<<While we're on the subject, how about "downtown style" ?
(i.e. estilo del centro) When did people notice that
the dance was different in the center versus the outer
districts?>>

Tango began in the less respectable and poorer neighborhoods on the fringes of 
the city.  As the popularity of the dance spread new clubs opened in the center 
that were aspiring to be more respectable because they were attracting better 
clientele.  In some cases the owners of new clubs in town, who were often 
Italian immigrants, tried to "clean up" the dance and give it more elegance and 
respectability and remove the stigma of being only associated with the lower 
classes.  People dressed up when they went to these clubs and the dance also 
"cleaned up" and lost some of its cruder movements.  The tango danced in some 
of these clubs became known as "tango liso" (smooth tango) which evolved into 
tango de salon. Neighborhood styles were beginning to appear but there was no 
specific date so much as a gradual change.
My take on the history was that the tango del centro was the fancier classier 
tango.  I think milonguero and apilado are new terms that emerged (or were 
invented) after the resurgence of tango in the 1980's.  They did not  arise to 
describe dancing close, because people had always danced close for 
years....they were a different style of dancing close, in part because of the 
newly crowded clubs.

Cheers,
Charles 
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