Firehouse Tango Newsletter 16/07/14

Published: Fri, 07/15/16

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July 14, 2016 Newsletter

Celebrations at Firehouse 
No special celebrations next week.   We're looking forward to seeing you all for great dancing, eating, and socializing. 






 
If heaven is anything like celebrating one’s birthday at Firehouse Tango, it has a lot to recommend it.  Frankly, I’d rather be at Firehouse.  Thank you lovely tangueras, for a birthday memory I shall cherish.  Con mucho amore,
                                                                Steve Turi

I keep saying I do not want to celebrate any more birthdays, but how many men will line up to dance with me, if not for the traditional tributes on birthdays.....oh  well, you know that is not really true because our tanqueros dance with all of the ladies...
                                                                Terri Lopez
 

Cortinas
 
 Thanks to  Richard Abrahamson for his suggestion of songs relating to Britain leaving the EU (I found lots of bye-bye songs and everyone seemed to love them.)   

Ed Botteri was thrilled when I played Frank Sinatra a few weeks ago, and he suggested Rosemary Clooney, Linda Ronstadt, and Bonnie Raitt (I will use the Rosemary next week and Linda the following one.)  Adrienne asked for Queen (I have it all set up.)  This is so much fun for me, and I hope that others enjoy it, as well.  I will try my best to accommodate everyone.  Remember, cortinas are non-tango music.  

​​​​​​​Any other suggestions?  I always love feedback.  Let me know if you love or hate my selections or anything in between.  Same for my playlists.  Remember, I do this for you, and I really aim to please.

 A cortina (curtain) is a short piece (20–60 seconds) of non-dance music that is played between tandas at a milonga (tango dance event). The cortina lets the dancers know that the tanda has ended. The partners can then without insult thank each other and return to their own tables, to find a new dance partner at the next tanda. Cortinas are used at many of the milongas in Argentina and Uruguay but are increasingly common elsewhere- Wikipedia


Let us know if you are celebrating an occasion and would like to request special music for that night’s cortinas.  We will try very hard to accommodate you.  ​
 
Reader's Corner
 We welcome readers' contributions about Argentine Tango in general and Firehouse Tango in particular. Send your thoughts to firehousetango@gmail.com  We welcome readers' contributions about Argentine Tango in general and Firehouse Tango in particular. Send your thoughts to firehousetango@gmail.com



From Adrienne Burton

My dear sue

Keep going, girl... tango last night was awesome!! 
Thank you
Elena

Adrienne




Tango Tip of the week

Hi everybody, Fran here with your Tango Tip of the Week. Recently, I met with a new student, who told me he had a very specific agenda of what he wanted to learn. This student had identified ten figures he had found on YouTube, which he said were his "project for the next two months." If he could master this material, the student felt, his progress in Tango would be right where he wanted it to be.


Under normal circumstances, I would have immediately told a student like this that I was the wrong teacher for him, and suggest that he look elsewhere. But this student had been recommended by a close associate, so I decided to take things a bit further.


"I'm not sure I'm the right teacher for you," I told him, "but let's look at one of the figures on your wish list, and take things from there."


The student brought up YouTube on his iPhone, and showed me a highly complex, multi-part sequence originally choreographed and performed by the late Osvaldo Zotto and his then partner Lorena Ermocida. "I figure," the student told me, "that if we mark it out today, I can get it pretty much in my mind, and then work out the finer points next week."


As it happened, I knew this material very well, since I had at one time actually learned it myself, a process which had taken me about three months of intensive work. (At that time, I had been dancing Tango for approximately twenty years.)


"How long have you been dancing Tango," I asked the student.


"Oh, you know, almost a year now," he casually replied.


Sigh.


To make a long story short, I decided to try working through the figure with the student and his partner step by step to find out what their actual skill levels were, and to determine how far we'd be able to realistically get in "marking out the sequence" by the end of the lesson. What I learned during this process was that -- as I had strongly suspected -- this couple had lofty ambitions, but very little in the way of a fundamental skill foundation on which to build such a sophisticated dance sequence.


Before I continue with the story, I want to spell out what I mean by "a fundamental skill foundation." This couple wanted to incorporate the figure in question into their social dance. To do this, the very first skill set they would have required would be:


·      The development and implementation of individual dance posture at rest.

·      An in-depth understanding of -- and the ability to execute -- linear movement alone (forward, backward, to the side, in-place, and pause).

·      An in-depth understanding of -- and the ability to effectively overcome -- the crucial challenge of achieving absolute balance at the beginning and end of each individual movement.


There's a great deal of detail I'm leaving out here, because it would make this primary skill set list go on forever, but you get the idea. Can you do without these primary skills, and expect to become a credible Tango dancer? No, you can't; but lots of people -- maybe the vast majority -- don't give these things a second thought. "Let's just cut to the chase," they say. "We'll pick up that stuff some other time."


The second skill set would involve:


Fundamental linear movement with a partner. For social dance, this skill set incorporates the highly complex matrix of interconnected skills, which I usually refer to as the "lead/follow mechanism." (For stage dance, this skill is somewhat less essential, but certainly useful.) The second skill set also incorporates creating the necessary condition for balance at the beginning and end of every individual movement -- within the unique context of the dance partnership. This alone can take months -- sometimes years -- of intensive practice to accomplish.


Let's try one more level. The third fundamental skill set would focus on pivots and balance for forward and backward ocho as well as giro/molinete. The individual elements of this skill set are quite extensive, and absolutely demand concentrated, step-by-step development, followed by constant practice. During this multi-level process, simple sequences would certainly be incorporated by the teacher in order to integrate slowly developing individual skills into real-world dance situations. However, no competent teacher would even begin to think of starting the process by choosing a sequence like the one my student presented to me. This would be tantamount to fraud.


During the hour I spent with this particular dance student and his partner, it became clear to me that this individual was doing what so many Tango students routinely do in their efforts to learn this dance -- he was overreaching. He was basing his goals, not on building an actual foundation first, and then moving on. He wanted to achieve an end result immediately without putting in the time and effort to get there.


This doesn't work; it never has worked; it never will work. And yet, so many students keep banging their heads against the wall in pursuit of the fantasy -- rather than doing what's actually necessary to get there.


At the conclusion of the hour we spent together, the leader, said, "Okay, that was a good start; we can wrap it up next week, and move on to the next figure." I offered a short speech about the importance of primary skill development in advance of tackling such complex material.


The student adamantly disagreed. "That stuff is for beginners. We want to get this show on the road."


"Okay," I replied, and now said what I probably should have come out with right in the beginning. "But I'm afraid you're going to have to do it without me."


And I added, "Good luck."

Saturdays with Fran and Pat at Dardo Galletto Studios
 

Please join us for our Saturday Practica at Dardo Galletto Studios, 151 West 46th Street (between 6th and 7th Avenues), 11th floor; 2-4pm, $10 per person. (Bringing a partner isn't necessary.) Pat and I will both be on hand to answer any questions you may have about your dancing, and to help you with material you're working on. Plus you get a new “must-have” tango move each week! If you’d like a private lesson, you can visit our website at www.franchesleigh.com, call Fran directly at 212-662-7692, or email him at franchesleigh@mac.com Join us on Facebook atwww.facebook.com/franchesleighllc


Los Pitucos Milonga in new location this Saturday, July 16th, 2016 - Join us- we will all be there for this spectacular grand opening celebration
 
    A little bit of Buenos Aires in Oakland, NJ 
 Thanks to your ongoing support we are growing!
We are moving to a bigger nearby location with a wooden floor!
Next Milonga - Saturday, July16th, 2016
Special guest teachers and performers - Carolina Jaurena & Andres Bravo
Andres & Carolina are one of the best known and most liked Tango performing couples and Instructors in the New York City area.
Carolina will be selling a new line of her hand crafted Tango shoes.
Expect a great Tango performance...
More information about them at http://www.andresycarolina.com/
Lesson at 7:00pm
Social starting at 8:00pm

Couples, singles and beginners welcome!
Admission $15, including home cooked "delight"
 New Location:
THE AMERICAN LEGION
65 Oak Street
 Oakland, NJ 07436                
For directions click here       

Los Pitucos Milonga is a monthly event which is held on the third Saturday of the month. 

We have been bringing the finest tango events and music to New Jersey since 2009.

Beginners welcome - no partner necessary
Cocktail bar area - byob
Munchies and finger food (feel free to bring a dish.
The evening's delight is made fresh before the milonga by chef/DJ El Tordo
 
Facebook Members can join Los Pitucos Milonga group by clicking here:
​​​​​​​ here


View Monica Paz' terrific tango Facebook posts -

 

 I hope that this link to Monica's Facebook page works for everyone.  Her tango and vals with Daniel Arias in Los Angeles is a joy to watch.

 

https://www.facebook.com/monica.paz.127?fref=ts

​​​​​​​

July 7th, 1959


ÁNGEL VARGAS (José Ángel Lomio) was born. The singer symbol of the 1940’s. In 1935 he records his first pieces with the orchestra of José Luis Padula: the tango BRINDEMOS COMPAÑEROS and the “ranchera” ÑATA LINDA. Three years later he recorded various pieces with the Orquesta Típica Victor. In 1940 he started his splendid career with Ángel D’Agostino. Let’s listen.
♫ MUCHACHO. Ángel Vargas and Ángel D’Agostino (1940)





Here is another link to Monica's tango calendar:




Why wait until the date you are interested in? In 2016, the full milonguero calendar is available for you to visit him every day that you wish:
http://mptango.com/calendar/?page_id=8806

​​​​​​​


 
Here is the Facebook link to see Monica's tango calendar:

 https://www.facebook.com/MPTango

And the following one for her latest interview (She regularly posts interviews that she does with surviving old milongueros) : 

New MP Tango Interview

 

 


 

Our cancelation policy - We STILL rarely cancel





Even though we had to cancel once last year, we still rarely cancel!

We want to remind everyone that if the weather looks really bad, we will leave messages on our web site www.firehousetango.com and   on my cell phone 201-826-6602. Feel free to leave a message if I don't answer.

We cancel only when absolutely necessary (only about eight or nine times in all these years - including, unfortunately, the first scheduled milonga of March, 2015), but please check whenever you're not sure. If there isn't any message, we're on.

During Hurricane Sandy, when we had only cell phone service, I was able to leave a message on my cell, so I guess that the best number to call is 201-826-6602.




A final thank you

The following folks helped set up, break down and clean up before and after the milonga. Without them, there would be no Firehouse Tango.

 


​​​​​​​Steve Maisch
Jesse Barton
Tsipoyra Sartan
​​​​​​​Steve Turi
Lynn Gross




And of course, without Terri Lopez and Steve Turi  we would have to close up shop.

 

 
    A reminder that Firehouse Tango does not supply wine - Your fellow tangueros bring it. Therefore, if you drink it, please make sure to bring a bottle every so often.

    The folks below brought food and wine this week -

    • Barbara Lombardi - Popcorn
    ​​​​​​​
    And these people brought wine 

    • Barbara Lombardi
    • Fred Meyer
    • Mary Pagano
    • Kathy Dignam
    • Mike Casale
    • Marta Bautis
    • Dan & Georgina
    • Francis & Marie
    ​​​​​​​

    Tango in New Jersey and New York