As I travel around the country visiting Tango communities, I notice quirks particular to each community. Even within different camps within communities, idiosyncrasies usually show up.
Quirks are habits that show up in a majority of the community’s dancers, and they are not necessarily bad or good. Sometimes a quirk may be a more open embrace by default, or a lot of ganchos being led. However, quirks are quirks, and usually unconscious. When you want to learn more rapidly, it is very important to become conscious of what is not conscious!
Some bad-habit quirks I have witnessed in different communities: a lack of intentionality in the leading; a substantially higher pace of frenetic dancing; a lot of gas pedaling from the follows’ right arm; much less spinal movement.
Last night, I watched quirks of our community – in particular I realized how many leads allow the follows to migrate over to the lead’s right side and often do not use appropriate spinal rotation to stay with the follow as the follows are lead to the lead’s right.
Until my recent privates with Murat & Michelle, I had not realized I also had this quirk of migration and not enough of staying with my follow from the center of my chest.
I want to stress how insidious inbreeding in Tango is – when we dance and learn with the same people month after month (inbreeding), we can easily learn bad habits and not realize what we have learned. Often our bad habits support each other, lead/ follow, to continue their bad habits such as a follow gas pedaling her right arm and the lead pushing hard with his left arm.
Crossbreeding – dancing with people outside the primary group of people one usually dances with – is needed to grow in a healthy way.
Awhile back, I asked several teachers what they thought the fastest way to learn Tango was. While I received many tips, I think the best tip was the importance of dancing at festivals (thank you Tom Stermitz). Dancing at festivals is essentially crossbreeding.
When I notice quirks, I look to the community teachers and pay attention to what visiting instructors have come through town. I am fascinated with how quirks are unknowingly passed on. I am noticing my own quirks I may have inherited from dancing in the Pacific Northwest. Can any of you guess the quirks? These quirks are actually pretty cool!