Archive for category Excellence series
Milonga Magic or Misery - what makes an excellent tango venue?
Posted by Henry in Excellence series on September 26th, 2009
As part of our on-going series about excellent tango, I asked Cherie — an expert tanguera and veteran blogger — to tell us a little about what makes an excellent venue. Her comments are very insightful, even if a bit opinionated …
By Cherie Magnus, http://tangocherie.blogspot.com
I’ve been dancing tango for a long time, and in many venues around the world. And in Buenos Aires since 1997, where I now live and teach. Looking back, it seems I’ve danced everywhere-from outdoor plazas and bandstands to vacant factories to castles.
Where do I enjoy dancing most? Which salons are most appealing? What are the physical requirements of a great milonga?
First and most importantly, we like to go where our friends are.
But then there is the space itself– basically the three types of salons are elegant traditional, modern, and funky. And I go for the elegant traditional every time.
I have to say that my partner Ruben Aybar and I are very picky. Every night here in Buenos Aires there are around 20 milongas to choose from, but actually very few that we consider attending. Why?
First of all, the floor is important. We like “soft” wood floors (Region Leonesa, Gricel) as opposed to hard tile (La Ideal, La Milonguita, Viejo Correo) and our knees and legs thank us for it.
We also like space. We dance large when we can, and we are tall. We feel cramped when the floor is small and the ceiling is low (Maipu 444, El Beso). But other folks may feel cozy in intimate spaces.
We enjoy watching the dancers, and so we like the salon to be well-lit. We are traditional, and only use the cabeceo; for that, you have to be able to see across the room. Because we like to watch, milongas that are divided up spatially aren’t appealing (Boedo Tango.)
The placement and size of the tables contributes to the ambiance. Small cozy tables, with tablecloths, scattered around the floor are ideal, as opposed to clustered all in one area, or large banquet tables.
Because of the importance of the music, the sound system should be good and the DJ the best. Just putting on iTunes playlists and letting them run doesn’t cut it.
The organizer should make attendees feel welcome and at home. It’s nice if out of towners are introduced during announcements.
The dancers hopefully are at all levels, but the majority advanced, with a flowing ronda and no crashes on the floor or high-boleo stabbings by stilettos.
People are not there to get drunk or to buy drugs. They come to dance and are clean and well-dressed.
We like to have good table service by a friendly waiter/waitress.
Good ventilation is important, as well as fans and air conditioning in the summer.
We are most comfortable where the codigos are known and observed: cortinas, cabeceo, good manners.
If we can have all this in a historic ballroom with ornate chandeliers and gilt, even better.
Traditional elegant salons in Buenos Aires are like this. But there are funky venues as well: La Catedral, Peru 571, Independencia 572. The floors are bad, the music may be alternative, people are dressed casually in athletic shoes. Folks go there for other reasons than to dance the best tango possible.
Practicas are of course less formal, but still a good floor is necessary-dance studios if large enough can work well as practicas. There should be enough room that dancers can really practice without worrying about injuring someone else.
Tango classes can be held anywhere on a good floor with a good sound system. Mirrors are nice, but not necessary.
What about Festivals? I’ve been to plenty of those too, all around the world. I like it when everything is in one place-like a hotel or convention center. I wasted so much time, for example, in Amsterdam trying to find my way around to various studios/clubs/salons.
I used to attend Norah’s Tango Week outside of San Francisco, and while perhaps it wasn’t the most gorgeous of venues, I liked that my room, the classes, and the nightly shows and milongas were all at one place-in this case, the Holiday Inn.
Many factors make up a good tango venue, and when they all are there, the effect can be magical and keep dancers returning time and time again. It’s worth it to think about the ambiance, because when it all comes together and makes magic, the dancing does too.
Excellence (guest post): Buenos Aires Milongas
Posted by Henry in Excellence series on July 21st, 2009
I am very pleased to announce that today’s blog entry was written by Debbi of An Ever Fixed Mark. Debbi has spent the last couple of months in Buenos Aires and has gravitated towards the more traditional milongas.
I asked Debbi what, in her opinion, makes an excellent milonga. Debbi’s answer is intricate and intertwined, but ultimately lands on a simple answer …
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From the outside it does not look like much, a doorway with large iron security grates partly closed, where someone perched on a stool is greeting and eyeing those who enter. Not with an unfriendly eye, but certainly an attentive one. Smokers congregate at the doorway, challenging the car exhaust with their own plumes of smoke. Stepping inside transports you to a different world from the one on the street, a huge marble floor lies before you, a grand staircase made of marble and iron to your right invites you to step up towards the strains of D’Arienzo floating down from above. At the top, you are greeted, pay your Entrada, and receive your ticket. Before entering through the dark red velvet curtain separating you from Senor D’Arienzo, you must first go to the bano and change your shoes. Only then can you part the curtain and allow the milonga world to wash over you. Other sounds merge with the music; the clinking of glasses, murmur of Castellano, and the soft shuffle of shoes across an old wooden dance floor. The host greets you, and if he knows you, kisses your cheek before escorting you to your table. Women on the left, men on the right. The better dancer you are, and/or the more well known you are, the closer you are to the edge of the dance floor and the center of the room. As you settle at your table, stowing your belongings beneath, a waitress appears at your elbow. Drinks ordered, and perhaps a tostada or empanada, and it is time to begin your pre-game routine. Watch the floor. Pay attention to who the better dancers are, and, perhaps just as importantly, who the horror shows are. As the tanda ends, the women are escorted back to their tables, and you must watch to see who is sitting where. The cortina plays, about a minute worth of an old Pat Benatar song from the 1980’s. Next tanda begins, Biagi. Eyes seek out eyes. Slight inclinations of the heads create couples and women are collected from their tables. The game is afoot. You find your intended, they find you, and a deal is struck from across the floor. As the embrace is created, arms circling shoulders and backs, the circuit is complete and the dance begins.
That is an overall generalized account of one traditional milonga here in Buenos Aires, although all but the description of the surroundings could be used for most all of the traditional milongas. Some milongas are better than others, and a few are great. What is it that makes them great? That is really a matter of personal preference for the most part, but when so many personal preferences agree, they must be doing something right.
In my opinion, number one is music. When the music is great, you will forgive the little aesthetic details, such as worn out tablecloths or bare walls. The music is not only a good mix of known Golden Age music, but the DJ keeps his or her attention on the dancers, increasing or decreasing the energy of the room with strategic selections. Pacing the energy. Creating tandas where the first song makes you say, “Oh man, I gotta dance this one!” regardless of how tired you are. If there is less known music, it is skillfully added into the line up. There is not tanda after tanda of “I found this music in an archive, it has never been played since 1953!” Well, there very well might be a reason it had been shoved away and not played since 1953, and giving us three tandas of it might find a DJ playing music to people sitting down and muttering angrily about “What exactly is wrong with DiSarli?!?!?” A very interesting conversation I had with a tango musician recently brought out this excellent suggestion. “It is fine to play ‘interesting’ music, but the DJ better well have grabbed his dance partner and danced to it before playing it in the milonga!” I could not agree more.
After that, the next most important aspect to a great milonga is – Know Your Target Audience!!! Here is BA they looooove performances. So there is usually at least a half an hour of performances, if that milonga has performances. Some don’t. Sometimes multiple couples perform, sometimes it is not tango that is being performed, but folklorica, and sometimes it is longer than 30 minutes. In the States, a half hour of performances may cause mutiny. Or it might not. But it is up to the organizer to know this piece of information. Other important things to know, are all of the little things that make the majority happy and keep them coming back – lighting, seating, food, beverage, cost, venue, live music, floor condition, A/C… all those “atmospheric” things that create a vibe, an energy to the place. Make sure your floor layout has a good “marriage” with the layout of the room, it should be easy to get around without walking across the dance floor if at all possible.
A pet peeve is when the milonga is set up according to the specific preferences of the organizer. I have been to traditional milongas, both in BA and in the States, where everything was obviously set up according to what the organizer liked best, and not what their target audience liked, and it was reflected in the attendance. Along with my lack of a return visit.
So what makes a great milonga? An organizer who does his or her homework and creates an event geared towards a large audience whom they hope to make “regulars”. For traditional in BA, that means cabeceo, which means light! In the States, cabeceo is much less used, so lighting tends to be darker for a more “atmospheric” feeling. There was a huge topic in the tango blog world about lighting in milongas very recently, and I have to say, after being here in BA, I am leaning more towards light-er so that at least cabeceo is an option. Other factors are a host who has a presence, who makes you feel that he or she has a stake in your enjoyment of the evening and is not just there to collect your money. The environment should be inviting, not sterile; the set up of the room must make you want to stay there for hours on end, and not feel deflated or claustrophobic after one hour. There is a study in psychology as to the impact of one’s psyche from their surroundings — McDonald’s made use of it, they discovered that the color orange stimulates one’s appetite. Hence the use of it in their chains. Now I am not saying study what colors and environment make for happy tango dancers and stick to that, most venues won’t be happy if you show up with gallons of paint. But make your space into something specific, be it cozy, elegant, casual, etc. by enhancing what you do have. All that being said, there are instances where the venue itself creates all of the atmosphere needed for the dancers, and these are the outdoor milongas. Two that spring to mind are La Glorieta in BA which is held in a gorgeous gazebo in a park in Belgrano, and Tango Porteno at the South Street Sea Port in NYC which is held on Pier 16 beneath the awesome presence of the historic Peking ship and the harbor stretched out before you. Both milongas have nothing but atmosphere and good music, but that is more than enough to make it successful.
All in all, the essence of a good milonga is a great organizer.
Excellence pt. 2: Venues for tango milongas, tango classes, and tango festivals
Posted by Henry in Excellence series, Tango on July 13th, 2009
In continuing our excellence series, we turn next to the question: What makes an excellent venue?
There are arguably three types of important venues, which may or may not overlap. One is for milongas, classes, and festivals.
Simba had a great series of thoughts in his post on how to organize a milonga.
What do you think? What makes an excellent venue?
Excellence: Tango classes and tango technique
Posted by Henry in Excellence series, Tango on June 9th, 2009
Clay from Portland, famous for organizing the single largest tango festival in the US, has some informative surveys on his site.
Survey #1 deals specifically with teaching to beginners, and the most improtant qualities (in order of importance) identified for beginners teachers are:
- Understood mechanics of tango.
- Good communication skills.
- Encouraging.
- Patience.
- Good dancer.
- Empathetic.
- Methodical and organized.
- Non-judgemental.
- Flexible and creative in classroom.
- Danced with you during the class.
- Explained the “culture” of tango.
- Funny and entertaining.
- Knew your name.
Are there different qualities that are important for teachers working with intermediate or advanced dancers? What other skills become relevant at higher levels? Can an excellent teacher for beginners be a mediocre teacher for other levels? If so, are there any teachers that are good for any and every level, and always have something to offer?
If there exists a teacher or teaching couple that always has something constructive to offer at every level for every type of learner, then I would venture forth that they are truly excellent. Then again, do these types of teachers even exist …?
Excellence, pt. 1: Argentine tango classes and teachers
Posted by Henry in Excellence series, Tango on June 8th, 2009
What makes dancing fun? What makes dancing tango fun?
A good community will have, at least in part, good dancers taught by good teachers.
We start our excellence series by asking a very simple question: what makes a teacher excellent? Put another way, what distinguishes excellent teachers from mediocre or even good teachers? Here is a distillation of some early responses:
- Passion & enthusiasm
- Knowledge of tango music, Argentine culture, and Spanish
- Vast experience, careful preparation, and good communication
- Humility, sense of humor, and respect for your students
From my personal perspective (disclaimer: distinct from that of the company), good teachers know a lot about the music and the dance, have a wealth of experience, and an undying passion that they convey to their students. But building on the last point, truly excellent teachers connect with and inspire their students by capturing their imagination.
So how to connect and inspire? That’s for your comments and maybe the subject of another Excellence Series post …
What do you think? What is missing from this list or if nothing’s missing, what’s the most important? Think back to your favorite two or three teachers — what made them so incredible and so unique? What qualities makes a teacher excellent?
Happy dancing,
-Henry
Excellence in tango classes, teachers, milongas, and resources
Posted by Henry in Excellence series on June 6th, 2009
The purpose of this blog is to reach out to our community and receive candid feedback. This time, we are asking a rather difficult question:
What defines excellence for you?
- What makes a great tango class so enjoyable?
- What distinguishes the amazing tango teacher from the mediocre?
- What transforms a milonga from an event into an experience?
- What do you wish you could do online easier in the global or your local tango community?
Answer just one or all of the questions but if anything answer this: How would the perfect tango community look and feel?
A bit of a vague question, but we know individual answers will be enlightening for all …
