El Maipu

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***Post updated January 2012 to reflect one or two changes in Buenos Aires.***

La Nacional

At the time it closed its doors in March 2011, there were popular Traditional-style milongas being held almost every night in Plaza Bohemia, Maipú 444 (as well as the more Informal-style La Marshall, the Gay-friendly Milonga, now in El Beso on Fridays and Club Independencia on Wednesdays). Plaza Bohemia was featured in Happy Tango’s 7 Traditional Places to Try First (page 140), and many Buenos Aires tango dancers and visitors, including me, were sad to see it go.

If I were writing a new edition of Happy Tango now, I’d have to replace Plaza Bohemia in 7 Traditional Places to Try First with a suitably significant Buenos Aires tango venue, wouldn’t I? And, I think I’d have to choose the Asociación Nazionale Italiana at Alsina 1465, or ‘La Nacional‘ as it is most regularly known. I already gave you a glimpse of it when I told you that the 6pm Monday milonga, El Maipú (organised by Lucy and Dany) from Plaza Bohemia had moved there: click here for my post with its gorgeous photo of the ceiling inside this historic space. This picture (above) of the outside shows one of my most favourite parts of the building, the entrance. Who can resist walking up the steps underneath that canopy at least once? I confess that I have succumbed to its charms every week that I’ve been in Buenos Aires in 2011 and 2012.

I think that when something fades or dies, it makes space for something else to shine. It seems to me that the loss of Plaza Bohemia has shone a fresh light on La Nacional, and now a whole raft of milongas seem attracted to it. The place is kinda buzzing, which is great news for such a beautiful building, and it seems to be one of the new and most popular old-places in town to dance. If you are heading to Buenos Aires for a tango vacation, you probably shouldn’t miss it.

Some nights (like Mondays) are very popular, and reservations are therefore wise. It’s got a good kitchen, and if you get a bit peckish, I suggest that you try at least one empanada caprese (a yummy little pastry pie stuffed with tomato, cheese and fresh basil). It is a good idea to take a jacket or a wrap because the aircon can be icy, but, at the more traditional milongas (where men, women and couples are seated in separate areas) you will have to muster your magnetic energy and your best cabeceo technique, and look ready and willing to dance, because the place is attended by those serious about their dancing and competition can be a little fierce. Seat location can matter because the room is long and there isn’t much scope for men to walk around, thus you are restricted to inviting/accepting those within your eye range; however, when you enter the salon, you should wait just inside the door for the host to come and seat you. It’s wise to change your shoes and look your best before entering, the restrooms are just outside, as is the desk where you pay and can leave your coat for a couple of pesos. The dance floor is smooth wood, and the acoustics are full and warm so that the music fills the high-ceilinged space and the hearts of the dancers.

Here’s the latest run down on the La Nacional milongas, all held in the salon on the first floor. Which will you try first?

Monday from 6pm: El Maipú (reservations 43008007)

Wednesday from 7pm: Mi Refugio (reservations 15-59631924)

Friday from 11pm: Yira Yira (reservations 15-31725077)

Saturday from 8pm: J.L. (reservations 15-63601984)

La Nacional now has its own website, visit lanacionaltango.com (if you don’t like websites with music, turn your sound off first!).

The venue La Nacional is in Monserrat on Alsina between San José and S. Peña, just one and a half blocks from Plaza Congreso where taxis are plentiful. At night, turn right on leaving the venue, then right again onto S. Peña for the Plaza, and keep your eyes ‘open’ and walk with purpose, just to be on the safe side. If you want to catch a bus back into town (say to Callao y Corrientes to eat pizza) or on to Plaza Italia and Palermo, then the famous 60 heads down S. Peña and the bus stop is almost on the corner with Plaza Congreso; $1.25 pesos will take you anywhere along that bus route that you need to go; a taxi to Palermo will be more like $30+ pesos from here.

Many ‘Happy Tangos’ to all who host milongas and who dance in La Nacional during 2012, thank you from me for doing your part to breathe fresh dancing-life into this atmospheric and historic tango salon. May it live forever, and may it certainly be going strong when I do come to update Happy Tango, so that it can feature in my 20 Places to Try First, for the visitors who want a more Traditional-style milonga experience; for now, it certainly fits the bill.

Many Happy Tangos to you all! Sallycat

Buy Happy Tango and start planning your tango adventure to Buenos Aires, today! Do join our Facebook page facebook.com/happytango for updates, because sometimes I post things there first.

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If you’re in Buenos Aires and need the book, let us know and we’ll do our best to help; sadly due to El Pipa’s recent death the bookstore in Salon Canning (mentioned in previous updates) has closed.

***Updated 21 April 2011 to reflect recent changes***

A Happy Tango reader comments on the Happy Tango Facebook page,

I feel sick to my stomach and heartbroken. My favorite venue has closed and I never gave it a proper goodbye.

And I reply,

Neither did I. Just breezed out of there after some incredibly intense tango with some of my fave dance partners, changing my shoes and laughing with my girlfriend in the ladies, kissing the organisers and saying I’d see them in 5 weeks (UK trip), winking at the last man I danced with (very naughty), letting the dark curtain fall back behind me, chattering excitedly as I clomped down the carpeted stairs towards my Monday night pizza… Maybe, giving the space my passion for tango on that last night was the best goodbye of all; it knows that it was loved by our tango hearts and perhaps it is good that there weren’t goodbye tears there, just joy and the energy of the music filling the air. I will be keeping my ear to the ground for its future and will let you know. Just so grateful to have danced there at all.

Me and C. dance merengue in Maipú

Yes, it seems that Maipú 444 (Plaza Bohemia, page 140 of Happy Tango) really has closed. Sold, and with no plans for tango there in the future. I’ll walk past when I’m back in Buenos Aires to pay my respects and whisper my thanks through the doorway and up the stairs that were climbed, over the years, by so many expectant tango-hearts and stepped down by so many tango-tired feet. I’ll tell you what I find there, but, until I’ve actually seen its locked door for myself, there’s a teeny part of me that won’t quite believe it’s over. Perhaps you feel the same.

Meanwhile, here is a quick summary of the state of play for the milongas that were most recently being hosted in the place so often fondly referred to as ‘Maipú’, and that now continue life somewhere new.

Monday: El Maipú has moved to La Nacional at Alsina 1465, first floor, in Monserrat (6pm-1am, reservations 1553170257).

Wednesday: La Marshall (gay-friendly, and featured on page 147 of Happy T.) moves to Club Independencia, first floor, Avenida Independencia 571/2 from Wednesday 2nd March; from April 2011, La Marshall no longer operates on a Saturday, instead they hold a Friday night class and milonga in El Beso, 416 Riobamba; see their Facebook page.

Saturday: Cachirulo moves to Club Villa Malcolm, Cordoba 5064, from Saturday 5th March and continues in El Beso on Tuesdays. You can see the Facebook status update from the organisers of Cachirulo confirming this, here, and you can see the ad for the new Saturday Cachirulo in Villa Malcolm on page 79 of the B.A. Tango magazine edition 206 (in PDF) hereThis YouTube video, by Tango Zen Chan Park, showcases the inauguration of Cachirulo in Malcolm: Inauguración de Milonga Cachirulo en Club Villa Malcolm, el 5 de marzo 2011, by Tangozenhouse; you will see why it is always a good idea to reserve a seat at this popular milonga.

Lujos has no new home for Sundays yet, but continues in El Beso (as usual) on Thursdays, and Sentimental y Coqueta (previously Tuesdays) has no new home either.

Off the subject of the Maipú milongas, other little change to the milongas in Buenos Aires is that La Milonguita (Centro Montanés, page 138 of Happy T.) now only operates on Sundays, not Fridays; Sunday was perhaps always its most popular night, and can be packed; it has a strong local vibe, and unless you are arriving after midnight (when a few people start leaving), you’ll need to reserve. Stay in touch with La Milonguita, via the website milonguitabaile.com.ar. Rather splendidly La Milonguita hosted a contest to find the most bewitching piropos (compliments with touches of smarm and even a flash of thinly-veiled lust) in honour of Valentine’s Day 2011; if you speak Spanish, you can enjoy the fabulous entries and winners here. You can also see that I got a little mention for my excited enthusiasm for the event, here on Facebook. It’s so good to support ventures that seem to me to be absolutely in the spirit of ‘Happy Tango’. Centro Montanés is now home to the new milonga Vida Mia on Friday nights.

Buy Happy Tango online and start planning your tango adventure to Buenos Aires, today!

Click a link to buy Happy Tango from:

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Please buy before travelling, as Happy Tango is not generally available in Buenos Aires.

La Nacional (El Club Italiano)

Following on from my last update on the subject of the closure of the venue Plaza Bohemia at Maipú 444, I have news that the Monday milonga El Maipú (organised by Dany and Lucy) has a new home from today, Monday 7th February, at La Nacional, Alsina 1465 (first floor), in the barrio of Monserrat. You can see the confirmation at the website

lanacionaltangos.blogspot.com.

The milonga runs from 6pm to 11pm, and reservations should be made by calling 15-5317-0257.

La Nacional had just been renovated when I wrote Happy Tango and milongas were only just re-opening there; I gave it a brief mention in 10 More Places to Explore, on page 151, but perhaps it will need to be one of my 20 Places to Try First in the second edition of the book (planned for 2012).

La Nacional (the Club Italiano) is an historic building well-suited to Traditional-style tango of the type offered by the El Maipú milonga, and absolutely worth visiting at least once, whether you dance or not. The dance floor is of hard wood and can be a bit slippery (dusty), so you might want to wear suede rather than leather soles. The space is not as intimate as Plaza Bohemia. The salon is bigger and quite long and arrow, has a higher ceiling and can be pretty chilly even in summer (due to mega-strong aircon) so take a wrap, ladies, just in case you get seated in an icy blast. I often wonder about the ghosts in La Nacional, as the place can feel a little cold to me in other ways; while you are sitting out a tanda or visiting the restrooms, see if you can sense a spooky energy seeping from the nooks and crannies and hooking you back into times past.

Do stop outside in the street before you go in and stare at the stunningly beautiful entrance. It’s art nouveau and pretty impressive. I like the staircase too, makes me feel grand. In a way, it will be great news for keeping the historic buildings of Buenos Aires alive, if this venue gets filled with the buzzing energy of more milongas in 2011.

La Nacional is in Monserrat, on Alsina between Luis S. Peña and San José, and the zone can feel a little edgy and deserted after dark. But it’s very close to Plaza Congreso where it is really easy to get a taxi; turn right out of the venue on Alsina and take first right down Luis S. Peña and walk one block to the Plaza. The 60 bus also travels back into the city down S. Peña, so that’s a possibility for those who want to bus it in the direction of Barrio Norte, Recoleta and Palermo.

There’s no doubt that I’m feeling a bit sad at the closure of Plaza Bohemia, Maipú 444, and I am kinda wishing that perhaps it has not disappeared from our Buenos Aires ‘milonga map’ forever. But meanwhile, let’s support the Plaza Bohemia milongas as they embrace change and move into fresh spaces. More as I hear it.

Big thanks to the super-knowledgeable-on-all-things-tango-BsAs Rachel and Eduardo at TangoTaxiDancers for letting me know about the El Maipú move to La Nacional.

Buy Happy Tango online and start planning your tango adventure to Buenos Aires, today!

Click a link to buy Happy Tango from:

amazon.co.uk
amazon.com
amazon.ca
amazon.fr
amazon.de
amazon.co.jp
barnesandnoble.com
BookDepository.co.uk
BookDepository.com
whsmith.co.uk

Please buy before travelling, as Happy Tango is not generally available in Buenos Aires.