Thanks, Brian, for pointing out that milongas have a flow and are not static 
things.


--- On Wed, 3/25/09, Huck Kennedy <[email protected]> wrote:

>      The man shouldn't lead anything allowing her to do
> that?  The leader in the video is doing nothing more than leading
> simple tango. How is that "allowing" the kicks?  What is the
> leader supposed to do, put chains and shackles on her legs to prevent such 
> kicking?  What can he do, other than dump her right there on the floor and 
> run away for dear life, hoping not too many people noticed him dancing with 
> her?

Someone always used to complain about this woman who would always do an unled 
front boleo after a back boleo.  My answer was simple:  quit leading back 
boleos, duh!  If a man realizes that everytime he leads a turn, the woman will 
turn into an high-kicking ninja, then he shouldn't be leading turns if he wants 
a tanguera and not a ninja.  A leader is expected to tone down his dance for a 
beginner.  Same thing here.  And if he doesn't want to alter his dance as such, 
then he shouldn't be dancing with her.  

 
> > Don't be so quick to negatively judge a
> woman's ornaments when you have no idea the work a woman
> has to do in order to execute an ornament well.
> 
>      Say what?!?

Nice-looking ornaments don't just happen by accident.  It's not easy 
embellishing gracefully almost instantly on someone else's improvised 
choreography. And to do it musically so that it makes sense.  And make it look 
organic and flowing.  And within the timing so that it doesn't interfere with 
the man's idea.  And with awareness of the dance floor.  There's a lot of 
embellishment exercises in addition to the host of exercises for balance, axis, 
grounding, walking, pivoting, turning, etc.  And guess what?  Working on the 
embellishment exercises is going to help with the basics!

Women, just like men, will see things and try to imitate them.  I'd rather that 
they get instruction in a class setting where a teacher can give them pointers 
on how to do it right.  Much better than some guy telling her on the dance 
floor that she can kick this way or that way or tell the woman that she can rub 
her leg against him.  Yes, that happens.

Trini de Pittsburgh







      
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