--- Mario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi Trini, > The last part of your email/post; > "I know they'll be folks on their no-pattern, > just-dancing > blah blah blah kick, but I just figure their tango is as > limited as their thought processes. I'd rather not see > that happen with you." > ...leaves me troubled. I am one who believes in > no-pattern, just-dancing...(blah, blah, blah?)
For social dancing, I do advocate dancing without patterns. But patterns can have a place in teaching, and not necessarily complicated patterns. There are some people who need something very structured until they learn to control their bodies. For example, I have one student who "moseys along" in his normal walk, which is the timing he brings to tango so he tends to be behind the beat. With him I have to do a specific pattern over and over and over for an entire song until he can do it without thinking. So patterns can be useful to break out of habits. And I've learned to be more forgiving of beginners who need patterns. I know that over time, they'll eventually dance their own dance. But if patterns is what they need for the time being, then I'm happy that they've found a way to enjoy a dance. Sometimes we'll do a complicated patterns in our advanced class, but it always to hone a particular skill. We usually don't see the pattern being used at a milonga (they may ask about it at the next practica), but that's okay. Our students know what the purpose of the pattern is and pick out what they need. Trini de Pittsburgh PATangoS - Pittsburgh Argentine Tango Society Our Mission: To make Argentine Tango Pittsburghs most popular social dance! http://patangos.home.comcast.net/ ____________________________________________________________________________________ You rock. That's why Blockbuster's offering you one month of Blockbuster Total Access, No Cost. http://tc.deals.yahoo.com/tc/blockbuster/text5.com _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
