I agree this is not nuevo milonguero. It is 2 women dancing together and 
changing roles. Ignoring that, it otherwise looks like tango milonguero, the 
tango danced in the milongas of Buenos Aires. However, same sex couples dancing 
together are extremely rare in the over 100 traditional milongas in Buenos 
Aires. It is not the norm in traditional tango culture, where a man leads and a 
woman follows. However, there are a few non-traditional milongas such as La 
Marshall where same sex couples or role reversal is commonplace. These milongas 
are clearly labeled or identified in advertising as non-traditional in one 
sense or another.   

As for nuevo milonguero, it is a label used to describe the insertion of nuevo 
elements such as volcadas and colgadas into tango milonguero, i.e., the use of 
these elements in a close embrace. It is a term that is used for marketing 
purposes, to attract people to tango danced in close embrace who would 
otherwise not be interested. Nuevo elements are not part of the tango 
milonguero danced in the milongas of Buenos Aires.

Many will say that nuevo elements are derived from traditional tango. A volcada 
is a 'fall'. Movements such as a calesita with a tilt (used rarely in Bs As 
milonga), sometimes pointed to as the 'origin' of the volcada, are not 
volcadas; the women does not fall from her axis. A milonguero does not pull or 
push a woman off her axis. Bad dancers might. The only colgadas I have seen in 
Buenos Aires milongas are the jewelry around women's necks. As for 'linear', 
'circular' and whatever direction boleos and ganchos and the wrapping of legs 
around body parts that are best left unwrapped, they just don't occur in Bs As 
milongas. They violate other dancers' space. That is contrary to milonga codes.

Ron
 

--- On Thu, 10/1/09, Jack Dylan <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Jack Dylan <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [Tango-L] Nuevo Milonguero
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Thursday, October 1, 2009, 1:35 PM
> > From: Mario <[email protected]>
> > 
> > Here, two godesses of the Milonguero cult, introduce
> a 
> > new wrinkle to the dance; one that I, myself and many
> others, were hoping to 
> > never see...Alas, fair Prince...we are no more.
> >     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNcVDHdxCbY
> >
> 
> Firstly, this isn't Nuevo and, secondly, it's not a
> performance. It's clearly 
> a demonstration at the end of a class.
> 
> But you'd be right to attend their classes. The wonderful
> Susanna Miller 
> and Maria Plazaola are 2 of the very best teachers of
> milonguero style.
> 
> I'm not a big fan of same-sex dances [to put it mildy] but
> this is, by far, 
> the best demonstration I've ever seen by 2 women.
> 
> Jack




      

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