" tango is a folk dance, with no organization defining 
and policing what is right and wrong tango. 
  
It's also unique among social dances in that its music is rhapsodic - 
less strictly structured - rather than rhythmic - defined by a single 
rhythm.  This means that the orchestra playing tango decides the 
rhythmic structure of a piece of music.  Sometimes "La Cumparsita" (for 
instance) is played with a strong, clear rhythm almost no one can fail 
to hear.  At the other extreme, "La Cumparsita" is sometimes played 
with so few clear signals of the rhythm that the dancers must infer the 
rhythm - sometimes with wildly diverging results. 
  
To make matters even more interesting, tango music often is much more 
complex than other social dance music, usually having at least three 
layers - a bass layer, a melodic layer, and a lyric (song) layer that 
may or may not be "played" by a human voice.  The tempo may change 
speed several times in one single playing.  The rhythm signals may be 
given by different instruments in a single playing.  And so on. 
  
Thus tango dance is polymorphic, like those shapechangers in fairy 
tales who can not only be ANY animal but even appear to be any human. 
Tango dance is a projection test, like the Rorschach test.  Or as some 
milongueros say, "You dance who you are." 
  
This suits some tango dancers fine.  We may start with a single teacher 
and work on a single style, but after getting a good grounding in one 
way of dancing we will explore others.  After sampling several ways, we 
may create our own unique style, or if flexible enough dance any one of 
several depending on mood, music, partner, surroundings, and other 
factors.  Some of us continue  exploring the rich field of tango for 
the rest of our lives. 
  
The tango population being pretty much the same as the general 
population, it also includes a fair smattering of fanatic 
personalities.  These people are brittle of mind, dogmatically sure 
their views are right and everyone else's views wrong, and unable to 
see more than one viewpoint. Since tango dancers can choose or create a 
style that closely matches their particular tastes and personality, 
tango fanatics fiercely champion and defend their way of doing tango, 
because rival views of the One Right Way to do tango feels like an 
attack on their most fundamental self. 
  
I'm sure most of us have been amused or annoyed at these tango 
fanatics, or even angered.  In my 13 years doing tango I've seen some 
vicious (verbal) attacks by tango fanatics on rivals.  If any one of 
these fanatics became tango god it would be hell for most of us to 
dance tango.  I suspect tango would go into decline, for a number of 
reasons, such as the stifling of the extraordinary continuing creative 
growth of tango. 
  
But tango fanatics are also very useful to the tango community.  At the 
very least they balance each other so that no one fanatic and his or 
her sycophants gain control.  They also often run milongas, act as DJs, 
teach, and import teachers.  Often they do this at a financial loss, 
and spend years of their lives so that the rest of us have a dependable 
place to dance every week.  Some of them are highly intelligent despite 
their inflexibility and dissect and explore their dance style so well 
that the rest of us can more easily learn and use it. 
  
I should say that other people also do these things, fans rather than 
fanatics, people with flexible minds able to see more than one 
viewpoint, and work with all kinds of people - including the dogmatic 
and arrogant among us who also have their place in making tango strong 
now and stronger in the future. 
  
               Larry de Los Angeles 
               https://home.att.net/~larrydla 
  
  
 
 
 
Date:    Mon, 18 Feb 2002 13:14:32 -0600 
From:    "Frank G. Williams" <frankw@MAIL.AHC.UMN.EDU> 
Subject: Re: Tango and Fanaticism 
  
Larry and friends from the list, 
  
"Larry E. Carroll" wrote: 
...big snip... 
 > If any one of 
> these fanatics became tango god it would be hell for most of us to 
> dance tango.  I suspect tango would go into decline, for a number of 
> reasons, such as the stifling of the extraordinary continuing creative 
> growth of tango. 
 Larry brings up a very interesting issue and one that, for better or 
mostly for worse, affects most tango communities I've seen.  I smile at 
the description of "tango god", but I surmise that every community has 
at 
least a few god or goddess wannabees.  And I would suggest that the 
difference between a) the denigrating moniker of "self-appointed god or 
goddess" and  b) somebody who is positively dedicated to tango in a 
creative and perhaps financial way is a very simple distinction.  It's 
how 
honest they seem about themselves.  It's whether they think it's 
adequate 
to 'talk the talk' or are willing to put in the work to 'walk the walk'. 
Ultimately, it's how well you like them as people. 
  
Human nature such as it is, personalities can clash.  In this forum we 
can only talk.  But in each of our communities with our friends and 
occasional rivals, there's no need for it.  If we shut up and walk 
we make perhaps the ultimate statement of tango individuality.  It 
may be that we would rather quit than dance worse than XXX or YYY. 
What would you change if the day ever came that, for their talent or 
their hard work, you are eclipsed by XXX or YYY in terms of 'stature' 
or 'aura'?  It's good to know why and for whom you're dancing. 
  
Further, it can be a very difficult thing to do - to just shut up and 
dance.  ... Especially when, like me, you sometimes react negatively 
to even the perception of dogmatic thinking... 
  
Shutting up... something to work on at the practicas... 
...not here on tango-l!    ;-) 
  
  
Cheers to all, 
  
Frank - Minneapolis 
  
Frank G. Williams, Ph.D.           University of Minnesota 
frankw@mail.ahc.umn.edu            Dept. of Neuroscience 
(612) 625-6441  (office)           321 Church Street SE 
(612) 624-4436  (lab)              Minneapolis, MN  55455 
(612) 281-3860  (cellular/home) 
  
  
 
    
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