Tangó Champán

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Tangó Champán Tangó Champán is the dancing of the wine of love that was blended between Buenos Aires and Paris,

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06/01/2025

Happy Birthday Paul Poiret!
Born in 1879, Poiret was a maverick in that he not only elevated the concept of the fashion designer as artist, but also broadened his creative output to include interior design, perfumes, and, most importantly, the creative marketing of his work.

Charles Delius, Paul Poiret in his atelier, 1910. Public domain image.

06/01/2025

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Tangó Champán

Tangó Champán is the dance of the wine of love. As per making wine, Tango Champán was harvested in Buenos Aires as Tango Criollo, then blended in Paris as Tango Musette, and finally aged as Tango Brillante when returning to Buenos Aires, in the Palais de Glace and in the Salon Armenonville, during the craze years of Tango between 1906-1914 (the end of the Belle Époque). The purpose of Tangó Champán is to release the champagne bubbles of the human body, the Oxytocin and the Endorphin as the ultimate goal to reach the champagne tango state of ecstasy known as "Tangasmo". “Tangó” is an accent on the “o” is the French accent to saying tango, and “Champán” is the Spanish word for champagne.

Tangó Champán is a research project about the lost of the original essence of Tango with the death of Carlos Gardel. A book will be released at the end of 2020, as the final outcome of this research project, and so far this is the structure of the book contents (it is still in a development phase and will be update along with the research):

Title: Tangó Champán: in search of the Holy Grail, the “T-spot” Introduction — A Tango Novel (Part I): The life at Paris in 1910s of the ex-president Argentinean Marcelo Tarcuato de Alvear and his wife the soprano Portuguese Regina Pacini de Alvear (to be continued …) Meeting Point A — Filling-up the “spirit” with “Sarabande in D minor” by Orchestra George Händel

Chapter 1 — Warming-up exercises of Tangó Champán: Energizing (Spirit of Ectasy) — Shoulder Pull (“Carmen: Habanera” by Orchestra Georges Bizet) — Four Thumps (“La Traviata: Brindisi” by Orchestra Giuseppe Verdi) — Cross Crawl (“La V***e Joyeux: Waltz” by Orchestra Franz Lehár)