3 Forms Of A Tango Embrace You Probably Want To Know
One area that gets overlooked when dancing the tango is the Embrace. It is one of the more general areas where most errors are created, that and our walk. While there are various forms of a Tango Embrace, there are 3 forms that you'd want to start to use when you learn to dance the tango as a couple.
The Symmetrical Embrace
The Symmetrical Embrace is used for many purposes, one of which is that it lightens most of the embrace distinctiveness that crops up for people. It is also about the equal and bilateral relationship between the partnership. And whatever, you can do on one side, you should, technically, be able to do on the other.
The Close Embrace.
While we don’t certainly need to talk about a ‘Close Embrace’; however, a ‘Close Embrace’ is not compressive, that we ideally want the skin to fabric contact without pressure, concentration, or force in our arms in any way, shape, or form. Your partner should be able to move freely within the embrace construct, regardless of role. you should also be fully engaged and independent of needing to hold on to someone to perform what we want to do or asked to do.
The No Embrace.
This is just a Close Embrace without the arms! It’s a torso-to-torso connection, and the trick is to stay in front of your partner at all times while engaging vocabulary.
If you want to learn to dance the tango, the Embrace is one of the important exercises you’d have to do.
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