<[email protected]> wrote: Bob: The primary difference between AT and ballroom is AT is a dance of possibilities, one step at a time. Ballroom is different in that there are prescribed steps. Women expect to begin going backwards on their right foot in tango, waltz, rumba, quickstep, and foxtrot. In AT, the woman doesn't know. Women who dance AT have to wait to find out if they are going to step sideways or backwards with the right foot.
Michael Dances ballroom, latin, and Argentine Tango > Ballroom dancers, to my knowledge, rarely complain about difficulty > "traveling" as they say. They do complain about stepping on toes and > tangled feet. > > Tangueros, on the other hand, do complain about walking, and it can be > difficult. > > So tango dancers in effect are dancing on a balance beam. What's more, > they are dancing on a balance beam pushing on each other. On every step > there is a compression and release felt in the chest. Ballroom dancers > experience some compression and release, but it's coming through the frame > (i.e. the arms). The arms can give a little to absorb the shock; the chest > cannot. > > Bob > San Francisco > > _______________________________________________ > Tango-L mailing list > [email protected] > http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l > -- I'd danced Argentine Tango- - with the Argentines _______________________________________________ Tango-L mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l
