Saturday, April 19, 2008

Weeks 6-7, 8 - 21 April 2008: Hectic, fun and Milonga'd out!

I should have learned from last week and written my blog daily, but it didn't happen again, and this time for two weeks, but with good reason!

Sharath arrived and stayed for 9 days and boy, was it hectic! We did every tango class we could, slept in the evenings for a couple of hours and went to Milongas almost every night, staying awak till 4am... just like the locals do. Salon Canning (which is by far my favorite), La Viruta, Viejo Correo (which literally means old post office, probably because the building probably was one), La Marshal at Maipu (a gay milonga) and Porteño y Bailarin, to name a few.

Sharath did the bike tours I had done around BA and to Tigre and we did the one to Palermo and Recoleta (the Barrio where we live) together. It wasn't as good as I had hoped it would be - the guide wasn't a good one. Sharath had the same guide for Tigre as I had for my BA tour and like me, he had her to himself - he was the only one there. I believe he had a good time!

We had lunch at Puerto Madero the first day and walked along the boardwalk for a bit before taking the short train ride parallel to the river. The Women's bridge is an interesting one - the suspension bridge is shaped like the heel of a woman's Tango shoe - and here's proof!

We walked through the San Telmo market, my third visit and as enjoyable as the first. There's always something new to see, live music to enjoy and people watching is always fun. Very interesting handicrafts to browse through too, not to mention the antique shops. There are some really interesting curios and artifacts for serious collectors, including old records and posters, china, glass and silver. Of course, you have to be careful and not get cheated, but it's the same as anywhere else. You have to know your stuff when buying 'antiques'. See my photo gallery for some interesting faces and street acts.

The highlight of the last week was a live tango show by Miguel Angel Zotto and his troupe of dancers and live orchestra. Stunning! Absolutely amazing footwork and not a move out of place. You have to see it and experience it to appreciate what I am saying - words just cannot describe how perfectly rendered the performances were. The women were one more stunning then the other to look at and their dancing was faultless. I wonder what it takes to be a dancer like that! Food for thought and something to aspire towards...

Our teachers Yanina and Adrian leave for Japan this week to teach for 6 months. They have been delightful to learn with. Sharath and I both did as many private classes as we could with them before their departure. They performed at Porteño y Bailarin last week and were amazing to watch. Elegance, grace and power. They make an amazing couple on the dance floor and off - they are genuine, warm and friendly and give off the best of themselves as teachers. We both learned a lot from them. They teach at Esquela Carlos Copello at Anchorena 575, (close to Carlos Gardel and opposite Abasto Shopping Center). They will teach here again on their return. I particularly appreciated learning the Milonga from them, a form of dance that is fast-paced and tremendous fun to do.

We were also treated to a performance by Gustavo Naveira and Giselle Anne and a few other couples at Salon Canning a couple of days ago. They are also very big names in the Tango scene - it's incredible that you can do a 2 hour Tango class, attend a milonga and be entertained by the top names in the field for a mere US$5 (15 pesos, represented by the $, is what it costs to enter a Milonga). Wonder how long that will last - apparently the rate of inflation is 3% - per month! I can see it in the prices of Tango shoes - they seem to go up every time I enter a shoe shop! Yes - I have bought some more as has Sharath! I'm not going to tell you how many- all I know is thay are fabulous!

Spanish classes are getting along well - am now able to have simple conversations in the present tense. I went for a foot massage and 'podicura' to a professional podiatrist yesterday - he scraped the dead skin off my feet with a scalpel, filed my nails with a Dremmel... and got my entire life-history out of me in Spanish! He helped me conjugate verbs into the past tense to get the story across. I will have to do this again... foot care and Spanish practice at the same time. I came home totally relaxed. I bought a bottle of wine on my way home because Sharath had flown out and I was alone - wanted to comfort myself and indulge. Shahrukh dropped by to reinstall my Vonage box which had been giving me grief and shared a glass with me. Needless to say, I didn't go to a Milonga and went to bed early for a change.

My Spanish teacher, Emma, has enlightened us on something valuable. A couple of my classmaes, Anna from Germany and Kerry from the US, and I were talking about continuing our Spanish studies. At present we are in Level 0 as none of us knew anything when we started. We were debating buying the workbook for level 1 and doing it on our own, when Emma suggested she would be happy to help us by correcting our work and we would have to pay the UBA only $50 pesos to sit the exam when we were ready to get a certificate of completion - interesting information! With that, we could enroll in Level 2 the next time we wanted to join the UBA. We are starting it next week - hopefully I will have enough time to do this before I leave.

The weather in Buenos Aires has changed - it suddenly became very cold a couple of days ago - had to go out and buy a jacket before our bike trip to Palermo - and though it has warmed up a bit there's still a nip in the air. There's also a blanket of smoke settled over the city for the past 3 days - the farmers traditionally burn their field to increase fertility before planting their next crop at this time of year and because of the lack of rain this year, the vegetation was drier than expected. The fires have been raging out of control and have destroying over 60,000 hectares of land. Due to atmospheric high pressure and no winds, the smoke is trapped over the city and will remain this way for the weekend. It might clear up after Monday, 21 April. It's strange walking around through smoke, breathing it and smelling it 24 hours a day. It has penetrated into Milonga halls and apartments. I am sure it won't be easy to get rid of. Entrepreneurs are making a fortune selling surgical face masks at subway and bus stations - I see several elderly people wearing them - must be effecting their breathing. Some of the culprits have been arrested but the fires still rage out of control... wonder how long it will take to stop them.

It's on to another week and right now it feels like it's going to be uneventful ... but time will tell! Nothing is predictable in this city...

Monday, April 7, 2008

Week 5, 1 - 7 April 2008 - Hard work and lots of fun

This week has begun as one of hard work - in Spanish and Tango. I have done 2 - 3 classes of tango each day and have spent long hours studying Spanish verb conjugation and added many new words to my Castallano vocabulary - the original form of Spanish spoken brought to Argentina by the Spaniards when they settled in Argentina. Its pronunciation is very different from the version spoken in Spain and other Spanish speaking countries. Now it's time to get out of one-word conversations to speaking in full sentences...

My tango classes are improving my dancing in leaps in bounds with constant reinforcement of comments by my teachers. Most of them have complimented me on my technique and ability to follow a lead - I have succeeded in becoming a good follower - the trick now is to graduate from a follower to a dancer. Therein lies my next challenge...

Paula finally left for San Francisco on Tuesday - I came back to an empty home, which felt strange. It would have been very quite here if it hadn't been for the pitter-patter of rain on the windowsill. The TV is also on in the background - it's been an invaluable tool for me in learning and understanding Spanish - the subtitles on English films helps me build my vocabulary and construct sentences. When I'm not sitting on the couch I turn on Spanish programs to listen to the soundtrack - I understanding the gist of things but not complete conversations yet. I wonder how long this will take!

Carol moved in 2 doors away and we have spent quite some time together - attending classes, window shopping and having potluck dinner on her terrace, which is very relaxing late in the evening after hours of dancing, with a glass of red wine and dulce de lecce for dessert. Good times! Good memories! I am going to keep the address of her place to see if I can stay there next time I come here. The location is just perfect and being in a private home (not an apartment block) it is very cozy.

Shahrukh and I went out for a very interesting meal at a restaurant called Freud and Fahler - nouvea esperanza, as they call it. New Breath! The cuisine was nouvelle Argentinian - served in bite sized portions - delicious, different and very distinct. The desserts were outstanding! Must go back there once again before leaving here...

I had an amazing foot massage by a podiatrist in the shopping arcade around the corner from home - 20 minutes for 20 pesos (less than $7) - excellent job! I walked in there with aching fee wondering how I was going to get through a 4 hour workshop that afternoon - I felt like I was ready to dance all night after it!

Finally made it to a milonga at Confeteria Ideal (a famous, old, traditional milonga hall which is now infested with tourists - it was a must do just to be there) this week - Yanina, Adrian, Rocio and Juan Pablo - all teachers from Carlos Copello - were performing there that night. I had a great time. I had asked one of my co-students to be my taxi dancer for the night (they get paid for dancing with you for the evening) but I got there late and he had started dancing with others, so he decided to dance with everyone and didn't charge anyone anything - very kind of him. He's a good dancer and I might ask him again when I want to go somewhere and don't have company. After the performance Adrian, whom I am taking private lessons with, asked me to dance with him - I felt I had gone to heaven after the dance - it was amazing! A good lead makes so much difference to how I follow. They had a live band playing for a while which was very good - UniTango.

Saturday and Sunday were spent doing a women's technique workshop for 4 hours each day with Aurora Lubiz - an amazing teacher who is known for her acrobatic performances on the dance floor - she is a tiny bundle of the most amazing energy - what an amazing 8 hours - learnt a lot of stuff that I had seen being done and always wondered how it was done. It was easy to figure out once taught but adding it to my dance repertoire is going to be a challenge - there's so much to think of to make technique a part of my dance, adding adornos to it is going to be the ultimate!

It's Monday and Sharath is on the home leg now - he has landed in Bombay at the ticketing office to get his itinerary finalized - he's going to leave as soon as possible to be here - flying through Paris so it will still take him at least 24 hours to get here. It's going to be fun 10 (+ or -) days to have someone to go out with without wondering whether I'm going to get to dance at a Milonga or not.

It's going to be another day of dance - Mondays are off from Spanish classes though I have lots of homework to do and another 2 Tango classes this afternoon, and perhaps another this evening... and so it goes on, and on, and on... I'm loving it!

No pics pics this week - back to being a non-tourist - and I'm loving that too!