Last night was one of those nights… Got to class, brushed the cat fur off my shoes (How? How do they get their fur on my tango shoes?) and couldn’t dance at all. Couldn’t follow. Couldn’t embellish. Couldn’t keep a good posture. Nada.
That aside, the classes were interesting. First I took Robin and Marika’s Tango 2 class. Usually I do a Tango 2 then a Tango 3 class at Empire, but with how I was dancing, I opted for Adam and Chico’s Tango Musicality class.
In Robin and Marika’s class we worked on ocho technique in close embrace, with embellishments. We were transformed into dancing cheese sandwhiches, with a piece of yellow paper between each couple. Marika talked about how the hip in close embrace ochos needs to take up the space in the embrace, rather than leaving a gaping void of space. (What most other teachers I’ve head refer to as “sticking your butt out.) Somehow that clicked for me more than it has in the past. We also discussed embellishments, and how the follower needs to take time, or she won’t be given it by the leader. For some reason that was really hard for me. For those who know me, I’m a fairly assertive dancer. Maybe that’s why I work hard at really listening to the lead, and feel weird taking time I don’t feel that I’m given? Marika pointed out that until your hips are in the right place, he can’t lead you to the next step. Robin also said that you can think of leads as a to-do list — you check off one thing before you go on to the next, even though you know that there are other things on your list. Another thought about ochos in close embrace: the embrace is like opening and closing a book. The bodies stay together, but the connection shifts.
In the musicality class we worked on different ways to listen to the music, and accent beats w/ movement, and different ways to time the cross/ embellishments to compliment it, particularly on the two. The hard thing with embellishing on the two is not rushing the next step, or giving it a false urgency, but feeling the underlying beat. It was a nice small class, so I lead Chico a bit, too. I still have a tendancy to overlead the cross a bit — should be more subtle. As with everything, I have a problem with tension in tango. (My clarinet teacher once told me “I can’t believe I’m saying this to a student, but don’t work so hard!”) Adam gave me an interesting mental image to loosen my walk a bit without making it seem artificial — practice walking with my arms swinging like I’m throwing something underhand. Then I don’t overdo the shoulders, but everything else loosens.
tonya | 08-Jan-07 at 11:44 am | Permalink
I had the hardest time with tango — never could figure out that close embrace! And I had a teacher who always told me I stuck my butt out too much — I think because I was shy about dancing so closely with someone and was subconsciously always trying to maintain a comfortable distance or something
At one point, most of the American teachers from my studio left and the owner hired a bunch of Argentinians, and they just thought we were all nuts — they couldn’t figure out why we were so afraid of each other! Oh, tango is sooo hard!