Modern Tango World N° 9 (Rome, Italy) | Page 19

This resulted in a standardization of tango de piste in a model to be imitated by all dancers. Since they all ad- opted the same style, the artistic and creative part of this wonderful dance, in which everyone can search for his own tango, was lost, It was time to take another road. But how? The dance I love cannot be relegated to those distant thirty years which will never come back again. It was hard for me to adapt to this retro trend. Although I accepted it sympathetically, was it right to take away that spirited and current modern music from the eve- ning, even though it was enthusiastically danced by many dancers? Up to the the 1970s, as Alberto Podestà wit- nessed, rock & roll and tropical music was played and danced happily in every milonga of Buenos Aires. What was the point of this obfuscation? In March 2009, for the first time in Rome. I organized a milonga in which the traditional tango was not even con- sidered. Musically, the milonga ranged from the rhythms of electronic tango to musical contaminations. The eve- ning had 180 participants at a bar in San Giovanni. There were some who loved it and some who hated it. It made me realize that this was really something new and beau- tiful. Musically managing an evening of dancing with the traditional embrace to today’s music, was clearly some- thing that violated the dance protocols. It was something that was uncomfortable with many, especially those who loved cultural tradition, folklore and retro aspect of Ar- gentine tango. For them, the poetry of a vitrola que llora is the reason for their own life and often of their work. But many people became accustomed to dancing the the music of those thirty years. In the very beginning, the today’s music seems strange to them, unknown or undanceable. This counter-reaction will lead to to the dis- solution of tango and impoverishment of tango musicians or potential tango musicians. The greatest successes of modern tango orchestras, in- cluding electronic tango, are those that play new versions of classic songs. This is because the melodies are, in some way, known and familiar. There is also the familiar rhythms, the compas, the structure and the typical musical phrasing of tango that also allow a beginner dancer to dance to an unknown piece, the arrastre which helps to step right. In some cases, we know the song so well, having listened to it and assimilated it, that we can interpret it, in dance. Some of this depends on personal tastes and adaptability. This is the case, for example, of many compositions by Os- valdo Pugliese, Horacio Salgán and Astor PIazzolla. The great composition by Eduardo Rovira, A Evaristo Carriego, famously interpreted by Osvaldo Pugliese, is difficult to interpret in the biomechanics of tango without knowing it before, just as Astor Piazzolla’s Oblivion, Johann Sebas- tian Bach’s allegro of the Fourth Brandenburg Concerto and Nothing else Matters by Apocalyptica. A modern tango has to become an old friend to be interpreted into tango dance by average dancers. I’ve spent more than 5000 hours behind the console, both at traditional and alternative milongas, playing music in many milongas and also in Buenos Aires as well as at international festivals. There is one episode that truly im- pressed me. It has, in some ways, become very illuminat- ing to my path. In December 2009, I also founded the Tangoeventi Asso- ciation, which I continued along with Fatima Scialdone until 2016. I curated the musical pro- gramming providing for a strong openness to modern and social. Felix Picherna, who was one of the last DJs to witnessed the golden age of the tango, ar- gued rightly that the golden era of tango will never come back again. No one will ever write tangos with the same words, with the same intensity, with the same poetry and the same feel- ing in the musical performance as they did back then. — 19 — TO SUBSCRIBE, CLICK HERE