--- On Mon, 10/12/09, Keith Elshaw <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> This thought came up recently:
>
> It's been about 4 years that this kind-of malaise has been
> around.
>
> That's a cycle.
Was that the time of the nightclub fire? I've heard it said that that event
really changed the milongas. When the clubs were closed, people found other
things to do and some didn't go back to the milongas. When people went back
they may have changed where they went. No doubt the success of CITA and the
World Championships would have brought in more foreigners and changed the mix,
as well.
When Daniel Trenner taught here, he surprised us with some of his take on
dancing there thirty years ago. Like the women holding up the man in the
embrace. Women doing ochos pretty much automatically once they got started and
not stopping until they were asked to do something else. I could see that
happening in an environment where people were trying to be social with each
other as opposed to being "correct".
Trini de Pittsburgh
_______________________________________________
Tango-L mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l