Hey Kieth: I may not be one of the fans of your opinions. But this is one of the best things I have seen you write.
Ballroom overall for me has the substance of wonder bread and the depth of a Dick and Jane book. You have given a really great description of why do ballroom. I am impressed by the people who do ballroom really well. I understand the time, energy, money, etc this takes to be really good. Hell, I am impressed when some one does anything really, really well. For the same reasons. I tried ballroom and was horribly miserable. I am much more into the Zen-Tango, and the ritual. It is who I am and the way I have seen things since I was a young one, long before tango. So it does not work at all for me. Sounds like you have a nice balance between the two. David -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Keith Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 1:04 AM To: Tango-L List Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Get Real! As usual, most of what Sergio says is true, although I think he greatly underestimates Ballroom dancing ...."Once you learn about ten patterns for a dance you are considered to know that dance." I don't think so Sergio, that wouldn't even get you to the the first level - Bronze Medal stage. In most of the world, maybe not the US, Ballroom dancing is now known as DanceSport and it's a very accurate name. It really is a sport, requiring a lot of energy, a high level of fitness and at least some natural physical ability if you want to dance it even reasonably well. One of the great things about AT is that it's accessible to just about anyone. I firmly believe that ANYONE can learn to dance AT at a social level and I've think I've proved that more than once with some of my students :-). The same is not true for Ballroom. I know many people who are competent social AT dancers who would never be able to learn Ballroom simply because they don't have the physical ability. Many people go to Ballroom classes every week for years and enjoy it for the exercise and the social environment. But many will never be good enough to actually got out to dance socially at a Ballroom and Latin party. It's one reason why professional dance partners are in such high demand. Someone recently posed the question - why do you dance AT? I think the above is one of the reasons. Many find Ballroom too difficult and too physically demanding and then find success in the much less physical AT. In my case, as my age advances and my physical abilities decline, I find I can no longer dance Ballroom at the level that I would like. I fully expect AT to extend my dancing life by at least 15-20 years. But I still dance Ballroom for the exercise and, on my good days, for the sheer exhilaration of flying around the dance floor, perfectly synchronised with my partner. Finally - the main difference between Ballroom and AT? IMHO, Ballroom is all about dancing the figures while AT is all about the feeling - and it comes from that delicious embrace. Ballroom Tango and AT are so totally different, IMHO, they cannot be considered as even remotely similar. Keith, HK On Thu Mar 6 11:06 , Sergio Vandekier sent: > > >Differences between Ballroom Tango and Argentine Tango. I will mention just a few of them: _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.516 / Virus Database: 269.21.4/1313 - Release Date: 3/5/2008 9:50 AM No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.516 / Virus Database: 269.21.4/1313 - Release Date: 3/5/2008 9:50 AM
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