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Tango success
By Goyo Cuello
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The origin of such an original dance, if it is not
lost in the darkness of times, was born to the beat of candombe music,
which with the passing of time became a dance of the merry people of
the outskirts of the Buenos Aires capital. The compadrito polished
it with embellished steps and changes and agile body movements, then
it took the name of baile con corte.
The most outstanding composers, Pallermats, Williams,
Aguirre, Hargreaves,
López Buchardo and Tornquist, have tested their inspiration to
create tangos; but the truly popular, like "Bartolo",
"Golpiá que te van a abrir", "La Porteñita" and others
have been the creation of popular musicians. And there are composers
who have specialized in the genre and are famous, such as Villoldo,
Posadas, Reinoso and many others, and they are those who provide the
market on the classic days for tango, at Carnival time. These musicians
preferably look, to give title to their compositions, for the most creole-styled
phrases and with a compadre-tinged character.
As for the boom of tango among us, it is evidenced
in the fact that music houses privilege the publishing of tangos above
other compositions, and some have sold millions of copies, and now even
more, since tango has turned out to be an export article.
Only to Paris and London some million copies are mailed,
because it seems that this Argentine dance is more generalized each
day.
How great the popularity reached by tango in Paris
must be, that even academies to teach it have been established; at one
of them professor Ducasse was as catedrático and had as his disciple
nothing less than the Bonaparte princess.
Furthermore foreign magazines have tended to popularize
tango, and if this goes on, we will probably be in the geographies as
a country exporting cereals, cattle and tangos.
Argentina has become fashionable, and more than to
our soil resources which we export, we owe it to that dance so popular,
which we had nearly forgotten, because had it not been for the outskirts
compadre who kept the sacred fire of tango alive, perhaps it
would have been replaced by some dance coming from Paris. But after
it was given naturalization papers at the Ville-Lumière and is
considered as a good thing, we had no other alternative but making it
decent, modifying the cuerpeadas, making the tenzados
more skillful and, what is more, dancing it with such prosopopoeia,
that our dancers when performing it, seem to be solving a problem of
surveying, such is the attention they pay when measuring the steps.
And with the popularity of the dance the catedráticos
have appeared. In any salon we see them springing, looking at the gathering
as if they were to perform a very difficult demonstration, and to the
beat of a tango "No te digo niente" or "Alcanzáme
la budinera", rock around with all the dignity that Sáenz
Peña devotes in his official acts.
But it is interesting to see a salon of those which
also have a humorous title like those of the tangos, at the time when
the orchestra leader places a little notice with the sacramental word
"Tango", when the dancers get ready and look for the partner most floreadora
(skillful in embellishments) to exhibit their tango abilities to the
beat of the popular dance, and when the orchestra breaks in with its
caressing languid notes, the couples start to bend like a palm grove
caressed by the wind, and it is worthseeing those compadres del
arrabal (guys from the outskirts) assuming an air of gentlemen
insolently looking at us, the misfortunate ones who are unable to dance
with corte, as if saying: "¡A ver, che, sacame el molde!" (come
on, you, copy my style!)
The little success they achieve brings them unbelievable
energies; that is why tango dancers dance ten or twelve pieces without
experiencing the least fatigue; and since their pride is at stake, when
they perceive that they are being observed or admired this is enough
to regain energy, and to go on hardly and evenly with that dance all
night long, which because of its exotism is a boom abroad.
To be a tango dancer is a marketable merit; its catedráticos
are "mangiados" (recognized) from a far distance by their singer-like
manner, their noticeable way of stepping on and by their looking eyes
of caburés de ocasión (bargain vultures).
Tango is triumphant, revives, is fashionable; Paris
and London have consecrated it. Let us dance it, then, if not, maybe
with the passing of time it will be brought back from Europe like leather
and wool with their label "made in Germany".
Article published in the magazine "Caras y Caretas"
Buenos Aires 20 July 1912. |
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