Monday, May 19, 2014

So that's why "Poema" is hard to fit into a tanda...

Most of of the practicing and aspiring DJs must have noticed that Canaro-Maida's superb (and much overplayed) 1935 "Poema" doesn't quite fit seamlessly into tandas. "Poema" is quite singular in its gently melancholic, softly nostalgic flow, while other Canaro's hits of the period tend to be more insistent and dramatic in quality, energetically driving rather than softly soothing.

One can't help noticing a few more peculiarities about this hit. Its popularity peaks overseas, especially in Europe, and reaches the low point in Buenos Aires. And no other orchestras in Argentine recorded the piece. 

Thanks to German Nemoljakin's constant flow of stories from tango's past, I got an intriguing glimpse of Poema's special history, and couldn't resist digging deeper into it. To sum it up:

The beautiful "Poema" isn't quite an Argentine tango, it is as much a European tango, composed by the expat musicians who were singularly successful in transplanting tango to the musical scene of Paris.
Furthermore, Poema's lack of acceptance in Buenos Aires wasn't helped by the dark political undertones of its story, and the fact that its lyrics are a thinly veiled confession of a banished murderer.

"Poema" is undoubtedly the best composition of Eduardo Bianco, an Argentine who lived in Europe for nearly 20 years, and who mastered the art of making the tango of Argentina sound the Parisian way. The oft-retold story says that Bianco and Mario Melfi, aided by others in their band, composed it on a train during a 1932 tour of Germany. What is rarely mentioned is that Bianco's lyrics tell his personal, and thoroughly suppressed, story from his final year in Buenos Aires. In 1924, Eduardo Bianco played the first violin in the orchestra of the famous Teatro Apolo at Avenida Corrientes. Bianco learned that his wife cheated on him with the pianist of the orchestra, and shot his rival to death in a fit of jealousy. As translated into English by Alberto Paz, Bianco's stanzas tell us how a dream of sweet love ended up awakening the heart's monsters, the chimeras which can never be fully grasped; the words "intenso mal" which Alberto Paz translated as "intense misfortune" may be better interpreted as "overpowering evil":

...You'll remember my love,
and you will come to know 
all my intense misfortune.

Of that one intoxicating poem,
nothing is left between us,
I say my sad goodbye,
you'll feel the emotion
of my pain…

Eduardo Bianco was jailed and tried for murder, and acquitted - according to Jose Maria Otero, owing to political connections of Bianco's influential rich friend, Martin "Macoco" Álzaga Unzué, a race driver, bon vivant, and night club owner whose circle included top entertainers, aristocrats, and mobsters. But the acquitted violinist had to leave Argentina. Soon, he sailed for France.

In Paris, Bianco with the bandoneonist Juan Bautista Deambroggio "Bachicha" assembled Orquesta Tipica Bianco-Bachicha, which started to play in the downstairs cabaret of the famed Argentine-themed Montmartre boîte, "El Garron", and toured Europe, the Americas, and Middle East. He continued cultivating relationships with the rich and powerful, even dedicating his tango compositions to kings and queens, and (twice) to Benito Mussolini, and boasting of praise from Stalin and Hitler. It was the 1926 "Plegaria", dedicated to Spanish king Alfonso XIII, "symbol of Spanish democracy" (who fled after the electoral victory of the Republicans, and supported Franco with the outbreak of Spanish Civil War) , which brought Bianco most infamy.

The most detailed account of Bianco's European years has been provided in Enrique Cadícamo's 1975 "La Historia Del Tango En Paris" (and summarized in a recent El Litoral article). Cadícamo, who toured Europe with Gardel, advised his tango friends to avoid discussing politics with Eduardo Bianco because Bianco supposedly informed for Gestapo (the French police detained and investigated him in 1937, but released him). Bianco associated himself with Eduardo Labougle Carranza, Argentine ambassador in the Third Reich Berlin and an avowed antisemite. They supposedly convinced Goebbels that tango should take place of the "racially tainted" Jazz music, and were invited to perform in Berlin's "La scala".  Then, at an Argentine asado reception at the Embassy, Bianco's orchestra got to entertain Hitler himself (even with a bandoneon player personally grilling meats for him), and the fuhrer asked for an encore performance of "Plegaria" ("Prayer" in Spanish). The sentimental monster must have enjoyed the play between the solemn sound of the piece and the frivolous, erotic perception of the word "tango", because soon, he found a horrible use for Bianco's score. In a short time, "Plegaria" would be dubbed "Tango of Death", as the Auschwitz prisoner band was ordered to play it when the camp prisoners were led to the gas chambers. The horror of "Tango of Death" has been immortalized in the verses of Paul Celan, a Jewish Romanian death camp survivor; but Celan had to strike any reference to "tango" when he translated his poem from Romanian to German, because "tango" still sounded disrespectfully racy in German. So "Plegaria" turned into "Todesfuge", "The Death Fugue"!

(A personal side note here ... this is how I got to understand another allusion in Psoy Korolenko's "Ilimsky Ostrog", an amalgamation of quotes and allusions of three centuries of Russian and foreign classic poetry, folk song, pop and rock, where peeling off the layers of meaning never ends ... "Meine Todesfuge" is heard near 4:55 in this concert record)

 The WWII broke out, and Ambassador Labougle returned to Argentina to champion the cause of South American neutrality in the war, the cause which must have been largely anti-American and anti-Brazilian, rather than pro-Axis, in Argentina, since it traditionally allied itself with Great Britain, its main export market, and, after the Great Depression-era unfair trade treaties went into effect, also Argentina's main supplier of manufactured goods. The United States, in the meantime, practiced the ideology of continental domination, the Manifest Destiny, and armed Argentina's regional arch-rival, Brazil. Although truth be said, Argentine leaders sought to emulate many aspects of the Axis, from nationalist fervor to regional expansion plans (Argentina even covertly installed a friendly, pro-fascist government in Bolivia in a 1943 coup). But time was running out for the open sympathizers of the Reich, and in January 1944, Argentina had to break relations with Nazi Germany (although it didn't declare war until a year later). In the meantime, Bianco played across occupied Europe for the Nazi troops, and on the Third Reich radio stations. As it's become clear that Argentina will sever relations with the Reich soon, he left on a Spanish visa from King Alfonso's times, and faced a lengthy investigation by the British intelligence services - Bianco himself wrote that he was only cleared owing to his investigator's appreciation of the music of tango. He finally returned to Buenos Aires in 1943, at the peak of Tango's Golden age, amid insane richness of tango orchestras. Bianco tried hard but has never succeeded in competing against the local talent; his remained a purely export version of Argentine tango.

Before we return to 1935, and to Canaro, let me mention that "Poema" has been recorded by one more Parisian band, the Orquesta Tipica Auguste-Jean Pesenti du Coliseum de Paris (A.-J. Pesenti was a bandoneonist from Colombia known to us largely owing to the Japanese collectors; in fact pre-WWII tango dancers and listeners in Japan played French tango records of Bianco, Bachicha, Pizzarro, and others, and generally believed that tango was a genre of French music)

Canaro, of course, also famously chose Paris to be his base after 1925 (embarking on tours to New York, Berlin, Hamburg, and Madrid, and to a family roots discovery trip to Italy, from France). Sometimes people say that Canaro stayed abroad for a whole decade, and supposedly didn't make a comeback to Buenos Aires until 1935! Technically, it's very untrue, and yet in terms of Francisco Canaro's legacy and influence, it may be true that the decade between 1925 and 1934 was the low-key part of his tango carrier. He tried diversifying into other genres - rancheras, maxixe, foxtrot, jazz, and even recorded such Americana pieces as "Red Red Robin" as "Francisco Canaro Jazz Band". He toured the provincial towns, played a lot for the radio stations, launched a series of comedy musicals, and appeared in a movie with Gardel, all to regain his fame and to secure the grand dance halls of BsAs for himself again. Perhaps it was the chilling effect of the Great Depression on the porteno party scene. Or Canaro's affiliation with the recording company Nacional Odeon, which pitted him against the more prominent RCA Victor. Or it could have been the continuing echo from yet another fatal gunshot story which may have played a role in Canaro's departure to Paris in the first place.

This is a story which began almost exactly 100 years ago, in September 1914. Francisco Canaro's lucky break into the ranks of most-listened-to tango orchestras was catalyzed by his invitation to highlight Primero Baile del Internado, the First Ball of Medical Interns, which marked the end of the spring break in the School of Medicine. The interns of Buenos Aires found their inspiration in Paris, in traditional medical students Bal de L’Internat held at Bullier Hall. To this rancorous celebration at the famous Palais de Glace, Canaro premiered a tango titled Matasano, "The Slayer of the Healthy" (as the medical students were humorously called), dedicated to Hospital Durand in Caballito neighborhood. The following year, Canaro premiered tango "El Internado", "The Intern", at the Intern's Ball.


The tradition continued for 11 years, with many pranks and with tango titles such as "Aqui se vacuna" ("Immunizations shots here", dedicated to Public Health Office), "Anatomia", "Cloroformo", "El termómetro", "La biblioteca" ("The Medical Library"), "Hospital Durand", "Mano Brava" and "Qué
muñeca" (dedicated to outstanding surgeons' hands), "La inyección" and "El microbio" (continued with tangos about specific pathogens, "El dengue" and "Ae. Aegypti"), even "Paraiso Artificial" ("Artificial Paradise",  a tango cancion about morphine). The tango which premiered in 1924 was titled "El once: el divertismento" - "The 11th: let's have fun".
But soon after the 1924 celebration, the medical students took part in a prank gone horribly wrong, and an intern Ernesto O’Farrel was shot and killed by an administrator at Hospital Piñero, triggering a physician strike at all municipal hospitals. The Baile del Internado was never held again. And Canaro's memoirs mourn the things tango lost after 1924...

Yet Canaro's tango also gained from being exposed to the music of the European expats, and he kept returning to the scores from Paris, starting from a 1928 recording, with Charlo, of "Bandoneón arrabalero", a tango Canaro re-recorded several times. The 1925 score is signed by Juan Bautista Deambrogio Bachicha himself, although Enrique Cadícamo says in “La historia del tango en París” that it was Horacio Petorossi, a guitar player in Bianchi-Bachicha orchestra, who sold the score to Bachicha for a thousand franks. The 1935 recording of Bianco's Poema continued the trend of cross-fertilization of Parisian and BsAs tango music, but failed to impress the listeners in Argentina. Yet you can understand now how it struck a chord with the European tangueros of the generation of the Great Worldwide Tango Rebirth!

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Practica Del Centro playlist, 5/12/14

With the parallel - but earlier in the evening - Heritage Center practica, Del Centro now comes to live only about a dozen tracks down the playlist, after the tangueros from the University join in. So for the after-class warm-up, I started with the instrumental favorites - the more rhythmical pieces of Di Sarli and Fresedo & I still don't know how this selection would have worked with a larger, more varied crowd. 
01. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "Shusheta" 1940 2:22
02. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "Catamarca" 1940 2:23
03. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "La trilla" 1940 2:21
04. Osvaldo Fresedo - Instrumental  "Arrabalero" 1939 2:32
05. Osvaldo Fresedo - Instrumental  "Pimienta" 1939 2:52
06. Osvaldo Fresedo - Instrumental  "Derecho viejo" 1941 2:31
07. Rodolfo Biag Jorge Ortíz "Lagrimas Y Sonrisas (vals)"  2:41
08. Rodolfo Biagi Jorge Ortíz "Pajaro Herido (vals)" 1999 2:18
09. Rodolfo Biagi - Jorge Ortiz  "Cuatro palabras (vals)" 1941 2:20
10. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno  "Tango argentino" 1942 2:37
11. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno  "El encopao" 1942 2:34
12. Enrique Rodríguez "Como has cambiado pebeta" 2:37
Quinteto Don Pancho (from todotango site where
I could no longer find it after the site overhaul...)
Canaro's Quintets existed alongside with his main, large Orquesta Tipica (and, occasionally, a couple more "Canaro orchestras" led by Francisco's brothers). Unlike the Tipica's, the Quintets never played live for the dancers - they worked for recording studios and for the radio. Very talented musicians, very slick, shiny quality of the music, it feels strangely modern, perhaps because modern classic tango bands usually have few musicians too? But these records are all from the 1930s! 
El Pirincho (Guira guira)
Quinteto Don Pancho was the first of the two Canaro Quintets (after 1940, followed by Quinteto Pirincho). Both bands were sort of named after their creator, but without spelling out "Francisco Canaro" ("Don Pancho" would have been a nickname for Francisco in Spain, and "Pirincho" was Francisco Canaro's actual nickname in Uruguay and Argentina, given to him at birth by a midwife who was amused by the newborn's cute little tuft of hair, and compared it to a crest of feathers of a local bird, el pirincho). Quinteto Pirincho recorded a lot more than the earlier, and lesser known, Quinteto Don Pancho; in fact two of the three tracks below were mis-attributed to Quinteto Pirincho in the files' metadata.
13. Quinteto Don Pancho - Francisco Canaro "Champagne tango" 1938 2:30
14. Quinteto Don Pancho - Francisco Canaro "El garron" 1938 2:27
15. Quinteto Don Pancho - "El flete" 1939 2:55
Another shot at a milonga tanda with "Ella Es Asi":
16. Edgardo Donato - Horacio Lagos  "Sacale punta" 1938 2:16
17. Edgardo Donato - Horacio Lagos  "De punta a punta (milonga)" 1939 2:21
18. Edgardo Donato  "Ella Es Asi - milonga" 2005 2:35
19. Ricardo Tanturi - Alberto Castillo  "Así Se Baila El Tango"  2:34
20. Ricardo Tanturi  "Que Nunca Me Falte"  2:42
21. "Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos / Oigo Tu Voz" 3:07
22. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Corazón no le hagas caso" 1942 3:00
23. "Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón / Jamas Retornaras" 2:31
24. Miguel Calo - Raul Beron  "Que te importa que te llore" 1942 2:44
25. Angel D'Agostino - Angel Vargas "Esquinas porteñas 1942 (Vals)" 2:51
26. D'Agostino, A. Vargas "Tristeza Criolla" 1945 2:28
27. Angel D'Agostino - Angel Vargas  "Que me pasara (vals)" 1941 2:29
Now it was time for Irina's melodic, dramatic favs, and I didn't realize until later that the two sets below, classic Di Sarli and classic Laurenz, were united by the same vocalist, Alberto Podestá :) Alberto Podestá started singing tango with the famous Golden Age orchestras as a teenager, first with Caló and then with Di Sarli and Laurenz (It was Carlos Di Sarli who gave him his artistic name, and predicted to him a long singing career). Di Sarli was right, Alberto still sings in Buenos Aires at the age of 89. Two years ago he even visited Tango Element Festival in Baltimore and sang there with the band of Alex Krebs!
28. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podestá  "Junto a tu corazon"  3:00
29. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podestá "Nada"  2:45
30. Carlos Di Sarli - Alberto Podestá  "Lloran las campanas" 1944 2:58
31. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podestá  "Garua" 1943 3:09
32. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podestá  "Todo" 1943 2:37
33. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podestá  "Recien" 1943 2:43
34. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida  "Larga las penas" 1935 3:09
35. Francisco Canaro - Instrumental  "Milonga de mis amores" 1937-05-26 3:03
36. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida  "Milonga brava" 1938-06-20 2:37
These three Krebs records turned out to be a DJ's disappointment. I got excited by their super-grounded, almost underworld-ish vibe, but I forgot about strange noisy sections at the end of these tracks. Alas!
37. New York Tango Jam Session  "Duelo Criollo -- old school" 2010 2:29
38. New York Tango Jam Session  "Triste Destino -- old school" 2010 3:31
39. New York Tango Jam Session  "Ventarron -- old school" 2010 2:49
I haven't played from Donato's earlier, playfu and rhythmic period before. Liked the first two out of this trio, but the last one sounded weaker...:
40. Edgardo Donato  "El Acomodo" 2:27
41. Edgardo Donato - Horacio Lagos  "Gato" 1937 2:42
42. Edgardo Donato  "Tierrita" 3:19
Alberto Podestá again, now with the orchestra he started his career with at 16, and to which he kept returning for over 30 years. "Bajo un cielo de estrellas" was his very first record (and the one Podestá counted among his best hits). The young singer performed then under an assumed name of Juan Carlos Morel - he would become Alberto Podestá only a year later, rather unimaginatively rechristened by Di Sarli (Podestá was his mother's family name so the young singer's real full official name was Alejandro Washington Podestá Alé; he mentioned to Carlos Di Sarli that there are already renowned musicians by the same name, such as a tango singer Martín Podestá, but was told not to worry, that he'll eclipse them all :) ).
43. Miguel Calo - Alberto Podesta  "Bajo un cielo de estrellas (vals)" 1941 2:37
44. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "El vals soñador" 1942 3:32
45. Miguel Calo - Alberto Podesta  "Pedacito de cielo (vals)" 1942 2:21
Another Quintet, and a more complex but again, classic and at the same time intriguingly modern sound. It dates to the 1960s "dark years" of Argentine Tango, and owes its existence to the continued love of tango among some of its most talented musicians (and to the continued infatuation of Japan with the Argentine Tango, because it was the tours of Japan which helped the tango musicians survive the 1960s) . The tango titans such as Pedro Láurenz, Horacio Salgán, Enrique Francini performed together as Quinteto Real and, later, Láurenz convened his own quintet (which included Jose Colangelo, piano, and Eduardo Walczak, violin). The following tracks are from their 1969 album, "Pedro Láurenz interpreta a Pedro Láurenz"
46. Pedro Láurenz - Instrumental  "De puro guapo" 1966 2:48
47. Pedro Láurenz - Instrumental  "Orgullo criollo" 1966 2:57
48. Pedro Láurenz - Instrumental  "Mal de amores" 1966 3:16
Aces de Candombe tanda! You may remember how, a couple months ago, I wrote how hard it might be to put together an Enrique Rodriguez milonga tanda (and I got away, then, by playing a tanda of tangofox). Here is a different idea: Rodriguez recorded one of the most memorable milonga candombes of all times, the 1943 Tucu-Tun. It's one of those records which are so good and so special, it may be hard to find them a proper match in a tanda. Rodriguez recorded another notable candombe milonga, "La rumbita candombé";  Bernhard Gehberger suggested adding late Rodriguez records, Tamboriles & Color Punzo, while Tangology 101 suggests Demare's Carnavalito and Troilo's "Papá Baltasar";  for my set, I add two more records by different orchestras (I thought of Canaro's "Candombe criollo", too, but nothing makes a truly satisfying match. Any better thoughts?)
49. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno  "El tucu-tun" 1943 2:34
50. Osvaldo Fresedo - Oscar Serpa  "La rumbita candombé" 1943 2:34
51. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Azabache" 1942 3:05
And now the time is running out & the sets are getting shorter and shorter :)
52. Donato, Edgardo Various Artists "La Melodía Del Corazón" 1940 3:18
53. Donato, Edgardo  "El Adios" 1938 3:09
54. Alfredo de Angelis - Instrumental  "Mi dolor" 1957 2:51
55. Alfredo De Angelis  "Felicia 1969"  2:48
56. Osváldo Pugliese Osvaldo Pugliese "Farol" 1943 3:22
57. Osváldo Pugliese "Rondando Tu Esquina" 1945 2:49
The Cumparsita is a different kind of Pedro Laurenz, one of his earliest surviving records, of a bandoneon duet with the legendary Pedro Maffia. "The lad from Flores" Maffia played bandoneon like no one else - he truly revolutionized not just bandoneon playing, but the tango music in general. Pedro Maffia, famed for the rich, complex, dark voice of his instrument, became, in 1924, the first bandoneonist of Julio De Caro's Sextet,  and one of the leaders of the Decaroist movement in tango music, which transformed tango beyond the simplicity and boastfulness of the original Old Guard. Pedro Láurenz joined De Caro's orchestra the following year, in 1925, and over the next couple years, the two great bandoneon players also recorded about a dozens tangos in a duet. The tango records of the mid-1920s tend to be affected by poor record quality ( the first electric records appeared in Argentina only after 1926). This Cumparsita may be a great exception.
58. Pedro Láurenz y Pedro Maffia  "La cumparsita" 1926 3:01
Both post-Cumparsita tracks are Russian, from two very different epochs. "Nau", as they were called, were the pioneers of the Russian rock bloom of the 1980s. "Good-buy America", a bossa nova-tinged 1985 composition originally titled "The last letter" but better known for the line of its refrain, has become a sort of a generational anthem song. Although back in the 80s, few us could have thought that its theme of disillusionment about American culture would fit so well to Russia's 2010's... Danceability of "Good-buy America" is a source of perennial contention among Russian tangueros, but you know my opinion on this matter, right?
59. Nautilus Pompilius - V. Butusov "Good-buy America" 1988 3:38
Eddie Rosner's is one of the many tragic stories of Russian tango. The best jazz trumpet player of all Europe in his teens and early twenties, he fled Berlin, his birthplace, in 1933 to his Jewish parents' homeland of Poland, and discarded his birth name, Adolph, for Eddie. In 1939, escape from the Nazi bombing raids lead him from Warsaw to Belostok, which was soon absorbed into the USSR as a part of Western Belorussia. Eddie Rosner hardly spoke any Russian, but the circumstances made him one of the leaders of Russian jazz and swing. After the war, he attempted to return to Poland but was stopped and sent to Gulag for this "subversive act of attempted emigration". In the dreaded labor camps of Kolyma, Rosner survived as a prison band musician, eventually loosing his teeth to scurvy and re-learning to play trumpet with dentures. In 1954, he was set "free" and organized the Big Band of his dreams, but he was never allowed to go to Poland - or to the US to visit those relatives who survived the Holocaust. As the chill of the Cold War thickened, Eddie was blacklisted again, and confined to a provincial town in Belarus, until the authorities finally allowed him to return to (Western) Berlin to die. 
To record this tango, his best known, Rosner's largely Polish and Jewish band was assigned a great Russian singer, "lest Polish accent seeps into the sound of Russian tango music"; Eddie is said to have been really happy to work with a jazz-singer of such talent.
60. Eddie Rosner - Georgy Vinogradov "Zachem" 1944 3:11


Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Practica Del Centro Playlist, 4/21/2014

Totally squeezed for time, between a major spring cleanup / kids moving in after the semester and a Canada trip. But I still found an hour to try different tunes, measure them up, roll them together, & it was fun!
01. Juan D'Arienzo - Alberto Echagüe  "Nada más" 2:43
02. Juan D'Arienzo - Alberto Echagüe  "No mientas" 1938 2:39
03. Juan D'Arienzo - Alberto Echagüe  "Qué importa" 1939 2:10
I suspect that I played far too little D'Agostino lately :)
04. Ángel D'Agostino - Ángel Vargas "A Quién Le Puede Importar" 3:14
05. Ángel D'Agostino  - Ángel Vargas "El Yacaré" 3:09
06. Ángel D'Agostino  - Ángel Vargas "Adiós Arrabal" 3:10
"Tangon" was supposed to be a new all-rage genre of 1935, when the grand orchestras were locked in fierce competition for novelty, and Sebastian Piana's original reborn slow milonga, then fast milonga, and then milonga candombeanda all already debuted. But the new would-be hit rhythmic trend fizzled with just this one track, and Canaro moved on. "Tangon" remained one of tango's one-of-a-kind, hard-to-match unusuals.
07. Francisco Canaro  - Roberto Maida "Milonga Brava" 2:35
08. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Milonga criolla" 1936 3:05
09. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Tangon" 1935 3:17
Can't have enough Rodriguez!
10. Enrique Rodríguez "Como has cambiado pebeta" 2:37
11. Enrique Rodriguez "En la buena y en la mala" 1940 2:26
12. Enrique Rodriguez "Danza Maligna" 1940 2:27
"Gitana Rusa", a self-described "Tango Europeo" originally composed by Saul Zhadan, a Jewish fiddler in Ukraine just before his death in the Holocaust, is another hard-to-match unique sound of Argentine tango, and I don't think I did good service to it by combining it with two different-quality Malerba records...
13. Ricardo Malerba -"Embrujamiento"  2:52
14. Ricardo Malerba - Antonio Maida "Encuentro" 2:20
15. Ricardo Malerba & Garcia "Gitana Rusa" 2:47
The 2nd of the three D'Arienzo's valses may have been a hasty choice here...
16. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "Corazon de artista (2) vals" 1936 2:22
17. Juan D'Arienzo - Alberto Echagüe  "En tu corazon (2) vals" 1938 2:46
18. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "Pabellon de las rosas" 1935 2:50
We were talking with a friend in Ukraine about Uruguayan tango music, a topic precipitated by my quest for Lita Morales biography (see below), and I mentioned Nina Miranda (the most famous female voice of Uruguay of her time, who sang with tango orchestras of Racciatti and Pellejero). In fact I just pointed my own attention to Donato Racciatti and Nina Miranda for the first time a couple months ago, when my much-loved teachers from Tokyo, Akiyoshi and Noriko, performed to "Tu corazón" at a festival in Honolulu. Racciatti almost missed the Golden Age of tango; an Italian immigrant to Uruguay, he put together his orchestra in 1948, but didn't really reach fame until the mid-1950s. The success came to Raciatti with the amazing voices of his two female singers, Nina Miranda and later on, Olga Delgrossi.
19. Donato Racciatti - Nina Miranda "Tu corazón" 2:32
20. Donato Racciatti - Nina Miranda "Gloria" 1952 2:47
21. Donato Racciatti - Nina Miranda "Sin estrellas" 1953 2:46
So many amazing records Laurenz records, so little time in the playlist!
22. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podesta  "Todo" 1943 2:37
23. Pedro Láurenz - Instrumental  "Amurado" 1952 2:58
24. Pedro Laurenz - Juan Carlos Casas  "Al Verla Pasar"  3:23
An admission to make: I always think of "Ella Es Asi", "That's the Way She Is", as a song about my beloved dancing half. "A ray of light, a beautiful flower, you're filled with kindness - and candor". But do I have enough Donato materiel to mix this perfect milonga track into a tanda?
25. Edgardo Donato  "Ella Es Asi - milonga" 2:35
26. Edgardo Donato  "La Milonga Que Faltaba" 2:24
27. Edgardo Donato  "El Torito - 1939" 2:19
Could "Así Se Baila El Tango" - sometimes boastful, more often ironic and mildly self-deprecating title meaning "This is how Tango is danced!" -  be a perfect practica track ;) ? Kind of like, "look what I can do ... or can I, really? Let's give it a shot!". 
28. Ricardo Tanturi - Alberto Castillo  "Así Se Baila El Tango"  2:34
29. Ricardo Tanturi  "Que Nunca Me Falte"  2:42
30. Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos "Oigo Tu Voz" 3:07
Only one Fresedo track for the night? Only three songs of sheer sweetness to accentuate the bitters of tango?
31. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray "Isla de Capri" 1935 3:16
32. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray "Canto de amor" 1934 3:25
33. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray "Vida mia" 1933 3:23
34. Rodolfo Biagi - Alberto Lago  "Amor y vals" 1942 2:48
35. Rodolfo Biagi - Andrés Falgás "El Ultimo Adios (vals)" 2:08
36. Rodolfo Biagi - Teofilo Ibanez  "Viejo porton (vals)" 1938 2:27
Donato, as I already mentioned, is, in a way, an Urugayan musician, although Argentine-born. He and his band were only invited to play in BsAs after years of increasing success in Montevideo, and many of his later BsAs team members came from Uruguay. But Lita Morales? The most captivating female voice of tango, like, ever? The one whose song lyrics were so often first-person that one just won't dare to separate the singer from the character: "I'm this little girl who kept on repeating how life is like a sea with a bright bue boat", "I love you, my heart, I love you for your gift of passion" ... ?
From RCA poster
 Well, we don't know anything about Lita Morales. Not even when or where she was born, or died. Hardly more than a couple faded pictures exist.
Lita Morales briefly sang for OTV in 1937 and then joined Donato with her husband, Horacio Lagos (Stigliani), forming a wonderful duet. In 1939, an Uruguayan violinist and singer Romeo Gavioli joined the ochestra. People suggest that over time, the vocalist trio may have become a triangle, and finally, late in 1942, Edgardo Donato (famed for his absent-mindedness, as if living on the Moon), decided to terminate them all. Soon, the whole world of what has been Donato's orchestra fell apart. The band itself didn't survive much longer, with his pianist brother Osvaldo leaving first, and most of the rest of the musicians leaving to join Osvaldo soon after. Gavioli returned to Uruguay in 1943 and formed his own orchestra, recording some remarkable candombes. But, overcome with depression, he plunged his car into the sea off Montevideo embankment, killing himself at the age of 44. Maruja Pacheco, who wrote tango lyrics specially for Lita, left tango and embraced religion. But what happened to Lita and Horacio is simply unknown. According to a Todotango commenter, they had a son named Daniel Stigliani, and Lita died in about 1994. Discographies tell that she recorded a handful of tangos with Vieri Findazini more than a decade later, in 1955; the voice in those recordings is considerably more coarse but perhaps recognizable. Tango "is" full of sadness, there is no denying that; but how can we tangueros totally consign to oblivion one of tango's  most inspiring voices? It is depressing. Should we listen to her voice, full of sparkling laughter, and try to forget the injustice? I start from one of the happiest tangos ever, Carnaval de Mi Barrio.
37. Edgardo Donato  "Carnaval De Mi Barrio" 2:25
38. Edgardo Donato  "Yo Te Amo (Lita Morales)" 2:50
39. Edgardo Donato "La Melodía Del Corazón" 1940 3:18
40. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida  "Ciego" 1935 2:57
41. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Solo una novia" 1935 3:23
42. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Condena (S.O.S.)" 1937 2:39
Milongas with abandon!
43. "Orquesta Tipica Victor - Milonga De Los Fortines - Mariano Balcarce" 19372:52
44. Orquesta Tipica Victor  "Cacareando"  2:45
45. "Emilio Pellejero - Mi Vieja Linda - Enalmar De Maria - 1941" 2:26
And finally, for the close, dramatic late De Angelis and of course Pugliese, topped by a couple post-Cumparsita cleanup-and-last-hugs tracks.
46. Alfredo de Angelis - Instrumental  "Mi dolor" 1957 2:51
47. Alfredo De Angelis  "Felicia 1969" 2:48
48. Alfredo De Angelis  "Pavadita 1958" 2:53
49. Osvaldo Pugliese "La Abandone Y No Sabia" 1944 3:12
50. Osváldo Pugliese "Farol" 1943 3:22
51. Osvaldo Pugliese - Roberto Chanel  "Rondando tu esquina" 1945 2:48
52. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "La cumparsita" 1951 3:49
53.  Goan Bregovic & Kayah "Tabakiera"  4:15
54. Carlos Libedinsky  "Otra Luna" 2006 3:43
(54 total)

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Milonga BuenOnda playlist, 4/11/2014

Since this month's date of Buen'Onda fell on the eve of the International Space Flight Day, I added the Cosmonaut theme to the cortinas :)
The warm-up / after-class tanda is Canaro's instrumentals for a change:
01. Francisco Canaro - Instrumental "La melodia de nuestro adios" 1938 3:03
02. Francisco Canaro - Instrumental  "Pampa" 1938 2:50
03. Francisco Canaro - Instrumental  "El chamuyo" 1933 3:11
The signature track from Red Elvises 1999 "Russian Bellydance" album (they are a Russian American band from LA who famously sang "Cosmonaut Petrov" at a Red Square benefit concert in 2006). You're right, I wouldn't have known about it without the kids :)
04. Russian Elvises  "Cosmonaut Petrov 1 (-3dB)"  0:28
05. Juan d'Arienzo "El Cencerro" 1937 2:40
06. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "Ataniche" 1936 2:31
07. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental Soundtrack "El flete" 1936 2:58
Maya Kristalinskaya's bio in Russian
The 1966 Nezhnost' (Tenderness) is Maya Kristalinskaya's most famous of many famous hit songs, its star appeal only magnified when the song was included in the 1967 cult-following movie classic, "Three Poplars on Plyuschikha Street" (trust me, in Russian "Plyuschikha" sounds very mellifluous and old-Muscovite charming, but I realize that when Americans struggle to pronounce it, it comes out sorta Klingon harsh ;) ). Soon afterwards, Maya's Jewish roots got her blacklisted, and for the last 10 years of her very short life she was restricted to performing in small-town clubs, off TV and radio waves.  Maya's grave at Moscow's de facto Jewish cemetery, the beautiful and quaint Donskoe, is right next to the Pruss family plot. Her headstone reads, "You aren't gone, you just stepped out, you'll be back with a song". And yes, "Tenderness" is a space flight era song - it's about the void left when the dear one leaves Planet Earth.
08. Maya Kristalinskaya  "Nezhnost (Tenderness)"  0:17
09. Alfredo De Angelis - Carlos Dante - Julio Martel  "Pobre flor (1946)"  2:43
10. Alfredo de Angelis - Floreal Ruiz  "Mi novia de ayer" 1944-04-28 2:38
11. Alfredo de Angelis - Carlos Dante, Julio Martel  "Soñar y nada más" 1944-08-29 3:08
Trava u Doma (Grass Near the House) - the highlight of the 1982 Space Day celebration has been officially anointed as the anthem of Russian Space Agency in 2009. A long road for a song which started from a nostalgic ballad about the parents' house in a faraway village, the sad eyes of their cow, and, yes, grass near the house - with the space theme added, and the cow hastily deleted, just before the first performance. The 1982 version was still a mellow, nostalgic tune; but the following year, Zemlyane (The Earthlings Band) "rockified" it and powered it up, and the rest is history.
12. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 1"  0:19
13. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "Junto a tu corazon"  3:00
14. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "Nido Gaucho"  3:22
15. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "Nada"  2:45
16. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 2"  0:17
17. Miguel Calo  "Corazon No Le Hagas Caso"  3:00
18. Miguel Calo  "Tristezas De La Calle Corrientes"  2:46
19. Miguel Calo  "Al Compas Del Corazon"  2:48
"Bravo" group was one of the pioneers of Russian rock revival of the 1980s (drawing much inspiration from the American 1950s), reaching nation-wide fame even before the Soviet powers-that-be finally allowed it to sell records (and their first post-black market disk sold 5,000,000 copies). Ahh, those were the days. The "Space Rock-n-Roll" is a later period record though, from the times when the group may have lost its trailblazer appeal - but remained faithful to its early-years sound. It must be added that April 12th, the Space Day, is also the unofficial birthday of Rock-n-Roll: the Comets recorded "Rock around the Clock" on this date in 1954.
20. Bravo "Space Rock-n-Roll" 1993 0:12
21. "Orquesta Tipica Victor - Milonga De Los Fortines - Mariano Balcarce" 1937,2:52
22. Orquesta Tipica Victor  "Cacareando"  2:45
23. "Emilio Pellejero - Mi Vieja Linda - Enalmar De Maria - 1941" 2:26
24. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 3"  0:27
25. Edgardo Donato  "Carnaval De Mi Barrio" 2:25
26. Donato, Edgardo "La Melodía Del Corazón" 1940 3:18
27. Edgardo Donato - Lita Morales - Romeo Gavio  "Mi Serenata" 1940 3:02
"I am Mother Earth" is a song from a 1963 movie about a heroic rescue of a marooned alien spaceship - as it happens, a rather unremarkable movie launched to fame several quite remarkable songs. 
28. Olga Voronets  "Ya - Zemlya (I am Mother Earth)" 0:18
29. Rodriguez, Enrique Enrique Rodriguez "En la buena y en la mala" 1940 2:26
30. Rodriguez, Enrique Enrique Rodriguez "llorar por una mujer" 1941 2:51
31. Rodriguez, Enrique Enrique Rodriguez "Danza Maligna" 1940 2:27
32. Maya Kristalinskaya  "Nezhnost (Tenderness)"  0:17
33. Edgardo Donato  "Quien Sera - vals" 2:15
34. Edgardo Donato  "Estrellita Mia - vals" 2:36
35. Edgardo Donato  "La Tapera - vals" 2:54
36. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 1"  0:19
I planned for a 2nd, even more powerful Laurenz tanda, but alas, run out of time for it...
37. Pedro Laurenz Juan Carlos Casas "No me extrana"  2:44
38. Pedro Láurenz - Juan Carlos Casas  "Vieja Amiga" 1938-05-12 3:12
39. Pedro Láurenz - Juan Carlos Casas  "Amurado" 1940-07-29 2:30
40. Olga Voronets  "Ya - Zemlya (I am Mother Earth)" 0:18
I had most reservations about my second Calo tanda for the night, beautiful and poetic but not energizing due to its brooding, melancholic quality. Still wanted to play "April Rains" (Lluvia de Abril) to conjure up some more precipitation ;) To my relief, the tanda played well in the energy flow. And the rain is to come on Sunday?
41. Miguel Caló - Raúl Iriarte  "La vi llegar" 1944 3:24
42. Miguel Calo - Raul Iriarte  "Lluvia de abril" 1945 2:42
43. Miguel Caló - Raúl Iriarte  "Cada día te extraño más" 1943 2:35
44. Russian Elvises  "Cosmonaut Petrov 1 (-3dB)"  0:28
45. Francisco Canaro - Instrumental  "Milonga de mis amores" 1937 3:03
46. Francisco Canaro "La Milonga de Bs As (Milonga)"  2:48
47. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Milonga criolla" 1936 3:05
48. Maya Kristalinskaya  "Nezhnost (Tenderness)"  0:17
49. Osvaldo Fresedo Roberto Ray "En la huella del dolor" 1934 2:48
50. Osvaldo Fresedo Roberto Ray "Sollosos" 1937 3:27
51. Osvaldo Fresedo Roberto Ray "Recuerdo de bohemia" 1935 2:36
52. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 3"  0:27
A mix of energetic, laughter-filled valses from three orchestras - we used the first track from the birthday dance for Jenna, so the tanda grew to 4 valses for everybody to join.
53. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Salud Dinero Y Amor (vals)"  2:39
54. Francisco Lomuto - Fernando Diaz  "Cuando estaba enamorado" 1940 2:19
55. Orquesta Típica Víctor Orquesta Tipica Victor "Sin Rumbo Fijo (vals)" 2:18
56. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Fru Fru (vals)"  2:57
57. Bravo - "Space Rock-n-Roll" 1993 0:12
58. Biagi, Rodolfo  "Humiliacion" 1941 2:42
59. Rodolfo Biagi Andrés Falgás "La Chacarera " 2:24
60. Rodolfo Biagi Andrés Falgás "Son Cosas del Bandoneon " 2:44
61. Zemlyane  "Trava u Doma 1"  0:19
62. Francisco Canaro Roberto Maida "Condena (S.O.S.)" 1937 2:39
63. Francisco Canaro  "Recuerdos De Paris - Roberto Maida - 1937" 3:12
64. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida  "Solo una novia" 1935 3:23
65. Russian Elvises  "Cosmonaut Petrov 2 (-2 dB)"  0:20
66. Carlos Di Sarli Roberto Rufino "La Mulateada"  2:22
67. Carlos di Sarli - Roberto Rufino  "Cuando un viejo se enamora" 1942 2:14
68. Carlos Di Sarli Roberto Rufino "Pena Mulata" 2:27
69. Maya Kristalinskaya  "Nezhnost (Tenderness)"  0:17
70. Alfredo de Angelis - Instrumental  "Mi dolor" 1957 2:51
71. Alfredo de Angelis - Carlos Dante  "Carillon de La Merced" 1957 2:50
72. Alfredo De Angelis  "Pavadita 1958" 1999 2:53
73. Russian Elvises  "Cosmonaut Petrov 1 (-3dB)"  0:28
74. Osvaldo Pugliese - Instrumental  "Gallo ciego" 1959-07-23 3:33
75. Osváldo Pugliese "Farol" 1943 3:22
76. Osvaldo Pugliese "Malandraca" 1949 2:52
77. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "La cumparsita" 1951 3:49
78. Arabesque  "Midnight Dancer"  3:42
79. Red Elvises "Cosmonaut Petrov" 1999 3:10
(79 total)

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Milonga Sin Nombre "Homenaje a Rodolfo Biagi y Enrique Rodriguez" playlist, March 22 2014

This marks the second time when we theme Milonga Sin Nombre after "tango orchestras of the month" (in January, it was the birthday month of Di Sarli and Tanturi, and DJ Mark rather elegantly marked Di Sarli and Tanturi tandas by displaying different color roses at the DJ table). It is the tango DJ's perennial quandary, how to educate the tangueros about the music without being didactic or boring or non-danceable. Just how does one nudge the dancers to think about the music titles, orchestras, epochs, and singers without distracting them from the dance?

I'd love to hear your suggestions. Personally, I believe that a good milonga doesn't lend any possibilities for lecturing or quizzing of any sort ... but once a milonga is over, then it may be great to give the tangueros a chance to re-visit the music they liked, and to ask more questions about it. That's how I started my own path into understanding tango music and poetry - by asking DJs such as Dan "Red Fox" Boccia or Homer Ladas about the records they played.

For bios of Rodolfo Biagi and Enrique Rodriguez and my thoughts about their role on tango's history and present, please check the milonga flyer. And now, to the playlist:

01. Carlos Di Sarli - Instrumental "El ingeniero" 1952 3:25
02. Carlos Di Sarli - Instrumental "El Once" 2:48
03. Carlos Di Sarli - Instrumental "El amanecer" 1951 2:30
04.   "Bremenskie Lullaby Cortina"  0:31
Do you notice how Enrique Rodriguez hushes the final beat of each tango? There are two schools of thought about it... some think that it's still perfectly OK to finish a dance with a flourish on the non-existent note; others maintain that it's uncool to underscore what's not there in the music, and so, if you are in the know, then you'll stop on Rodriguez's actual final beat, rather than on the one which "sort of makes sense" except it isn't there.
A sampler of the more lyrical Rodriguez tangos:
05. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno "Como Se Pianta La Vida"  2:25
06. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Son cosas de bandoneon"  2:42
07. Enrique Rodriguez - Andres Falgas  "Alma en pena" 1946 3:05
08. Russian Folk  "Kalinka-Malinka 2 (cortina)"  0:25
09. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Milonga del corazon" 1938 2:48
10. Francisco Canaro - Ernesto Fama  "Milonga del 900" 1933 2:55
11. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Milonga criolla" 1936 3:00
12. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013 0:24
13. Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos  "Oigo Tu Voz" 3:07
14. Tanturi, Ricardo  "Madame Ivonne" 1942 2:18
15. Ricardo Tanturi  "Que Nunca Me Falte"  2:42
16. "Malysh i Karlson Cortina"  0:22
Vintage Biagi,  powerful, primal, vibrant. These records came from my very first tango CD, "Alex 4 Shorey":
17. Rodolfo Biagi - Jorge Ortíz "Humillación" 1941 2:42
18. Rodolfo Biagi - Jorge Ortíz "Indiferencia" 1942 2:33
19. Rodolfo Biagi -  Andrés Falgás "La chacarera" 1940 2:24
20. Russian Folk  "Kalinka-Malinka 1 (cortina)"  0:25
The trio of Enrique Rodriguez's most light-hearted valses ... it was too short a milonga to add another tanda of his more complex, folk song-based valses such as "Los Piconeros", "Las Espigadoras", or"En el Volga yo te espero".
21. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Salud Dinero Y Amor (vals)"  2:39
22. Enrique Rodrigues "Tengo mil novias-Roberto Flores-1939(Vals)" 3:06
23. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Fru Fru (vals)"  2:57
24. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 2013 0:24
25. Lucio Demare - Hector Alvarado  "Malena" 1951 3:13
26. Lucio Demare - Juan Carlos Miranda  "Manana zarpa un barco" 1942 3:22
27. Lucio Demare - Juan Carlos Miranda  "No te apures, Carablanca" 1942 3:29
28. Victor Tsoy  "Gruppa Krovi (cortina)"  0:36
"Llorar por una mujer" may be the most famous of Enrique Rodriguez's tango compositions; Cadicamo's lyrics of "En la buena y en la mala" are to die for; and "Danza Maligna" is the truest manifesto of tango: "Let's live together for the quarter of an hour // Of this oldtime and evil dance", or how about these lines: "Ungodly pleasure, the perverted dance // the tango is a rite and a religion"
29. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno  "Llorar por una mujer" 1941 2:51
30. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno "En la buena y en la mala" 1940 2:26
31. Enrique Rodriguez - Armando Moreno "Danza Maligna" 1940 2:27
32. Lidiya Ruslanova  "Valenki 3 (cortina)"  0:24
Cut for live music!
Brian and Dave playing at Milonga Sin Nombre

The three classic Biagi milongas:
33. Rodolfo Biagi - Alberto Amor  "Flor de monserrat" 1945 2:16
34. Rodolfo Biagi - Teófilo Ibáñez  "Campo afuera" 1939 2:08
35. Rodolfo Biagi - Carlos Saavedra "Por la huella" 1948 2:47
36. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 2013 0:24
I whispered to Irina, "Could you believe it that in the music I selected, there is no Fresedo and no Laurenz?", and she was, like, "No way, can it be fixed?" :)
37. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray  "Isla de Capri" 1935 3:17
38. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray  "En la huella del dolor" 1934 2:49
39. Osvaldo Fresedo - Roberto Ray  "Niebla del Riachuelo" 1937 2:25
40. Lidiya Ruslanova  "Valenki 4 (cortina)"  0:24
41. Donato, Edgardo Various Artists "La Melodía Del Corazón" 1940 3:18
42. Edgardo Donato - Lita Morales - Romeo Gavio  "Mi Serenata" 1940 3:02
43. Donato, Edgardo  "El Adios" 1938 3:09
44. Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 2013 0:29
So many exhilarating, energetic valses of Biagi's orchestra! One tanda is far too little to give proper credit to them - Biagi's "Lagrimas y Sonrisas", "Amor y Vals", "La Loca de Amor", "Lejos de Ti","Viejo Porton" and others are a good milonga's must-play. For this tanda, I picked 3 records united by the vocal of Andres Falgas; the 2nd one has a special place in my memory, of an ornate slope-side veranda perched high amid the vineyards of Prague, where shadows of the dancers swirled to the sound of the vals on its ceiling.
45. Rodolfo Biagi - Andres Falgas  "El ultimo adios (vals)" 1940 2:09
46. Rodolfo Biagi - Andres Falgas  "Dejame amarte aunque sea un di (vals)" 1939 2:55
47. Rodolfo Biagi - Andres Falgas  "Dichas que vivi (vals)" 1939 2:17
48. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013 0:24
49. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Jamás retornarás" 1942-10-09 2:31
50. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Corazón no le hagas caso" 1942-09-29 3:00
51. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Al compás del corazón" 1942-04-29 2:48
An assortment of years and vocalists to showcase Biagi's gentler, more lyrical side (and sorry for the DJ's oops moment with a missing cortina):
52. Rodolfo Biagi - Andrés Falgás "Queja Indiana" 1939 2:24
53. Rodolfo Biagi - Jorge Ortíz "Todo Te Nombra" 1940 3:33
54. Rodolfo Biagi- Carlos Acuña "Tu Voz" 1944 2:29
55. Lidiya Ruslanova  "Valenki 1 (cortina)"  0:24
As I already mentioned, it may be hard to play a milonga tanda of Enrique Rodriguez if you aren't up to interpreting tangofox as a kind of a milonga. And El Rey de Fox has myriad excellent tangofox records of all moods and sounds! But tangueros tend to be too shy to dance to them, often consigning these tracks to alternative milongas despite their most classic, vintage BsAs sound. In fact the first time I had a chance to dance to "Para Mi Eres Divina" was at an alternative milonga DJ'd by Varo in ABQ (thanks, man!!) In the following sampler, the first tune is a remixed (and faithfully translated) New York Yiddish pop record, immortalized by Andres Sisters in the 1920s; the second one remixes Brahms classic; and the final one is came from von Geczy's operetta which molded a fox after Hungarian folk czárdás. Be warned, tangofoxes may be highly addictive - it may take a long time to get a tune out of your head!
56. Enrique Rodriguez - Roberto Flores  "Para mi eres divina" 1938 2:28
57. Enrique Rodriguez  "Danza Hungara no 5" 1947 2:43
58. Enrique Rodriguez "Amor en budapest"  2:43
59. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 2013 0:24
60. Carlos Di Sarli - Alberto Podestá  "Lloran las campanas" 1944-09-20 2:58
61. Carlos Di Sarli - Alberto Podesta "La Capilla Blanca"  2:55
62. Carlos Di Sarli - Alberto Podesta "Junto a tu corazon"  3:00
63. Russian Folk  "Gypsy Girl (cortina)"  0:22
64. Edgardo Donato - Horacio Lagos - Lita Morales "Sinsabor" 1939 2:53
65. Edgardo Donato "Sinfonia de arrabal"  2:55
66. Edgardo Donato  "Carnaval De Mi Barrio" 2:25
67. "Bremenskie Lullaby Cortina"  0:31
68.  Osváldo Pugliese - Jorge Maciel "Remembranzas" 1956 3:41
69. Osváldo Pugliese - Roberto Chanel "Rondando Tu Esquina" 1945 2:49
70. Osváldo Pugliese - Instrumental "Recuerdo" 1943 2:45
71. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "La cumparsita" 1951 3:49
72. Israel Kamakawiwo'ole  "Over The Rainbow" 2001 3:32
(72 total)

Let's celebrate Rodolfo Biagi and Enrique Rodriguez!

-A Milonga Sin Nombre flyer -

March is the birthday month of Argentine Tango orchestra leaders Rodolfo Biagi and Enrique Rodriguez!

Rodolfo Biagi
March 14, 1906, Buenos Aires – September 24, 1969

Arguably the most handsome of the great tango orchestra organizers, Biagi was an insatiable piano prodigy who started playing at the movie halls of Buenos Aires at 13, keeping it a secret from his disapproving parents. At 15, he already played with the Tango Old Guard legend, Juan Maglio “Pacho”. 
  
Biagi’s fingers can be instantly recognized when we hear the trademark scattering of crystal chimes of his piano keys, even before he formed his own orchestra. From 1935 to 1938, Rodolfo Biagi famously played with Juan D’Arienzo, the revolutionary of the tango music, making tango vibrantly rhythmic, youthfully energetic, and in this way, many historians say, laying the foundation for the Golden Age of Argentine Tango.  

In Biagi’s and D’Arienzo’s lifetimes, though, their contribution to tango has often been dismissed and even berated. They were blamed for supposedly simplifying the tango, for “kowtowing to the base instincts of the wild dancing youth”. I don’t know how the critics could say it; to my ear, Biagi is simply irresistible, yet musically, not simple at all.  It’s a crazy pleasure to dance to Biagi with someone who shares your understanding of his music!

In 1938, Rodolfo Biagi struck on his own. Today, the most popular Biagi’s tangos, valses, and milongas are from this earliest, purest, exuberant period, which lasted roughly from 1938 to 1940. Later in the decade, his music grows slower, more subdued, and more melodic, before returning to driving, yet more complex, rhythm in the late 1940s.





Enrique Rodriguez
March 8, 1901 - September 4, 1971



Another great tango orchestra leader whom the highbrow tango critics loved to hate, Enrique Rodriguez was the true dancer’s musician who understood the rhythms of the dancing bodies like few others. Yet unlike Biagi, decades after his death, Enrique Rodriguez remains shut out from the best dance floors of Buenos Aires; his popularity is the strongest abroad. The supposed “sins” of Enrique Rodriguez include a widespread use of foreign music motifs (he remixed a great deal of classic, popular, and folk music from all over the world into dance tunes), the many non-tango dancing genres he played (earning to himself – oh horror! – the title of El Rey Del Fox!), his eagerness to add strange musical instruments into tango music, and even the supposedly ever-upbeat mood of his music. In other words, Rodriguez is found guilty of exactly the things which make him so dear to my heart!

First and foremost a bandoneonist who played with Pacho and Canaro in the Old Guard days, Enrique Rodriguez was also a fluent piano and violin player, and a wonderful composer. His rhythmic style developed in the mold of Edgardo Donato’s orchestra, after Rodriguez played with Donato in the late 1920s.

When Enrique Rodriguez convened his own grand orchestra in 1936, he pointedly refused to name it a Tango Orchestra. Instead, it was christened “an orchestra of all rhythms” which also played foxtrots, rancheras, pasodobles, polkas for the dancing public which didn’t just tango. Today, we often choose to dance to these very tango-flavored, fast-paced pieces in the rhythm of a spicy milonga. In fact, despite having recorded wonderfully rhythmic tangos and exuberant valses, Enrique Rodriguez’s orchestra didn’t leave us good milonga records … if you want to dance milonga to Rodriguez, you better not be shy about doing it to the sound of Argentine foxtrot!

***
For the music selection of our Biagi and Rodriguez night and more comments about the music, check Milonga Sin Nombre's playlist for March 22, 2014

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Flor de Narciso Milonga playlist, March 8th 2014

This time I tried to do lots of homework, trying less familiar records, listening, reshuffling, again and again. I hope I didn't overdo the "new and unfamiliar" part, and ended up with the mix which remains rich on tango's best hits. But I really need your feedback and criticism! The cortinas here came, mostly, from a Montreal Gipsy Orchestra, courtesy of Keith Elshaw.
01. Carlos Di Sarli  Instrumental  "9 Puntos" 3:27
02. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "El ingeniero" 1955 3:18
03. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "Indio manso" 1958 2:53
04. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 0:29
05. Biagi, Rodolfo  "Humiliacion" 1941 2:42
06. Biagi, Rodolfo Jorge Ortíz "Indiferencia"  2:33
07. Biagi, Rodolfo  "La chacarera" 1940 2:24
(we'll have much more Biagi on the 22nd when we celebrate his birthday at the upcoming Milonga Sin Nombre!)
08. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Variation Corelli" 2013, 0:28
09. Edgardo Donato  "Quien Sera - vals" 2:15
10. Edgardo Donato  "La Tapera - vals" 2:54
11. Edgardo Donato  "Estrellita Mia - vals" 2:36
12. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 0:24
13. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "No esta"  2:45
14. Carlos Di Sarli  Alberto Podesta"La Capilla  Blanca" 2:57
15. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "Al compas del Corazon"  3:19
16. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 0:29
17. Osvaldo Fresedo Roberto Ray "Recuerdo de bohemia" 1935 2:36
18. Osvaldo Fresedo Roberto Ray "Yo no se llorar" 1933 2:36
19. Osvaldo Fresedo "Sollozos"  3:27
20. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Minor Blues" 2013, 0:23
All three slow milongas below have impeccable Argentine pedigrees, yet of course people don't quite dig them. Rodolfo was openly fuming, "no es tango"! Es milonga, Rodolfo ... es milonga muy lente. But can I play them in three-track tandas at all? Maybe later in the course of a night? Anyway the dancers told me nice things about my traditional tandas, but only complained about the very first non-traditional set I played ... so I think I'll stick with the classics for the rest of the night :)
21. Erskine Maytorena Qtango  "Milonga Triste" 2011 4:17
22. Hugo Diaz   "Milonga Para Una Armonica" 1973 4:25
23. Paco Mendoza & DJ Vadim  "Los Ejes De Mi Carreta" 2013 3:23
24. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 0:24
Love Di Sarli's rhythmics as much as his melodic and dramatic pieces! 
25. Carlos di Sarli - Roberto Rufino  "Corazón" 1939 2:46
26. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "Nobleza de arrabal" 1940 2:07
27. Carlos di Sarli - Instrumental  "Catamarca" 1940 2:23
28. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 0:29
29. Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos  "Oigo Tu Voz" 3:07
30. Tanturi, Ricardo  "Madame Ivonne" 1942 2:18
31. Ricardo Tanturi  "Que Nunca Me Falte"  2:42
32. Russian Folk  "Gipsy Girl (cortina)"  0:22
33. skipped Montreal cortina track
34. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "Pabellon de las rosas" 1935 2:50
35. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "Valsecito de Antes" 1937-08-31 2:19
36. Juan D'Arienzo  "Lágrimas y Sonrisas (Vals)"  3:12
37. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 0:29
38. Donato, Edgardo  "El Adios" 1938 3:09
39. Edgardo Donato - Lita Morales - Romeo Gavio  "Mi Serenata" 1940 3:02
40. Edgardo Donato  "Sinfonia de Arrabal" 3:07
41. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 0:24
42. Enrique Rodriguez "En la buena y en la mala" 1940 2:26
43. Enrique Rodríguez "Llorar por una mujer" 2:47
44. Enrique Rodriguez "Alma en pena" 1946 3:05
(Come to Milonga Sin Nombre on the 22nd for much more Enrique Rodriguez - we're going to celebrate his birthday along with Biagi's)
45. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Minor Blues" 2013, 2013 0:23
46. Juan D'Arienzo "La Punalada (Milonga)"  2:02
47. Juan D'Arienzo - Instrumental  "El esquinazo" 1938-01-04 2:34
48. Juan D'Arienzo "Milonga De Mis Amores"  2:26
49. special requested! Actually, as the milongas played, Raina suggested that Sadie Hawkins / International Women's Day chica's choice tanda be next ... but all of a sudden the plan morphed into something completely different: birthday valses for Alice, our generous, fearless organizer of Salt Lake's very first milonga in this very new dance venue "on the other side of the tracks". 
Aaah I'm scrambling for valses now - for starters, it's Pugliese 1943 instrumental, "Desde el Alma", the absolute standout among Pugliese's few vals records. 
Followed by "Waltlz of the Butterfly", a cryptic record widely circulated among tangueros who danced in Turkey. The disks claim to have been recorded by St. Petersburg Lyric Ensemble of Seitkaliev (sometimes Seyitkaliyev), but there is no record of such group or musician (there is a young ballroom tango dancer by the same last name in Kazakhstan but any connection is murky). Most of Seitkaliev's records are waltzes, including some classic Argentine valses, but also some tangos. All tracks have been renamed in English or French. For example, Corazon de Oro is called "Sympathique" on their "Dance with me" CD. Intriguingly, I just found the 2012 youtube clip, which hints that Azamat Seitkaliev's group may be Konya University Chamber Ensemble, at former historic
Roman Iconium in Anatolia (in Turkish, Konya Üniversitesi Oda Müziği Topluluğu)?
The last record in this special set of dramatic, accelerating and slowing down waltzes, is "Valse Boston" interpreted by Ukraine's Sergey Luchko, a waltz with an actual St Petersburg pedigree. Originally sung to guitar by Alexander Rosenbaum, an Petersburger EMT turned a bard, it was a hit in Russia of our youth, a campfire must-sing. How strange that Luchko's 2011 record only turned up in my quest for tanda-mates for Pugliese's"Desde el Alma" last week!
50. Carlos di Sarli - Roberto Rufino  "Patotero sentimental" 1941 2:34
51. Di Sarli, Carlos  "Charlemos" 1941 2:31
52. Carlos Di Sarli Alberto Podesta "Junto a tu corazon"  3:00
53. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013 0:24
54. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podesta  "Recien" 1943 2:43
55. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podesta  "Todo" 1943 2:37
56. Pedro Laurenz - Alberto Podesta  "Garua" 1943 3:09
57. Russian Folk  "Gypsy Girl (cortina)"  0:22
My third Tanturi vals choice was, originally, Desde el Alma, but I already played Pugliese's mindblowing version in an impromptu Vals Special set. So to keep with the proprieties of tango DJing, I frantically searched for a different vals to complete this tanda ... whew!
58. Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos  "Al pasar (fast)" 1943 2:10
59. Ricardo Tanturi - Alberto Castillo  "A mi madre (Con los amigos) (fast)" 1943 2:35
60. Ricardo Tanturi - Enrique Campos  "Me beso y se fue" 1945 2:36
61. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 0:24
62. Juan D'Arienzo "Yapeyu" 1951 2:26
63. Juan D'Arienzo "Dime mi amor"  2:40
64. Juan d'Arienzo "Pensalo Bien" 1938 2:17
65. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013 0:29
When it comes to Canaro's tangos, I guess I belong to the Maida Generation :). It is indeed a generational shift which followed the runaway popularity of Maida's "Poema" abroad. In Buenos Aires, Ernesto Famá remains "the" Canaro vocalist. I tried playing Canaro-Famá before and wasn't convinced. But this time, I totally fell for "Te quiero todavia" with its unusual, and IMHO unforgettable, melody: 
66. Francisco Canaro - Ernesto Fama  "Tormenta" 1939 2:38
67. Francisco Canaro - Ernesto Fama  "Te quiero todavia" 1939 2:54
68. Francisco Canaro - Ernesto Fama  "Yo no se porque te quiero" 1934 3:10
69. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Minor Blues" 2013, 0:23
70. "Orquesta Tipica Victor - Milonga De Los Fortines - Mariano Balcarce" 1937, 2:52
71. Orquesta Tipica Victor  "Cacareando"  2:45
72. Varios Artists  "Emilio Pellejero - Mi Vieja Linda - Enalmar De Maria - 1941" 2:26
73. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 2013 0:24
Juan Carlos Miranda was Demare orchestra's first, and really defining, vocalist (they recorded "Malena"!). But their work together didn't last long, and Demare later criticized Miranda for being, suposedly, a "chansonnier" rather than a true "tango singer". They cut just over a dozen recordings. Horacio Quintana's career with Demare later in the mid-40s was even more short lived, and I find it hard to play Demare-Quintana without combining them with Miranda or Beron: 
74. Lucio Demare - Juan Carlos Miranda  "No te apures, Carablanca" 1942 3:29
75. Lucio Demare - Juan Carlos Miranda  "Manana zarpa un barco" 1942 3:22
76. Lucio Demare - Horacio Quintana "Torrente" 1944 3:10
77. Cortina Carmen Piculeata  "Egy kis cigainy dal" 2013, 0:29
78. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Jamás retornarás" 1942 2:31
79. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Corazón no le hagas caso" 1942 3:00
80. Miguel Caló - Raúl Berón  "Al compás del corazón" 1942 2:48
81. Carmen Piculeata  "Vien, Tzigane" 2013, 2013 0:24
Did I say, Generation Maida ;) ?
82. Francisco Canaro  "Recuerdos De Paris - Roberto Maida" 1937, 3:12
83. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Nada mas" 1938 3:00
84. Francisco Canaro - Roberto Maida "Condena (S.O.S.)" 1937 2:39
less than 15 minutes remaining means that it's time for the crescendo, juxtaposing late De Angelis with Pugliese
85. Alfredo De Angelis  "Pavadita 1958" 2:53
86. Alfredo De Angelis  "Felicia 1969" 2:48
87. Osvaldo Pugliese - Instrumental  "El monito" 1945 2:19
88. Osváldo Pugliese "Farol" 1943 3:22
89. Alfredo de Angelis - Instrumental  "La cumparsita (Matos Rodriguez)" 1961 3:33