Tango
115 pages
English

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115 pages
English

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Description

A look into the cultural history of the most popular and seductive dance to come out of Latin America


In Tango: Creation of a Cultural Icon Jo Baim dispels common stereotypes of the tango and tells the real story behind this rich and complex dance. Despite its exoticism, the tango of this time period is a very accessible dance, especially as European and North American dancers adapted it. Modern ballroom dancers can enjoy a "step" back in time with the descriptions included in this book. Almost as interesting as the history of the tango is the cultural response to it: cities banned it, army officers were threatened with demotion if caught dancing it, clergy and politicians wrote diatribes against it. Newspaper headlines warned that people died from dancing the tango and that it would be the downfall of civilization. The vehemence of these anti-tango outbursts confirms one thing: the tango was a cultural force to be reckoned with!


Contents
Acknowledgments

Introduction
1. The Origins of the Tango
2. Europe and the United States Discover the Tango
3. Argentina Reclaims Its Native Dance
4. Tango Music
5. Tangos in Waltz Time
6. The Tango in the World of Art Music

Appendix 1. Tango Steps, 1911–1925
Appendix 2. A Sampling of New York Times Article Titles on the Tango, 1911, 1913, and 1914
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 13 juillet 2007
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780253027757
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Tango
Tango
Creation of a Cultural Icon


Jo Baim
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bloomington and Indianapolis
This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press 601 North Morton Street Bloomington, IN 47404-3797 USA
http://iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders     800-842-6796 Fax orders               812-855-7931 Orders by e-mail        iuporder@indiana.edu
© 2007 by Jo Baim All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses’ Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences–Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Baim, Jo. Tango: creation of a cultural icon / Jo Baim.       p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index.       ISBN-13: 978-0-253-34885-2 (cloth)       ISBN-13: 978-0-253-21905-3 (pbk.) 1. Tango (Dance)–Social aspects–History. I. Title.       GV1796.T3B34 2007       784.18’885–dc22                                               2006039032 1   2   3   4   5   12   11   10   09   08   07
To H., who teaches me every day the truest joy of dancing through life.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 The Origins of the Tango
2 Europe and the United States Discover the Tango
3 Argentina Reclaims Its Native Dance
4 Tango Music
5 Tangos in Waltz Time
6 The Tango in the World of Art Music
Appendix 1. Tango Steps, 1911–1925
Appendix 2. A Sampling of New York Times Article Titles on the Tango, 1911, 1913, and 1914
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
To adequately thank everyone who helped with this project would require a second volume (properly documented in the Bibliography, of course). Friends and family, you know who you are, and each one of you has helped far more than you know. To my fellow Benedictines, both Oblates and Sisters, thank you for teaching me the holy value of work as prayer—may this little book be worthy of the unwavering encouragement you have given me.
Thanks to the patient and helpful editors at Indiana University Press—you were a joy to work with. Deepest appreciation goes to my friend and colleague Karin Pendle, Ph.D., for her enthusiastic support of tango as a dissertation topic and her steady good humor and belief in me ever since. Also, my thanks go to all the kind and helpful people in Buenos Aires, especially Ariel and Sandra.
One of the best things about researching historic ballroom dance is that you actually get to do the dances. Thanks to Richard Powers, Dr. Patri Pugliese, Joan Walton, and all the dance friends for some exquisite turns around the floor and many irreplaceable memories, as well as shared sources and ideas.
Many thanks to Lesley and Fay for the boxes of pencils, years of friendship, and endless cups of coffee, and to Steve, Bendetta, and Karri for taking such good care of You Know Who. And to Henry—constant, loyal, faithful companion of his dancing mom, even if he literally does have two left feet.
Tango
Introduction
The history of the tango is a story of encounters between those who should never have met.
—Marta E. Savigliano, Tango and the Political Economy of Passion


If one asks very many people about the tango, certain common threads still appear quite often: the tango is a dance from Argentina; the music always has a habanera rhythm; all tangos are sad or dramatic or tragic in some way; and it originated among the criminal classes in Buenos Aires around the end of the nineteenth century. As is the case with most beloved cultural icons, the common image is based in truth, but, as is just as often the case, error creeps in when devotees know or remember only parts of the history. A number of limitations plague the preceding description. First, the texts of tango songs in Argentina had a cultural importance equal to that of the dance music. Second, not all tango texts are sad; many of the earliest ones are based on comic or satiric themes of urban life. Third, starting with the first young Argentine aristocrats to discover the tango, many have assumed that lower class means criminal class. This affixed an undeserved label to many of the originators of the tango, particularly women. This particular myth is perhaps the hardest one to shake, since modern social dancers enjoy recreating the roles of sultry seductress and steamy gangster, and those roles also provide theatre audiences with something instantly recognizable. Yet in an age when women wish to add their own stories to validated, recorded history, it is paradoxical that only their bad sides appear relevant to the history of the tango. Finally, though the habanera rhythm identifies the tango for many, it did not originate with the tango. Also, its appearance as the consistent rhythmic foundation of the bass line lasted for a relatively brief time, although, ornamented and distributed throughout the texture, it remains an integral part of tango music.
A completely different aspect of tango history emerges in the various answers to the question, Whose tango is it? Many Argentines smile politely when one discusses the European tango of the years before World War I, and suppress a laugh at the modern ballroom styles of Arthur Murray and others. Yet to a dance historian, all these are at least called “tangos” and must be considered parts of the whole picture. The problem then becomes one of finding the links of style, steps, and music between one geographical area or period and another, and tracing the paths of transmission.
The tango’s complex history begins with seemingly unsolvable mysteries. Perhaps the earliest reference to the tango as a dance is in some proclamations of the municipal court of Montevideo, Uruguay, which prohibited performing the tangos de negros in public. 1 The first extant description of the tango, from 1856, does not mention Argentina. This reference is in a Philadelphia dance manual and is attributed to a Parisian dance master. 2 The connection to Paris is an interesting coincidence in light of the later importance of the Parisian tango. Nevertheless, the 1856 description gives nodding acknowledgment to South America as the tango’s place of origin, and it adds credibility to a theory that the earliest tango dancers knew the popular ballroom dances of the mid-nineteenth century and used some of their steps in the tango. 3 After this anomalous description, primary source material on the tango is difficult to find until around 1910, and almost impossible to find in Argentina itself. Many European dance manuals after 1900 refer to Argentine style, and Argentine sources provide some sociological and stylistic information. What the latter lack, much to the regret of choreographers and historians, are specific descriptions or breakdowns of the actual steps. Without such mechanics it is nearly impossible to reconstruct the earliest tango dances with any accuracy, even though dancers can perhaps approximate the style.
Apart from its use for dancing, tango music is very important to Argentine culture. Today, many people who do not dance at all are actively involved in performing, preserving, and appreciating tango music. In fact, tango music and texts had cultural importance some twenty years before the dance was exported to Paris as a symbol of Argentina. The tango as song has documented the spirit, culture, and struggles of a nation of immigrants and displaced natives, savoring and enjoying the loneliness and isolation of being foreign in their own country and feeling deeply the political and economic strife that has characterized Argentine life— particularly life in Buenos Aires—throughout the country’s history. The tango even has its own vocabulary, Lunfardo, which was originally a patois of the minor criminal class and became the expressive language of choice for writers of symbolic and metaphoric tango lyrics. For example, the Lunfardo word for the aforementioned pleasure of wallowing in one’s own gloom is mufarse . 4
My visit to Buenos Aires in 1991 ended on the inaugural day of a University of Tango—a civic venture designed to encourage citizens and visitors alike to go deeper into the history, musical repertoire, and culture of the tango. There are also several smaller archives in Buenos Aires dedicated to tango music past and present and to the iconography treasured by the Argentine people. Each year, more people visit the grave of Carlos Gardel, Argentina’s beloved tango singer of the 1930s, than the graves of Juan and Eva Peron. The few remaining street musicians who entertain with tango played on the bandoneon 5 are valued mentors for a new gener

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