Talk:History of the tango

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Latest comment: 1 year ago by Capybara4eva in topic African influence

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In the section "History of Tango" is written that TANGO might stem from African origins. This I put in question since in Argentina barely black people are living. It's like a lottery to see a black person there. Has someone an explanation for the African roots that seem to be logic? --Hauke 08:18, 2 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Tango-related article deletion

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Please vote Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Tango.info (2nd nomination). `'mikka (t) 18:48, 14 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

African influence

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i'm sorry but anytime I want to read about tango here they always call up on its african influence. gosh! what ALL the african people I've met get more surprised about tango is the fact that it is sooo different from their dances! I know you will say, Africa is huge, maybe it's from another part of Africa but still, most african dances are very separated the female from the male, sometimes not even touching or each one doing different dances. I suspect the people putting that is the same people writing everywhere that there's a huge amount of african heritage in Argentina and stuff. Werther it has or hasn't african influence I don't think it should be mentioned in first place since it isn't that important or notorious. it is way more influenced by waltz or zarzuelas. I hear more violins and bandoneons than bombos. Guchogu 08:24, 23 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

The origins of Tango have nothing to do with Africa. There has never been any African influences in Argentina whatsoever simply because there was never any Africans people, let alone communities in Buenos Aires. Not even today you can find Africans in Argentina as as opposed to Brasil who developed de Samba (a truly African dance). The person who wrote that Tango has anything to do with Africa is wrong and misleading the public, for whatever reason. Accordingly the article should be edited on this regard. Please can anyone contact me as to allow me to do this? My Wikipedia name is Magiko and I am prepared to spend some time editing this article with factual and true details about tango. Thank you for your help. Magiko
Thank you for your high interest in the quality of this article, Magiko. Please use published references when you edit this page. As far as no Africans in Argentina, how do you explain slavery from 1770 until the emancipation in 1813 of children born to slaves and finally outright abolishment of slavery in 1853? How do you explain blacks used in the military to fight pampas Indians? How do you explain The Shimmy Club in downtown Buenos Aires? Where did the Candombe come from? Here are a few interesting links:
La Ruta del Esclavo
(blog) In Search Of The Mythical Afro-Argentine
UNESCO: Slavery in Argentina
Cheers - Binksternet (talk) 19:46, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
A couple more links:
A Tango with Robert Farris Thompson (2005 interview)
Hisham Aidi: BLACKS IN ARGENTINA: DISAPPEARING ACTS
Enjoy - Binksternet (talk) 19:50, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Still, "The dance originated from the African community in Buenos Aires based on ancient African dance forms. ". BASED on african dances? please!! as I said before it is much more similar to a waltz in dancing, so I'd said BASED on Waltz or any other dances WITH african influence, but based on african dances?? can you show me please?? Guchogu (talk) 01:22, 29 November 2007 (UTC) I changed it. And as far as I know, candombe comes from Uruguay. There might be struggles between where mate, alfajores, best meat or tango is from, but candombe is clearly from Uruguay and also way more popular there. Guchogu (talk) 01:31, 29 November 2007 (UTC) And about the links you provided, there's nothing important. So what if this guy was afro argentine, or this other composer... there is thousands MORE composers, not because Ranko Fujisawa was one of the most famous tango singers in the 50's I'm gonna say most singers were japanese. read: http://www.todotango.com/spanish/biblioteca/cronicas/musica_criolla.html I'll quote some "En la música africana predomina la percusión. En muchos de los ritmos criollos de América Latina donde existe una gran influencia étnica negra se destaca ese origen con evidencia definitiva.Reply

Hi, you are not wrong in your comment that tango has similarities to waltz as a dance form. However, this is not a valid argument against tango's origins being influenced by Afro-Argentines. The tango danced in the 19th century looks very different from the tango of today because it went through a process of sanitization by the Argentinian elites who wanted to eliminate its associations with the people of African descent and the working classes (these are not personal opinions but summarized from an Argentinian sociologist, Anahí Viladrich's book "More than Two to Tango: Argentine Tango Immigrants in New York City"). Capybara4eva (talk) 15:19, 7 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

Tal influencia de los ritmos africanos -y dejamos de lado la gravitación pentatónica andina- se observa plenamente en nuestra América desde el Perú hacia el norte y, muy especialmente, en el Caribe.

No es el caso de nuestro país, del Uruguay y de Chile, donde el influjo musical español es más abrumador y tangible. Desde ya que no me refiero al popular "candombe" uruguayo en que la evidencia de su origen africano nos exime de cualquier análisis." So if you're gonna say Tango is based on African dances, I'd say Salsa, Merengue, and all those dances ARE african dances... a drop of ketchup on mayonnaise doesn't make it golf sauce..

Yes, you are correct Salsa (dance), Merengue, Mambo, Cueca, Rumba (dance) all originated in the african communities of Latin America. Later they would incorporate other elements European Origin. So yes we would not say they are "pure african" dances, but the origins were African.Muntuwandi (talk) 21:09, 29 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Guchogu (talk) 01:33, 29 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I noticed Mutu undid my edit, I say it here, they talk about the origin of the word in the second paragraph, then, the niger congo reference should be there, not in the first one. If you so want it to be included, reformulate it and add it where it belongs, not in the first paragraph to make a first eye impression of the african origin. Guchogu (talk) 18:20, 29 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

African influence

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Several sources note an African influence in the origin of tango, especially in the name of it. Recent edits seek to erase these referenced sources. Certainly it is true the dance and the music have much to do with Western forms, but erasing all trace of African origin ignores mainstream source material. We can't write the article without reference to mainstream research. Binksternet (talk) 18:03, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Yes there has been one problem editor, User:XGustaX who has been trying to overly europeanize Argentine history and culture. He has been blocked indefinitely but he uses his sockpuppets to rewrite the article every now and then. Muntuwandi (talk) 22:36, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

I'd say there's more people trying to "blackanize" Argentina. Guchogu (talk) 01:29, 29 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

by no means, just searching history for the truth. Muntuwandi (talk) 21:05, 29 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

searching your truth. Guchogu (talk) 05:48, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

As a Tango connoisseur, professional musician and expert on the subject I can say this: It is fundamentally wrong to state that the origins of Tango can be found in Africa. Argentina and Africa are so far apart as computers from mountain flowers. Please stop "africanising" Argentina. Simply because to do so, is historically, socially and factually wrong. Magiko —Preceding unsigned comment added by Magiko (talkcontribs) 12:16, 10 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

This is my personal opinion, based in years of traveling, reading and listening. I am from Buenos Aires and I can play and dance Tango. My family comes from San Juan y Boedo. I also lived in Africa for a year and study some history. You can read the book of Horacio Salas, great source of info.
There is seem to be some problems here,but I guess we can't expect more from a web source?
First is that nobody talks about the genocide of black people in the land that is now know as Argentina.Thousands killed fighting in the front lines in many independence and civil wars.
Second: The lack of knowledge of Africa seems big. Anyone that have some real knowledge of African music,can heard the origin of the candombe and milongas in them.For instance go and find some music from the the West African Coast.
Tango is a fusion of cultures, and we can't simplify and say is of African origin, that would be not serious. Anyone that heard "Havaneras" can trace tango origins there too.
Third: There is a lot of music that comes from Africa, mix in the Americas and then go back to Africa, and again...This is still hapening TODAY, so it is easy to see and heard.
Third: Don't confuse the music with the dance.Yes, africans don't dance like that. As far as I saw, africans are terrible dancers. The afro caribbeans really beat them. You will say that because caribbean dance way there is no african roots in the dance either?...Some people in different environment just change. Everything changes, all the time. Tango today is not the Tango of the 40s.Not the music, and not the dance. Capito?
Four: It seems to me a little racist to say that Africa is not related with Tango."Tango" is an African voice, that is for sure.Or maybe some will come up and say is German?
Five: Rock, jazz, blues, tango, bossa, you name it...comes from african roots.
Five: Another totally different topic is the Tango lirics...go and read the H. Salas book
END: it doesn't really matter where the Tango comes from, but waht is it now! Look at that gringos trying to mix tango with swing...that is sad....and bad taste...you should see my uncle Luigi dancing the old tango, people barely move. But that is the past, its gone.—Preceding unsigned comment added by User:72.11.112.189 (User talk:72.11.112.189contribs) 10:09, 6 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

We should be aware of the fact that present day black african music (from Mali through Ghana and Congo to South Africa) is highly influenced by Spanish American music. In the 40's and 50's radio stations in Kinsasha played Cuban hits nonstop, originating African Rumba (now known as Soukous). At the same time, English language radio stations in Ghana played US adapted Spanish songs like "Besame Mucho" (sung by Nat King Cole) over and over again, this being a major influence for Highlife, the style dominating the West African music scene in the 50's and 60's. The distinctive sound of what is broadly known as African guitar generated as West African musicians tried to imitate the piano lines of Cuban Son and later Salsa - no pianos available, so they had to make do with their Spanish guitars when entertaining travellers on river boats. Obviously, the very percussive use of pianos in Salsa was influenced by African rhythms in the first place; what I am trying to say is that you cannot tell what influenced what just by listening to the music of today; you really have to follow the tangled threads of history.--Megustalastrufas (talk) 12:00, 1 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Unreferenced edits by Magiko

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Please provide references for any and all edits to this page. There are as many opinion about the origins of tango as there are tangueros; the ones that we put into this article must be sourced. We can compare various sources and offer this contrast to the reader but in no way can the page benefit by being pulled in only a single direction by unreferenced editing. Binksternet (talk) 01:47, 31 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

SEND THIS TO WIKIPEDIA
Dear Binksternet - and others! Thank you very much for your response and for your advise. And although I disagree with your specific opinion/information about African influences I appreciate the fact that you are interested in helping me and Tango as a whole. Regarding Candombe (which appeared much later and in Uruguay and had slaves) has nothing to do with Tango's origins and I can prove this point to anyone as well. Rather than Candombe it is the Spanish Habanera which has been really influential in the birth of Tango. But all in all, it is fundamentally wrong to state that the origins of Tango can be found in Africa (which is what the article suggests). I will come back to you with book references, etc. as you desire, but I need time since I've got other things to do, as you can imagine. In the meantime I would like to ask you (as the Wikipedia expert you seem to be) to put some kind of 'note' or 'flag' advising that the correctness of the present article has been questioned and challenged by others. (I would do it myself if I knew how to). If you do that (or at least if you would add my article as well - perhaps at the end of the present one? (you can get my article by contacting me directly) people will have the opportunity to obtain a second opinion on this so controversial subject. Thank you very much again for your help - and for helping Tango. Kind regards, Magiko
I just rewrote some of the sections, making it flow more chronologically. I added more references, too, though they are just online articles and not scholarly textbooks. There's not a lot of high level scholarship relating to tango history. My point of view is that weak references are better than none at all. I'll continue to push for references accompanying each new edit and resist the deletion of existing referenced sections. Binksternet (talk) 00:56, 20 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Inaccurate article

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Tango started as rythmic dances of african slaves and immigrants/poor people in the slums of Buenos Aires. It was later appropriated as is became vogue, especially in Paris circa 1911. Lunfardo, an argot common in tango lyrics (see wiki page on it) is evidence of the influence that other immigrants had and the counter-cultural nature of the early dance. It has a lot of 'made up' words that are slightly satirical and have many Italian influences.

examples of lunfardo:

bacan = man, robber chochamu = young man (vesre for muchacho) fiaca = laziness (from the Italian fiacco -weak-) garpar = to pay with money (vesre for "pagar" which means to pay) laburar = to work (from Italian lavorare -to work-) lunfardo = criminal, thief manyar = to know / to eat (from the Italian mangiare -to eat-) mina = woman (as in gold-mine, from the point of view of the pimp) morfar = to eat (from French argot morfer -to eat-) pescar = to know (from the Italian capire -to know-). trabajar = to rob trucho - false/fake/not real

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This wiki page is very limited in scope and focuses mainly on the european appropriated form that turned in to contemporary tango. The african influence discussed here is indisputable and evident in some of the ways that tango was characterized–it was exoticized and called thing like a mild regression to more primitive roots' and the like. I'm basing this on the content of my Latin American Studies Pop Culture class and an excellent article by John Charles Chasteen "Black Kings, Blackface Carnival, and Ninteenth-Century Origins of the Tango" in Latin American Popular Culture eds. Williams H. Beezley and Linda A. Curcio-Naggy. Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources Inc., 2000 43-59.

It def. needs re-written or at least heavily modified, especially in the first half!!

P.S. Buenos Aires was a major entry point for slaves who at one point made up over a quarter of the population.


It seems difficult for some people to come to terms with the fact that music generally takes in a variety of very different influences. Tango did not START as rhythmic dances of African slaves in Buenos Aires, as claimed above. Tango did not START. It EMERGED over centuries. The first written reference to american Tango as distinct to the much older andalusian Tango is from 1836, and it describes it as a Cuban dance. See: Esteban Pichardo, Diccionario Provincial de Voces Cubanas (Matanzas, Imprenta de la Real Marina, 1836, Pág.. 242) I do realize that it is much cooler to say that it is purely argentinian, and single-rooted in africa - many writers have made this claim - but if you want me to believe them, you will have to hire a time machine, travel far into the past, and burn the evidence.

Incorrect etymology of the word TANGO

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The etymology discussed in this article is in fact incorrect, due to the fact that there is no proven and agreed-to single root. In fact there are at least 7 possible etymological roots, any one of which - and possibly all combined - lead to the word tango as we know it today. These are:

1. African word meaning closed space;

2. Resemblance of the sound of a drumbeat;

3. African word tang meaning to touch;

4. African word tang meaning dance, drums and the place for the rituals;

5. Spanish derivation meaning Black dances in general;

6. Black Argentinians danced on drums that were called tangos;

7. A derivation of the Latin word tango or Portuguese word tangere meaning to touch.

[Reference: extensive study - non-commercial - as per the Tango Melbourne website page 'History Of Tango': http://www.tangoinfo.com.au/tango-history.html]. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 203.134.88.96 (talk) 01:58, 3 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Italian influence

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Didn't music from Italy have an important early influence on the Argentinian tango? If so, why is the term "Italy" not mentioned in the current version of this article? 173.88.246.138 (talk) 05:47, 7 February 2022 (UTC)Reply