This is the first tango disk I ever purchased. Yes, I purchased it at the time I started to dance tango. No, it was not at the time I started to dance Argentine Tango, it was when I started to dance "ballroom tango." I was really impressed with the music as presented with Al Pacino in "Scent of a Woman" and with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis in "True Lies." I actually liked it so much that I purchased a second album by this group, "Two to Tango." Some time later, I was listening to the program "Schickele Mix" on NPR, and I heard a third album by Tango Project "White Rabbit," which is no longer available. It was really a cool sound, and I wish I could get a copy.
About 18 months ago, my wife and I started to take Argentine Tango lessons in Washington, DC, and we began to listen to the real classics. Carlos Gardel (who wrote the original "Por una cabeza," Di Sarli, Canaro, Laurenz, Pugliese, etc. Then I changed my opinion of this disk. There is something missing. It would be much better if there was a bandoneon instead of an accordion. This is great music to listen to, but you may be disappointed if you are an A.T. purist. The tango purist wants the sound of the "orquesta tipica" if possible. If I were planning music for a milonga, I would not include this disk
I really like the instrumental version of "Por una cabeza," and I regard Tango Project's version as one of my favorite [not including the wonderful original by Carlos Gardel]. I appreciate the fact that Tango Project was the group that initially sparked my interest in Argentine tango, and for that I am very grateful. I have nothing derrogatory to say about other pieces on the disk. As a matter of fact, they are pleasant, but I would prefer the "traditional sound" of a tango orchestra with bandoneon.