Tango – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
When were African slaves brought to Argentina?
answer
Mid 1800s
question
What are the origins of the word "tango"?
answer
The word may be straightforwardly African in origin meaning "close place" or "reserved ground".
question
What are the origins of the dance itself?
answer
The dance developed in the slums of urban areas.
question
There are several theories to when and where the dance developed. What are they?
answer
Around the 1880s
1. Tango was born in the dirt streets of the slums.
2. Practiced in brothels
3. Stylization of the knife-fighters
4. Performed by black people in secret societies
5. Inspired by the Cuban Habenara (both the music and the dance) which is African influenced.
6. Molonga (played by gauchos that were mostly black on the pompas). This is the musical aspect mostly, but some footwork was related.
7. Resembled the arrogant waling of the compadrito
8. Inspired by the dances of the NeoAfrican nations called the candombes. (organized by slaves)
question
What are candombes?
answer
Dances that were made by free black individuals that were once slaves and brought to urban areas.
question
Who immigrated to Buenos Aires first?
answer
Men immigrated first to get money and set-up jobs to bring their families to them.
question
Describe the "melting pot" that was Buenos Aires in the early 1900s.
answer
African, Spanish, Italian, British, Polish, Russian, and native-born Argentines intermixed and each borrowed dance and music from each other.
question
How did the "melting pot" influence the development of tango?
answer
It is generally accepted that tango is borrowed from many nations:
Slave rhythms "candombe" with the music of the Pampas called "Milonga". Then combining rhythms and foot patterns of indigenous people and Spanish music from colonists. The Uruguayan rhythmic form and candombe, was then added with the salon dances.
question
Milonga
answer
Milonga is a word from Quimbunda and means "the words of the Payadores" then to "a gathering where one can dance".
question
What can Milonga mean today?
answer
Music, dance, or a gathering.
question
What is the Milonga dance?
answer
It was an early rural dance form that mutated into the tango around 1880. Overall it is the popular music of the pampas and the Rio del plata.
question
Who were the gauchos?
answer
African-Argentine fathers of the compadres.
Moved to Buenas Aires and brought their own African music.
Were like cowboys.
question
Who were the compadres?
answer
Went to the city.
Son of the gauchos.
Worked in Butcher shops.
Had work in the ports.
Had urban jobs (Ex: blacksmith)
question
Who were the compadritos?
answer
Didn't have work.
Part of gangs.
Quite violent.
Gathered together in the streets.
Overall situations influence by poverty.
Influenced the development of tango the most.
question
Why did men dance the tango together?
answer
Did not have to pay prostitutes.
Not a lot of women.
To practice, improvise and innovate, creating new moves and new steps that allowed rapid development of the dance.
Allowed them to perfect, impress, and surprise women.
A way to develop skills and compete.
question
What kind of women first danced the tango?
answer
Prostitutes danced with men prelude to commercial sex.
question
How has the role of women been traditionally defined in tango?
answer
Women have been defined as submissive and less than men since prostitutes were not seen as equals.
question
How did people dance together in the brothels?
answer
Prostitutes would choose who they would dance with.
question
How is the tango perceived?
answer
The tango is a masculine dance even without prostitutes (misogynistic).
question
What is a bandoneon?
answer
The bandoneon is a large and fiendishly complicated concertina that is like an accordion and is a crucial instrument in tango.
question
Where was the bandoneon developed?
answer
It was originally developed in Germany for churches that could not afford organs.
question
What did tango lyrics express at different times in history?
answer
1. Sex and obscenities
2. Sense of loss and longing (as the tango developed "who are we" over several decades).
question
Did music originally have lyrics?
answer
No
question
What is at the root of the "bitter and insecure melancholy" that Argentines feel?
answer
Lyrics also reflected the renewed poverty and social divisions in the country.
Lyrics would involve the politics of the day.
question
Why did the Argentine elite originally looked down upon the tango?
answer
Due to the ties that it had to sinful places such as dance halls, cities, bars, cafes, low-class casinos and brothels.
question
How did the tango reach Europe?
answer
The sons of the elite would "slum" and when they traveled back to Europe, they taught the dance.
question
What other dance developed around the same time of the tango?
answer
The waltz developed around the same time.
question
Why did they eventually accept it?
answer
There was a purified version of the tango that was brought back to Argentina.
The tango gained popularity in Paris, London, and Berlin and other big cities as the young wealthy and nobility took a liking to the controversial dance that then spread through globalization (movies and tango singers traveling the globe).
question
How did the tango develop?
answer
Top down-> Elites
Bottom up-> suffrage 1912