The Tango-L mailing list archive

Digest from 1 Mar 1999 to 2 Mar 1999





Reply-To: Discussion of Any Aspect of the Argentine Tango          <TANGO-L @MITVMA.MIT.EDU>
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Date:     Tue, 2 Mar 1999 03:00:15 -0500
Sender: Discussion of Any Aspect of the Argentine Tango          <TANGO-L @MITVMA.MIT.EDU>
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Subject:  TANGO-L Digest - 1 Mar 1999 to 2 Mar 1999

There are 4 messages totalling 157 lines in this issue. Topics of the day: 1. Piazzolla en Tango Reporter 2. Picture of Pocho 3. AT Concert @ NYC Carnegie Hall Apr 6 4. Newsday review of "Tango Buenos Aires"


Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 09:49:31 EST From: "Carlos G. Groppa" <Tango4You @AOL.COM> Subject: Piazzolla en Tango Reporter Hola! Acaba de salir el tercer numero extra de la revista "Tango Reporter" dedicado integramente a Astor Piazzolla, con articulos escritos por Jose Gobello, Horacio Salas, Gaspar Astarita, Eduardo Rafael, Adriana Franco, Susana Reinoso, y Rene Vargas Vera, "Tango Reporter" se puede obtener por subscripcion o en Tower Records. Para mas informacion, ver en el Internet: http://www.tangoreporter.com Un abrazo, Carlos


Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 16:07:42 +0100 From: Raimund Schlie <kbb @PODEWIL.DE> Subject: Picture of Pocho Hi list, I=B4m going to invite Pocho Pizarro to Berlin in April and need a good foto for the flyer: does anybody of the list members have such a picture & can mail it as a file? thanks in advance Raimund -- ************************************************************* Raimund Schlie Podewil - KBB Klosterstrasse 68-70 10179 Berlin tel (work): +49+30-247 49 750 fax (work): +49+30-247 49 700 tel (home): +49+30-85 60 34 15 email: kbb @podewil.de *************************************************************


Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 11:17:21 -0500 From: Richard Lipkin <ezie @EROLS.COM> Subject: AT Concert @ NYC Carnegie Hall Apr 6 There will be a concert, "Tango Magic" at Carnegie Hall on April 6. Gidon Kremer - Violin Pablo Ziegler - Quintet for New Tango Jose Angel Trelles - Vocal Gary Burton - Jazz Vibraphone Orpheus Chamber Ensemble Maria Grana - Vocal Ryota Komatsu - Bandoneon Dancers: Carolina Zokalski & Diego DiFalco plus other dancers from "Forever Tango" I've posted the announcement on my web page: http://www.erols.com/ezie/tangomagic.html Richard http://www.erols.com/ezie


Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 15:31:36 -0500 From: Richard Lipkin <ezie @EROLS.COM> Subject: Newsday review of "Tango Buenos Aires" http://library.newsday.com/getdoc.cgi?id=126330399x0y19825&OIDS=1Q001D000&Form=RL&bp=no Tango: It Didn't Always Take Two to Dance By Valerie Gladstone.Valerie Gladstone is a freelance writer. TANGO BUENOS AIRES. "La Cancion de Buenos Aires" ("The Song of Buenos Aires"). Dance and songs from 1905 to the present. Saturday night. Tilles Center, C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, Brookville. IN A HEADY MIXTURE of formal rigor and sensuous phrasing Tango Buenos Aires, a flamboyantly talented company of six couples, six musicians and Karina Rivera, a robust singer, immersed the Saturday night audience at Tilles Center in the steamy world of Argentinean tango. The two-part program consisted of dances and songs from 1905 to the present - a cornucopia of moods and styles that exhibited tango's breadth. In one segment after another, the dancers, sleekly sexy in glittering evening gowns and elegant suits, conveyed the longing and sense of fatality that makes the dance more than an exhibition of eroticism and athleticism. Particularly striking was the musicality of the choreography. Everything flowed, no matter how tricky the footwork or acrobatic the movements. Credit must go to Osvaldo Requena, the artistic and musical director, who established the company in 1985, after its rousing reception at "Michelangelo," a famous Buenos Aires cabaret. A noted pianist and conductor in Argentina, he has spent years researching and reviving the indigenous music of his country. The teacher in him designed this program, a very seductive history lesson that took us through a century of dance. With only a lamppost and old-fashioned record player as props, the evening began with the small orchestra, which sat on the stage, playing "A Cumparsita," a popular march tune, characterized by the poignancy that underlies all tango. Next came a sequence just for the male dancers - since the tango was first only danced by men who were alone in a strange port. Women joined them for the second dance on the program but not as equals in status. Although now identified with the glamor of high society, the tango originated in society's underbelly - the brothels of Argentina. Many of the immigrants from Europe, Africa and other regions who streamed into the outskirts of Buenos Aires during the 1880's gravitated toward the port's brothels, where they could drown their troubles in a few drinks and find some companionship. From this intermingled cultural brew emerged a new music which became tango - a mixture of the rhythms of African drums and the popular music of the pampas known as the milonga, which combined Indian rhythms with the music of the early Spanish colonists. In the early days, the wailing melancholy of the bandoneon, an accordion-like instrument imported to Argentina from Germany in 1886, became a mainstay of tango music. It was the French in the first two decades of the 20th Century who first brought tango world renown and into cabarets frequented by the rich. The exuberant cast illuminated both the light and dark aspects of tango. While every dancer had tremendous elan, Nestor Ruben Gude, Lucia Miriam Alonso, Dante Roberto Montero and Haydee Carmen Gonzalez stood out in the "Milonga con Variacion" (Milonga with Variation) and "La Trampera / 9 de Julio" (The Rat Trap / July 9). One moment their flashing feet and intertwining bodies would convey pent up sexuality and the next a romantic tenderness. Their gift was showing how such a variety of emotions could exist almost at once. Unwilling to depart without a special fanfare, the men did a final dance with twirling ropes, finishing in a blaze of virtuosity. Copyright 1999, Newsday Inc. Tango: It Didn't Always Take Two to Dance., pp B02.


End of TANGO-L Digest - 1 Mar 1999 to 2 Mar 1999 ************************************************