What it Takes to Tango
The Argentina Tango is intense, both in its style and in what it requires physically from the dancer. Although you won’t develop a dancer’s body in a few months, you probably will notice increased strength in your legs, and perhaps better alignment, as you practice better posture while dancing. You might notice that at first your muscles are sore after your first few lessons. Your body might feel stiff, and you will notice that you feel a little uncoordinated at first as your brain and body get used to working together to form the tango postures and movements. The more you practice, the better your body and brain will become at knowing what the other is doing, and will begin to coordinate together. You’ll feel clumsy even walking backwards, but this will improve with practice.
In Buenos Aires, the top tangueros spend the first six months of lessons just learning to walk the right way. If you visit a milonga, a tango dance club you will probably see some good tango walks, especially if some of the dancers are pros from Argentina. If you live in a major urban area, chances are you’ll have lots of places to try your new Tango skills, and to satisfy your obsession. Look for clubs, more dance studios where you can take extra classes, advanced workshops, private classes, and group classes.
Spanish explorers who arrived in southern Argentina to find the wide expanses of Patagonia thought the land was too wild and rough to be useful. A closer look and centuries later, we know this beautiful corner of the earth to be as varied and precious as any remote natural resource, and lots of fun, too!