Tango enthusiasts sway the blues away
Argentina's biting economic crisis cannot keep tango enthusiasts from seeking out the haunting tunes of piano and concertina music at a dwindling number of dance halls in the capital.
For many, in fact, the deepening hardship is exactly what drives them to seek solace in the arms of a dance partner at places called "milongas" to the sway of a musical genre closely associated with working class struggle.
At a milonga, "you feel... a connection with yourself and with others. It's an investment for the heart and the spirit," explained 36-year-old tango dancer Andrea Censabella, a regular at the tiny dance club "La Tierra Invisible" in a middle class suburb of Buenos Aires.
"For me, this is a priority... So it [the economic crisis] doesn't stop me. For now," she told AFP.
The club is small, only about 20 square meters and fits around a dozen dancers. The tables are concocted of old doors resting on trestles.
It hosts one or two sessions a week, charging an entry fee of about 400 pesos (just under one U.S. dollar at the fast-changing official exchange rate).
Many milongas in the capital have had to close amid spiraling inflation that reached 95 percent last year. Fewer and fewer can afford to hire live musicians.
But dozens of increasingly lower-budget milongas continue to attract the tango faithful and the Argentine capital continues to host about 30 of them on average every night of the week from fancy to informal, traditional to queer, for all styles, all budgets.
"The milonga survives because it is a necessity. There has always been and will always be a crisis," tango pianist Nicolas di Lorenzo, a co-manager at "La Tierra Invisible," told AFP.
People pay what they can
"In the...
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