@@TangoInsideOut tengo muchas desgrabaciones soy violinista en Chile y me gusta tocar Tango , disfruto leyendo las desgrabaciones , mientras oigo la musica , que gran trabajo , un saludo!!! Si quieres hacemos trueque por alguna desgrabacion.
hi from uk.. very nice rhythmic steps ... but why don't you dance to the sound of milonga music which would help I think.. but thank you so much .. was very nice.
Thanks a lot for your comment! There's no demo with music at the end? We'll start a new series with milonga and vals in autumn, there we'll include it for sure
I may be wrong, but i think walking in an elegant, fluid manner is one of the most difficult things to achieve. Perhops because we are so used to walking in a functional manner since we learnt to walk as children. Lots to work with here, thanks for making this video! Matthew
Definitely it is. That's why it is important to keep working on details with the attitude of staying curious and exploring. Happy it was useful for you. Stay in touch! Helmut
@@TangoInsideOut They are vey useful! Do you travel and teach? If so, perhaps you could visit us here in Bergen, Norway? Contact Tango Abrazo, my local club, should you be headed this way. We can almost guarantee rain! Regards, Matthew
GRANDE MAJO ; desde chilito que sigo a esta muy buena bailarina del 2x4 cuando hacia pareja con Carlitos , cada vez me sigue sorprendiendo con su excelente baile 👏👏👏
Thanks for the creation of this wonderful tutorial on this truly important topic. If a follower could chose, he/she would prefer a nice close embrace plus caminata over everything else. If a leader gets told after the Tanda that the follower enjoyed the embrace, you ticked the box. We'll done Helmut and Iris.
Very thorough tutorial - thanks! However I still don't understand this whole concept of the "preparatory step". Why don't you simply call the back step of the "Basico" the FIRST step of the pattern? What does it "prepare"? I find it much easier to teach beginners a FOUR-step pattern (for the leader: left - right - left - close). Those four steps also correspond with the musical (8 count) phrase.
Well, the concept of the preparatory step is maybe too big to explained just in a comment. It definitely makes a lot of sense to distinguish between a preparatory step and actual step no 1. In short - a preparatory step you can omit and it still works. E.g. you can start the salida directly with the apartura. Sometimes I also call it anacrusis step referring to preparing aspect of the anacrusis in music. I think an important aspect of musicality in tango is to understand that not each step is equally important and hence also not danced equally.
3 месяца назад
@@TangoInsideOut If it's "too big", you should make a separate video about it. ;-)
Thanks a lot! Exactly that's the idea. You have to program the body, the muscles first. Then it can be done in an intuitive way while dancing and listening to the music.
Hey Lucy, thanks for your comment! We're working on it! ;)
4 месяца назад
I've been wondering why it's called "Americana". Do you have any explanation? Most other figures have Spanish names. I know that there is "espejo", but nobody uses it.
I don't know exactly where the name derives from but it's clear that the element comes from a ballroom background. I think it was referring to that by calling it (North) American.