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Carlos Gardel, Buenos Aires, Argentina The musician and tango dancer Carlos Gardel, pictured here in graffiti in Buenos Aires, helped popularize tango in early-20th-century Argentina.
Explore Buenos Aires, the vibrant capital of Argentina, in a visual journey through its most iconic landmarks. Visit the Obelisk, Casa Rosada, the colorful La Boca neighborhood with Caminito, San ...
Tango dancer Anahí Carballo believes any two can tango. Here is her guide to Buenos Aires's queer tango scene, from Muchaches in the barrio to the Tango World Championships.
Hundreds of tango dancers have been gathering for the first full festival since Covid. Buenos Aires has been the spiritual home of tango since the dance originated there in the late 19th Century.
Proper Buenos Aires society considers tango an indecent entertainment associated with violence, illicit sex, and the lower classes. Clubs where the tango is danced are raided and closed by police.
Buenos Aires holds a tango festival every year in August, which allows professional and amateur dancers from around the world to showcase their dancing skills.
Gavrila's Tango Suite Buenos Aires comprises the second half of the studio session, which opens with one of Piazzolla's nimble compositions, "Michelangelo 70," written to salute a nightclub in Buenos ...
In the bohemian district of Almagro in Buenos Aires, the wistful notes of the tango classic “Vida Mía” drift out a window of a small cultural center. Inside, on a makeshift dance floor ...
Over 500 tango dancers from Argentina and the world are congregating in Buenos Aires for a major festival of the dance in its spiritual home, with concerts, classes and a competition to compete ...