Tango in Toulouse--Part 4
July 2, 2009
10:00 PM

There is a tango concert-dance tonight at Le Bikini, a tropical-themed rock 
club with an outdoor  restaurant, a swimming pool, palm trees, and patio 
torches.  A poster of Vladimir Lenin by the entrance advises people to "dance 
hard, but drink in moderation!"

Janet goes inside the rock club to hear the warm-up band, Trio Entonces.  
Robert and I pick a table at the outdoor garden and feast upon an amazing salad 
built on a decorated half-shell melon with skewers of beef, shrimp, and grilled 
vegetables arranged like the masts of Errol Flynn's flagship from Captain 
Blood.  We drink no rum nor sing no sailor's shanties, but with a glass of beer 
and a strong espresso, we are feeling jolly by the time the main event 
begins--Orquesta Tipica Color Tango, from Argentina.  

Led by Roberto Alvarez, once lead bandoneon with Osvaldo Pugliese's orchestra, 
Color Tango does for Pugliese what others have done for D'Arienzo and DiSarli.  
Cynics call them a "copy-cat orchestra," but I gladly put such labels aside 
when the musicians play with such harmony, precision, and style.  Would you 
call The New York Philharmonic  a "copy-cat orchestra" because they play, note 
for note, the works of masters of the past?  

Finding no "service compris" written on the check, Robert and I leave a tip for 
our waiter, then enter the rock club. It has a medium-sized dance floor, made 
smaller by light and sound equipment, by tables and chairs, tango gear for 
sale, and a busy bar.  There is also a large, raised stage for the orchestra, 
with a smoke machine and mobile lighting.  The best views are from above--from 
the catwalk. 

In contrast to what I've seen at other milongas, where most people come to 
dance, here at Le Bikini, many people seem to want only to listen.  Nothing 
wrong with that!  But after the orchestra plays "La Yumba," Robert Alvarez puts 
down his bandoneon and tells the audience, in Spanish, that although he is 
deeply honored by their undivided attention, he would be honored even more "si 
se levantaran a bailar"-- if they would get up and dance!

Reluctantly, as if afraid of breaking eggs, the first couples rise tentatively 
to try out the dance floor.  Alvarez nods his encouragement, and others join.  
And others.  And others.  The floor fills up fast.  Once the dancers are on 
their feet, the mood of the club changes completely.  The concert quickly 
becomes...something  else.

How do I describe the change?  I went to a bullfight once.  I've watched 
demolition derby on television.  The crowd at Le Bikini seems to have taken its 
cues from both.  The dancers brandish their boleos, galvanize their ganchos, 
heedless of the traffic around them.  From my perch on the catwalk, I can 
barely discern the line of dance, but I can make out multiple collisions.  I 
even witness a woman wind up on her back after tripping over the sound and 
light cables taped to the floor by the engineer's booth.  Madre de Dios!

So what do I do?   Le Bikini has awakened my Inner Pirate.  I run the Jolly 
Roger up the flagpole, climb down from the catwalk, and join in the brawl.  
"Dance hard and fight in moderation!" as Lenin says.



Copyright 2009 by Randy Cook







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