The most beautiful experience...

I had the most beautiful experience a few days ago I just have to share with you all:

Last weekend I attended the Warzaw congress. The party nights were a glorious mess of highs and lows; I met a bunch of really gentle, nice and talented ladies which gave me many awsome dances (to a lot of good music), plus rides back to my hotel. Thanks ladies! :) At the other end of the scale there were a lot of spilled drinks on the dance floor (most I've ever seen), people stepping, elbowing and even slapping each other in the face(!) without apologizing, and of course the usual dose of pointless, childish jokes/pranks by the host and some performers. Lastly there was the usual clique of noisy, attention seeking salsa elite which, however talented they may be, after a while becomes somewhat tiresome to be around.

This was the setting, quite rough around the edges, along with the usual exhibitionist/childish/tiresome attitude from the stage and some places of the dance floor.

Sunday evening was no different. After listening to the host and his crew going on in the above spirit and "experiencing" the salsa elite clique, I looked around the packed club for somewhere to sit down for a while. I noticed a partly hidden stair behind the DJ booth. Up the stairs there was a small area with a couple of sofas, some of which were occupied by what seemed to be some locals. I sat down for a song or two, just watching the dance floor from above and the locals chatting. Then, an awsome on2 mambo came on, and two of the locals stood up and begun to dance in the minimal space between the sofas. And I was completely mesmerized by their dance! The sublime fluidity of their movements, their timing, their accentuations and footwork in awsome harmony with the music, the delicate and perfectly balanced patterns. The sheer brilliance of their technique. It was all so beatuiful I almost started to cry!

There they were, totally unpretentious, no fancy clothes, no fancy haircut, no swollen egos, in a back room, dancing for the love of the dance and the music, just blowing everything else from that weekend (and more) out of the water! Including all shows and the salsa "elite". I had not even seen them before, not that night or any other night! Despite their exquisite dancing skills, they apparently stayed clear of the salsa elite battlegrounds, to focus on what matters. After the song finished I immediately stepped up to them and thanked them for the experience. They seemed a bit unprepared for my praises, looked like they were thinking: "hell, we were just dancing as usual" :)

Events like this makes me so happy and hopeful. It just stands above all things negative in salsa and shows the beatuty of the essence of the dance and music, and the love for the core of what we do!

Thanks locals, whoever you were! :)
 
Fantastic!! :D Thanks for sharing. I love how you set the scene then hit us with an unexpected turn. I thought you were going to say that a beautiful salsera came up to you and gave you the dance of your life. Great idea for a thread too by the way...it's a little different from the 'buzzing from last night' thread but could be just as inspiring to read. (That's if me posting hasn't killed it - the curse of the thread killer has returned *teehee*)
 
I'd be curious to hear from people who have been in the states and Europe as to how the people compare in general.

That is if I'm not hijacking the thread asking. If so I'll start another. the above does describe a lack of maturity to a good extent.

Slapping? :mad: What next? WWF cage Salsa :P
 
nice post Pax - also, glad to hear i'm not the only one who finds the attention-seeking tiresome sometimes. :cool:

i had a similar experience at the Puerto Rico Congress in 1999....i saw a completely unknown couple practicing on the first afternoon in a little space behind a cafe. they were really awesome - the musicality and humour in their dance was great and technically the spins etc were really sharp. i was blown away.

that same night, i saw them again....

on stage. Jhonny Vasquez and Olivia Dasso, LOL! :oops::oops: :raisebrow::raisebrow: :uplaugh::uplaugh:
 
@vancouverguy

I should say that this congress was the roughest one I have attended ever, by quite a margin, and I have attended relatively many (12 or so) during the last few years. The face slapping incident deserves a separate mention because of its blatantness:

I was dancing in my slot, just in the outskirts of the clique corner. Next to my couple was another couple in their slot, nothing strange about that. Next to that couple was a couple which seemed quite sweeping and aggressive in their dance. All of a sudden the lady in that couple did a fast, wide turn, with her hand stretched out in face-height. The hand was there, the face of the guy in the couple next to me was there, and BAM! She slapped him hard, straight over the face! I don't think I will ever forget the expression in the face of the slapped guy just after the slap; he was completely stunned, seemingly not really knowing what hit him. I stopped dancing when I saw the slap, it was some of the worst I have seen on a dance floor. The guy then seemed to get angry, looking around for the slapper, but nobody approached him... Guess what, the "lady" that slapped him just carried on with her dance, like nothing had happened! She completely ignored the incident and him! I was somewhat shocked, but finished my dance.

Immediately after the dance I went up to the slapped guy to express my disgust with what had happened. He was very upset, almost yelling at me "was it you?!". For God's sake no, it was not me, I just wanted to say I could not believe what had happened.

If the slapping lady was a beginner, an incident like this could be forgivable (since beginners sometimes are so concentrated on the dance they notice 0% of things outside the couple), but that was not the case here. Quite the opposite in fact. The lady is far from beginner, she is a professional salsa dancer, one of the weekend's performers! I just cannot understand how she could do such a thing and not apologize... :?: Maybe her whole slapping arm and hand is a prosthesis with no sense of touch whatsoever, but somehow that seems a bit improbable :)

All in all the congress was quite remarkable in its contrasts: The slapping lady, the godly dance couple from my last post, all the beer on the floor, the extraodinarily hospital and talented ladies I met, my poor stepped-on feet, ...

Maybe I will return next year just for the thrills of it :)
 
I'd be curious to hear from people who have been in the states and Europe as to how the people compare in general...
I happen to have some experience there, I have been two weeks in NYC and a few nights in Seattle (and obviously around Europe a bit). But I am sure there are other here on the forums who have plenty more experience in this area.

Anyway, see this thread, a before and after NYC thread, where I tried to give my impressions of the trip in a balanced way. I did not follow the thread through though (got busy with other stuff), I actually think I will read it through again now :) The after-part of the thread starts at #20

http://www.salsaforums.com/showthread.php?t=7451
 
Good story ... I like the dancing in Europe. Congresses in the USA and all over the world tend to have big headed salsa stars, groupies and wannabees.
 
I happen to have some experience there, I have been two weeks in NYC and a few nights in Seattle (and obviously around Europe a bit). But I am sure there are other here on the forums who have plenty more experience in this area.

Anyway, see this thread, a before and after NYC thread, where I tried to give my impressions of the trip in a balanced way. I did not follow the thread through though (got busy with other stuff), I actually think I will read it through again now :) The after-part of the thread starts at #20

http://www.salsaforums.com/showthread.php?t=7451

Hmmm. I'm going to ask a question here, and will also start a thread about "Congress"

It's been suggested to me to attend the Seattle congress at the end of this month. It would be my first congress, and part of the reason my coach suggested it was to attend the 18 hour (6 hr per day) bootcamp being done by Edie TSF.

Any opinions?
 
Hmmm. I'm going to ask a question here, and will also start a thread about "Congress"

It's been suggested to me to attend the Seattle congress at the end of this month. It would be my first congress, and part of the reason my coach suggested it was to attend the 18 hour (6 hr per day) bootcamp being done by Edie TSF.

Any opinions?

Congresses are great fun in my opinion. They also give you a much greater perspective on the dance and if you dance a lot over the weekend (obviously you have to ask and not everybody does) and take the workshops you can really get a lot out of it and advance your dancing significantly at the same time.

Checkout some of smiling28's congress threads, he gives some great reports.

Here's a pre-congress one where I put a big list of tips for preparing:
http://www.salsaforums.com/showthread.php?t=4972
 
Congresses are great fun in my opinion. They also give you a much greater perspective on the dance and if you dance a lot over the weekend (obviously you have to ask and not everybody does) and take the workshops you can really get a lot out of it and advance your dancing significantly at the same time.

Checkout some of smiling28's congress threads, he gives some great reports.

Here's a pre-congress one where I put a big list of tips for preparing:
http://www.salsaforums.com/showthread.php?t=4972

Thanks Azzey,

My threads have been great due to the fantastic replies by yourself and others who share awesome wisdom. Eg. that pre-congress thread above where those tips helped IMMENSELY!!!
 
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