The Southern Cone
- Related Topics:
- tango
- juego de los voladores
- samba
- rumba
- conga
The Southern Cone includes all of Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay and parts of Paraguay, Bolivia, and Brazil (also discussed above). Two characteristic dances of the region, the cueca chilena and the Argentine zamba, have already been discussed as variants of the zamacueca. Settlements along the Andes cordillera perform numerous dance rituals connected to Roman Catholic festival days and Carnival celebrations. One of the largest celebrations occurs in the northern highland desert of Chile. On July 16, the festival day of the Virgen del Carmen (the patron saint of Chile), more than 100,000 spectators, dancers, and musicians journey to La Tirana, a town with a population of about 600. More than 180 cofradías gather there, divided into dance units called cuyacas, pieles rojas, chunchos, osos, negros, morenos, chinos, gitanos, collaguayos, and diablos. Each has distinct steps, costumes, and music. The gitanos, for instance, dress as Gypsies (Roma) and dance in two lines facing each other, with choreographed crossovers, jumps, and gestures with scarves. The atmosphere is a mixture of rich spectacle and emotional reverence as the nonstop playing and dancing make the drummers’ hands bleed and the dancers’ feet blister. On the final night, the cofradías bid farewell to the Virgin with weeping and songs of farewell. They enter the church, where these sounds echo at the climax of exhaustion and fervent devotion.
Gaucho culture is shared by Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and southern Brazil. Gaucho dance heritage mixes Portuguese and Spanish fandango, chula, and tirana with the European-based waltz, polka, and schottische. Many of the dances reflect themes of courtship, while others emphasize humour or function as party games. Their charm lies in the formal politeness that partners display toward each other through bows and curtsies, modestly holding hands or using handkerchiefs to maintain connection. The men perform zapateado steps during sections of the dances, while the women perform a swaying soft step called a zarandeo (sarandeio in Portuguese), which is considered a flirting gesture. In the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, 22 documented gaucho dances are re-created by more than 1,000 performance groups within gaucho community centres (centros de tradicoes gaúchas). In Argentina the gaucho dances include the chacarrera and gato (couple dances based on the fandango) and malambo (a man’s solo dance with improvised footwork).
The Río de la Plata separates the cities of Montevideo and Buenos Aires, the birthplaces of the milonga and the tango, respectively. These port cities were entryways to the cattle ranches of the Pampas and the mining industries of the Bolivian Andes. In the 1880s the riverfront area of Buenos Aires included bars, boardinghouses, and brothels that were patronized by sailors, gauchos, stevedores, soldiers, cart drivers, porters, and stablemen. The upbeat milonga and the gliding tango began as walking dances that could be performed in the confines of brothel and boardinghouse parlours. Like the Cuban danzón and Brazilian maxixe, the dances incorporated close embraces that symbolized and sometimes preceded sexual engagement and thus were inappropriate for middle- and upper-class society.
Tango became acceptable and entered mainstream society after 1907, when it was exported to Paris. There it became one of the dance rages of the ragtime era, and in Europe it acquired certain features—the dance posture (a lifted body carriage) and many of the movements (such as dips, mechanical stops, and quick shifts of weight)—that are so closely associated with contemporary tango. Simultaneously, in Argentina the Black population lost its identity as a separate group with the end of the official and clandestine slave trade, and its visibility was further diluted by a wave of European immigrants, most of whom arrived from Italy. Earlier African-influenced movements of the hip, torso, and shoulders disappeared from the tango, and its mood became more serious.
Tango’s popularity reached its apex in the late 1930s and the 1940s. After its success on dance floors overseas, the tango was brought to downtown Buenos Aires cafés and dance halls. On the larger dance floors, the number of tango steps increased, and variations were added, including leg hooks, jumps, and flicks, respectively called ganchos, saltos, and boleos. The previous close embrace of the dance relaxed so that couples could accommodate the new steps and leg gestures. Musical accompaniment included the guitar, piano, violin, bandoneón (a square-built button accordion), and voice. The tango singer and film star Carlos Gardel became the heartthrob of Latin America in the 1920s and ’30s. With the decline in Argentina’s fortunes, tango’s tempo slowed and its lyrics became poems of bitterness, melancholy, and nostalgia.
Dances driven by rock and roll music from the United States displaced the tango as Argentina’s favourite social dance in the 1950s, and salsa took the popular lead in the early 21st century. Meanwhile, tango made a transition into cabarets and onto the concert stage, where the dance became an international entertainment spectacle in the 1980s. Brilliant dance artists such as Juan Carlos Copes, Maria Nieves, and the Denzels toured the world, giving exhibitions and teaching classes. The tango revival reinvigorated Buenos Aires tango clubs, and the new tango (tango nuevo) became a draw for young people who wanted to experiment with cross-gender leading or new combinations of steps.
Additional considerations
In a brief introduction to Latin American dance, it is not possible to describe more than a few of the dances that helped shape and express the identities of countries and cultural groups throughout the region. Dance can be found almost everywhere, and almost anyone can participate in Latino dance in its many informal settings.
Susan V. Cashion