Tango y Cultura Popular ® English Edition TyCP Special | Page 9

One of the few who referred to this “essence”, investigated and defined it, was José Gobello in his short work entitled “The essence of tango” (edited in 1980 by “Cuadernos de Tango y Lunfardo”). One of the main conclusions he reached in his analysis, is that the mentioned and shaken “essence” is something mutant according to each era and the accidents of porteñidad that tango expresses (porteñidad understood in a broad sense, not only limited to the geographical space), as influenced by cultural changes, customs, lifestyles, language, trends, etc, in addition to the predominant musical and/ or poetic influences. That is, that such essence is not something fixed, immobile, but everchanging, just as Tango has been throughout its history’s evolution, and so many works conclude to demonstrate. Perhaps the emergence of new works in the mentioned stages (as the style diversity shows) provoked more one conservative exclamation: “This is not Tango, tangos were those of ...” (and here we put the names according to personal tastes and times). So where is the essence if all of them are different? There lies the key, to understanding that the Tango phenomenon, as it has developed and develops nowadays, recognizes in the course of events its substance, and in the evolution its characteristic sign. And that is its true essence: its fidelity to the essential characteristics of each time (with its historical burden), always nourishing itself from its roots with its springs running waters in its sap. The 1910 city is not the same in 2010, obviously. If it were possible that an inhabitant of that time, was miraculously brought to this day, when facing the landscape, he would think: “This is not Buenos Aires”. And he would be right, it is not his time’s, it is the current one. And Tango being born today is certainly not the one that he knew, but ours (if it is Tango, I add). In this supposed game, lies another key. New city, new Tango (and therefore, different). Let’s not deny the inhabitants of the future the possibility of knowing how we were - artistically expressed in Tango - in this decade of the 21st century. Let’s not freeze the essence, let’s make it last with the same root. And so, Tango will maintain its validity over time. (*) (SADAIC Bulletin, No. 3-April 2010) 09