Modern Tango World N° 8 (Moscow, Russia) | Page 13

In Moscow, there is what is called Alternative Practice on Sundays. The people, who attend, bring their own music and dance it. There is no real management of the music playlist. The event does not have a milonga format. This is a very interesting place that helps to expand the musical, emotional and dance scope of the participants. But I had wanted to raise it to another level with a full- fledged alternative milonga, with a unique atmosphere, sound quality and so on. The first milonga of this type appeared in Moscow on February 20, 2016. The orga- nizers of Milonga Chique invited me to implement this on one of their two dance floors. As it turns out, this format works fine. It is worth noting that the word Nuevo in Moscow had acquired a negative, and even threatening sense in tango circles. It is usually understood as either monotonous electronic tango music, or heavy, chaotic and dramatic compositions of late Osvaldo Pugliese, or Astor Piaz- zolla. Nuevo was understood as very complex music that cannot be danced. There were some different, not very successful, experimental nuevo milongas in which rare, electronic, non-danceable music was played. It was clear that the DJ’s intention was to enlighten the people, opening them new music. It became clear that was inap- propriate for particular audiences. It was often reduced to a chaotic, disorganized, unbalanced event with limited musical and emotional flow. Of course, it was stressful for people who came to dance. People associated this stress with the concept of nuevo. As practice has shown that a good tango-DJ, using only traditional tango, can create almost any mood on the dance floor, without using the alternative, modern, or nuevo music. It depends on the taste and ability to feel the dance floor, from empathy, emotionality, sound quality, and many other factors. However, the important point is that the expansion of the musical range is itself very interesting. It can open up new opportunities, ideas, inspiration and emotions for both the DJ and the dancers. This opens a com- pletely different domain introducing other flows and energies! Currently, there are not too many people at milongas who can dance well to this music. Most people use traditional movements and combinations. But, the music inspires improvisation, and this is very important! Here is a good example from classical music. No doubt, that Bach, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky all represent classical music. But, these composers are very different! If you ask a person if they likes classical music, their answer will depend on whether they knows something about com- posers, years of their activity, genres within classics, and so on. But many people do not know anything about this. Their knowledge may be limited to the Moonlight Sonata, Fugue in D minor and Waltz of Flowers. Knowing only these few works, they form an opinion about all classical music. The situation is the same with the con- cept of Nuevo.. Some people think that it’s only Piazzolla, Gotan and Otros Aires. The word nuevo is translated as new. But, the genre includes a much larger range of music. Maybe, the term, NeoTango, used by foreign col- leagues, is more viable. — 13 — TO SUBSCRIBE, CLICK HERE