Milonga: Bibliography and Sources
The dispersed source base for the study of a Río de la Plata genre and dance
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Milonga is a music and a dance of the Río de la Plata, documented in equal measure as a musical genre and as a partnered social dance.[1] Its sound and step took shape in the estuary shared by Buenos Aires[3] and Montevideo,[4] in the migratory, cross-class settings of those port cities, and the form stands among the musical currents from which tango later emerged.[5] The scholarly and documentary record of all this, however, was never gathered into a single authoritative monograph. It survives instead as a dispersed body of materials — reference catalogues, peer-reviewed studies, printed scores, and literary works — each illuminating a different facet of the genre and the dance, and each carrying characteristic strengths and silences.
Reference works supply the most stable definitional baseline. Structured databases classify milonga as both genre and dance with associated catalogue identifiers,[1] even as a separate database entry records the term more narrowly, describing it strictly as a type of dance.[2] Encyclopedic treatments of the wider tango tradition furnish the indispensable context, enumerating milonga as one of six musical currents — alongside the Andalusian tango, the Cuban habanera, candombe, the mazurka, and the European polka — whose confluence left its imprint on tango.[5] Such overviews place the genre firmly within the Río de la Plata and its zone of influence,[5] a geography corroborated by the urban histories of the estuary's two capitals.[3]
Academic literature forms a second, narrower stream, split between historical and technological lines of inquiry. Peter Wade's assessment of John Charles Chasteen's comparative history situates milonga within a diasporic argument: African hip movement combined with European couple dancing to produce New World forms once judged transgressive, traced across the late-nineteenth-century cities of Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, and Havana.[6] That survey groups Argentine milonga and tango with Brazilian maxixe and samba and Cuban danzón, locating the form within a hemispheric family of partnered dances.[6] The technological line runs differently: Courtney Brown's Interactive Tango Milonga, an academic interactive-music system, theorizes the tango idea of "connection" as synchronicity among dancer, partner, and music,[7] and a later study reframes that same system as a case study in collaborative learning.[8]
Primary and archival materials form a third category, valued for documenting practice rather than interpreting it. Printed scores by the Uruguayan composer José Pierri Sapere (1886–1957), issued in Buenos Aires in 1988, preserve milonga compositions among his folk pieces,[9] while a companion digitized collection of his milonga sheet music has circulated under a Creative Commons release.[10] Literary sources complement the musical record: an anthology of Jorge Luis Borges's writings carries both a "History of the tango" and a "Milonga of Manuel Flores," attesting to the genre's standing in Argentine letters.[11] Folklore scholarship engages the form on its own terms, as in a 2018 collected volume whose essay treats milonga's poetic and musical airs.[12]
Reception in the popular sphere is registered in the careers of leading composers. The Argentine pianist and bandleader Mariano Mores, long associated with the tango canon, saw his "Taquito militar" chosen in a 2000 popular poll as the milonga of the century,[13] a measure of the form's durable standing beside tango in the Río de la Plata imagination. Taken together, these holdings — database entries, journal articles, archival scores, literary anthologies, and folklore studies — define the present evidentiary base; their unevenness shows how much of milonga's history still rests on fragmentary documentation rather than settled scholarship.
References
- 1.milonga — Wikidata contributors, Wikidata
- 2.Milonga — Wikidata contributors, Wikidata
- 3.Buenos Aires — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 4.Montevideo — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 5.Tango — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
- 6.National Rhythms, African Roots: The Deep History of Latin American Popular Dance — Peter Wade, Hispanic American Historical Review, 2005
- 7.Interactive Tango Milonga — Courtney Brown, 2015
- 8.A Case Study in Collaborative Learning via Participatory Music Interactive Systems: Interactive Tango Milonga — Courtney Brown, Springer series on cultural computing, 2019
- 9.Jose Pierri Sapere 1988 — José Pierri Sapere (1886-1957), 1988
- 10.Jose Pierri Milonga — José Pierri Sapere (1886-1957)
- 11.Borges, a reader : a selection from the writings of Jorge Luis Borges — Borges, Jorge Luis, 1899-1986, author, 1981
- 12.Dupey Cosechando todas las voces: folklore, identidades y territorios — Dupey, A. Fischamn, F. Hirose, B. Fernández, C., Gualmes, M. Aranda,R. Díaz, C. Díaz Acevedo, Sayago, D.Goyena, H.Randisi,L. Palma, H. Molina, A.Blanes G. Rodríguez, K. Epulef, M. Pisarello, C.Moreno Cha E. Hechenleitner, A. Palleiro, M. I.Welschinger, D. Bello, 2018
- 13.Mariano Mores — Wikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
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Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Milonga: Bibliography and Sources. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 18, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/milonga/bibliography/bibliography-and-sources
Bailar Editorial Team. “Milonga: Bibliography and Sources.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/milonga/bibliography/bibliography-and-sources. Accessed 18 June 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “Milonga: Bibliography and Sources.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 18, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/milonga/bibliography/bibliography-and-sources.
@misc{bailar-milonga-bibliography-and-sources, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Milonga: Bibliography and Sources}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/milonga/bibliography/bibliography-and-sources}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-18} }
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