Wednesday, 7 August 2013

On the Zurich Salsa Congress (June 2013)

Overall  Fantastic first edition. Great parties, social dancing and overall ambiance.

This congress was run on the same weekend as the Candela 10 year anniversary and performed well given the steep competition. Throw in the general confusion among the congress set between the February and June congresses and the resulting crowd wasn't quite your usual travelling crowd, but a smaller, more Italian sub-set of it.  To my mind, keeping a whole host of dancers away made this festival into the intimate party that it was.

 I would definitely want to go again, not least because of the awesome afternoons and evenings spent on the festival venue’s rooftop, with food, drinks, friends and sunshine. Fantastic way to finally welcome the summer. Despite dancing non-stop, I found this festival to be really quite relaxing!

Priceless moments:
- Seeing the “table dancing” and “bar dancing” spotlights upon arrival at the after party and grasping the venue’s real purpose
- Debating the meaning of tattoos for hours on end
- My first and only ever dance with Tito! I still can’t get over the fact that I had the courage to ask him.
- A number of dances which will not readily be forgotten



Prices

1. Flights  Flights to Zurich typically range in the £100-£150, depending on when you fly and how badly inflation has impacted flight prices by the time you read this. And that’s assuming you fly after work on Friday night as well. Upon arrival, trains into the city are cheap and easy to navigate. I took a train, a bus and a tram (could have probably walked some of that) to my hotel and while it was a bit of a pain, I certainly never risked getting lost thanks to the meticulously detailed display screens that can be found inside and outside every public moving vehicle.

2. Pass prices – Party passes were about €90 with a 10% discount. Zurich is typically expensive so much of that is down to the cost of living in Switzerland.

3. Hotels  The congress hotel was the Crowne Plaza, a 5 star hotel housing the artists for which the organisers had secured an event discount. However, we opted to stay in the Ramada City Hotel which was far cheaper (£20 a night for 3 in a room) and ten minutes closer to the venue on foot. In fact, our hotel was a 10 minute walk to the venue, while those staying at the Crowne Plaza either had to walk further or wait for the organised buses.

4. Water  I can’t remember, but I think it was 2SFR per bottle…and then I discovered that they provided tap water upon request. Limited queues at the bar as well which meant that drinking didn’t take you away from the dance floor for too long!  


Venue

The venue was a gutted warehouse in the north-west of Zurich (surrounded by car dealerships). On top of the warehouse there was a rooftop with couches, chairs and tables and a buffet that served lunch, dinner and a small array of drinks. This was THE most perfect hang out place, especially since it was sunny! Moreover the food was cheap (15SFR for a hot meal, salad and soft drink) and easy. There was a shopping centre nearby with a MacDonald’s and alternative food options as well.

1. Floor  The dance floor was perfect wooden floor, laid down for the occasion. It wasn’t particularly big, but it was perfect for the number of people there. There was lots of space around the floor for standing and chatting, so the dance floor was very much for dancing. It did actually get quite hot. But I think that was because I was dancing a lot…

2. Number of dance floors  Two dance floors – On the main floor, the music mixed Cuban, Mambo, Romantica, Cha Cha Cha. The second floor, which was in the after party room downstairs played Romantica, Bachata, Kizomba.

3. Workshops vs. parties  The workshops were all in the same venue as the parties.

4. Show seats. There were chairs if you arrived early for the shows. We sat at the front on the floor on Saturday and on chairs to the side (also at the front) on Sunday.  

5. Show visibility. Very good from where I was sitting. There was an upstairs balcony too for those who wanted to see more from higher up.

6. Workshop visibility. Very good. The workshops were generally pretty poorly attended for the quality of the artist line up. By which I mean, those in the class got a lot of attention and were able to cover a larger amount of material as well. I walked past the last 15 minutes of the final Adolfo class of the weekend, which turned into a crazy masterclass as the 20 or so students were almost all professional dancers (all of Yamulee, all of Adolfo’s dancers, Mitchell Provence, Gosia, etc). Needless to say Adolfo taught two difficult and long shines and a piece of partnerwork. It was incredible to watch!

7. Workshop organisation. Few people were attending the workshops so there was loads of space. Definitely recommend this as a great learning environment.



Crowd

1. Workshops. From what I could tell, having few people and more room for personal attention was great. I will confess to spending all my time in the sun on the rooftop though! The Candela party had a simple line-up including Frankie Martinez, Fernando Sosa and one of the Vasquez brothers. From what I heard, those workshops were pretty empty too.

2. Parties There was a very high % of Italians at this festival. I enjoyed it so much that it has made me think that I would really enjoy the Milan festivals…! Given the limited attendance by the locals who were divided between this congress and the Candela party, there was quite a high percentage of performers as well, many of whom were social dancing. There was no “us and them” feeling either, which made the parties feel more inclusive.

There was a charity gala performed by kids with Down Syndrome on Saturday lunchtime. Very emotional but beautiful experience.

3. Size  I would say this was on the small side of medium. Pretty perfect though – big enough to have new people to dance with every night, small enough to be able to have repeat dances with your favourites.

4. After parties  At 4am the parties ended and we moved into the “strip club” downstairs until 6am – or was it 7am? (it had spotlights shining down on tables, bar tops etc). They played a little bit of everything down there, but always ended with salsa, which made it worth my while to stay past the latin-house and kizomba sections. On the Friday night, the DJs tried playing one song each and following each other. To my mind this was a disaster as the amalgamation of tunes didn’t really work, but it was still good fun! Also convenient: you couldn’t see that it was daylight until you left the building!


Line-up

1. Quality of teaching  Great. Usual Malo Entertainment line-up including the Milan posse, Tito & Tamara, Terry & Cecile…

2. Choice of workshops  4 workshops per hour, 5 hours of class per day. Classes only on Saturday and Sunday.

3. Number of shows  Maybe 10-15 shows a night, not more. The shows I saw (Sat/Sun) were all of high quality and great to watch. I also snuck into the dress rehearsal on Sunday and it was amazing to see the transformation when it came to the final performance! This being Switzerland, I don’t need to mention that it ran like clockwork…
They also got the touring Cubans from some dance show to come and do a 5 minute rumba performance instead of the Sunday night Descarga. They were stunning to watch!

4. Artists on the dance floor. As I mentioned previously, there were many artists present and many on the dance floor right through to the end of the night – Grupo Alafia are always great at this, Gosia, Cecile, Amauri (from Yamulee) are also proper party animals. Slightly more “drinking and watching” than in say Puerto Rico, but it was generally understated compared to what I’ve seen elsewhere. The fact that I successfully managed to walk up to Tito and ask him to dance says a lot about how many of the world’s great dancers were standing around, on the dance floor and genuinely happy to dance with randoms (i.e. me!)…

5. DJs. Willy (Viper), Mauri, Fabrizio, Zorro, El Malo ran the show and did a fantastic job. Once I got over my initial surprise at the music mix, I loved the really chilled vibe they had going on. They had a couple of others do sets (Oz from London, a couple of local DJs), all of whom were great also.

6. Bands. No bands, no live music.  Normal given the size of the festival.



Location

1. Central location? The venue was about 20 minutes from the Zurich Hauptbahnof using a bus/tram combo.

2. Distance from the airport  About 15 minutes by taxi from the airport (cost of £50 I think!) or an hour on public transport, changing three times (c£5). Obviously your choice will depend on how you value your time/sleep.

3. Time to London – 1.5 hours on a plane approx. Easy. Except I went to St Petersburg for work from Zurich, which took me three hours and made me get up stupidly early…

4. Number of days off work. You only need one, or none at all if you decide to take it easy on Sunday night and work on Monday…Hmm…perhaps not for you if you plan on going to bed after 6am every day…


For more information, check out the website here: http://www.zurichsalsacongress.com/de/

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