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by Néstor
Pinsón and Julio
Nudler
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Violinist, leader and composer (November 26, 1888 December 14, 1964) Nickname: Pirincho |
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His beginnings are muddled with those of tango history.
So much so that a radio program of mid 50s had coined a phrase to refer
to any extremely old event: «when Canaro already had his orchestra».
His fortune gave birth to a common saying: «He's got more money
than Canaro», in allusion to somebody's opulence. It is said that
once when Canaro and Gardel met
at the races, the latter asked him 500 pesos (an amount then enormous)
to bet on a horse, but asking the former to forget about this debt:
«I'm poor, and you've got all the money here.» Because compared
with Canaro, even Gardel was poor.
Canaro was called Pirincho since birth. The midwife,
while holding him in her arms, exclaimed when she saw so much hair and
an upright tuft: «He looks like a "pirincho"!»,
alluding to a crested bird easily found in the River Plate area. His
family soon moved to Buenos Aires, where they lived in leasehold houses
(called "conventillos"), under conditions of extreme poverty. Before
he was ten he was a newspaper vendor in the streets. Later he was a
house painter and he also found a stint in the works when the National
Congress was being built.
Music was an attraction for him. His first satisfaction
were a few chords he managed to play on a guitar thanks to the teachings
of a neighbor cobbler. But he was hypnotized by the violin. As he had
no money to buy one, he made his 'Stradivarius' with an oil can and
a wooden fingerboard. «The first tango I played by heart was "El
llorón", of an unknown composer- he would remember several years
later-. The case was made by my mom; it was simply a cloth bag, and
so I went out to get some money at dancings in the vicinity.»
But his official debut took place in Ranchos, a lost town a hundred kilometers from Buenos Aires. There he played with a trio, but his gig on that location fell very short for two reasons. One was that the small stage for the artists had to be reinforced with iron sheets to protect them from gunshots exchanged by the customers. The other was that Canaro liked the girls at the local, but the owner of the place tried to dissuade him with a story in which the man in charge of the girls had killed some people. Back home he met a new neighbor, the bandoneonist Vicente Greco the one who some time later would coin the term Orquesta Típica for tango groups-. Canaro would acknowledge much later Greco's influence. In the course of 1908 it was decided that Canaro's career would be in tango. He performed then at cafés in La Boca neighborhood and his name began to be known. Later he joined his friend Greco and with various tours they commenced to find the prosperity they sought after. In 1912 Canaro started his trascendental work as composer with the tangos "Pinta brava". Along his life he piled such number of pieces that even today it is argued about how many were really born out of his inspiration and how many he made his own in exchange for favors or money. But as stated by the expert on the subject Bruno Cespi, «if only 5 per cent of all the songs Canaro signed, were composed by him, that would be enough to regard him as a great». "Matasano" was written in 1914 on request of the medicine
students nearing graduation, who on the first day of Spring organized
the so called "Bailes
del internado". At one of those balls, when hired to play with his
line-up gathered for the occasion, he took the conductor's baton for
the first time. His orchestra was the first to be admitted into aristocratic
houses where tango was resisted. His line-ups did not have a definite
musical style. Canaro preferred to adapt himself to every circumstance,
always finding the way to keep his space without rivalling other stars
of the genre. As for the bulky number of his recordings, there are no
coinciding estimations: the figures vary between 3500 and 7000.
In 1924 he conceived the idea of incorporating a singer
into the orchestra but only to sing the "estribillo" (bridge), the brief
main section of each tango. So he started the "estribillistas"
or "chansonniers" era, the first of these was Roberto
Díaz. Several years later, Canaro was also pioneer in the
introduction of the contrabass into the tango orchestra, choosing the
dark colored Leopoldo Thompson for that mission. In 1921, in order to
play at the carnival balls at the now disappeared teatro Opera of Buenos
Aires, he reunited a 32-piece orchestra, an orchestral mass unknown
in tango until then.
In 1925 he traveled to Paris, where tango was the new
fashion. Manuel
Pizarro and his brothers were there, each one with a different "Pizarro"
orchestra, Canaro with his brothers did the same. He had taken with
him the "estribillistas"
Agustín Irusta and Roberto
Fugazot, a duet he gathered with the pianist Lucio
Demare. The resultant trio would succeed in Spain and other European
countries for more than ten years. In Paris he also introduced a female
singer, Teresa Asprella, already settled in France, and when he toured
the United States he incorporated Linda Telma.
When he returned to our country after two years of
absence, other good orchestras were popular. Skillfully, Canaro commenced
a long tour across the country to make himself well known in every place.
Afterwards, as soon as broadcasting was becoming in vogue, he took full
advantage of it so as to reach the position of the major star on radio.
Even though other musicians had improved and developed personal styles,
the name Canaro was known by everybody.
Musical theatre was not his creation but all the musicals
he produced were successful. He made use of simple scripts as an excuse
to introduce his musicals. His vocalists were elegant fellows, and he
modified some of his tangos with a "symphonic" treatment, using them
as overtures or interludes when played by the orchestra in the pit.
He brought forth old tangos, renamed them and changed their names again
if lyrics were added to them. So, his symphonic tango "Pájaro
azul" came from his previous "Nueve puntos"; "Halcón negro",
of 1932, was "La
llamada" before, and with lyrics became "Rosa de amor". He also
tried to introduce a new beat, the tangón, but it did not work.
Also he made an attempt with the milongón.
His only failure was within the film business. He founded
Río de la Plata productions, but none of the movies in that label
was profitable, so he had to get rid of the company. Some of his successful
compositions were "El chamuyo", "El pollito", "Charamusca",
"Mano brava", "Nobleza de arrabal", "La tablada", "Destellos",
"El opio", "Sentimiento
gaucho", "La
última copa", "Déjame", "Envidia",
"Se dice de mí",
"La brisa",
"Madreselva"
(previously "La polla") and "El
Tigre Millán".
In 1956 he published his memoirs with the title "Mis
50 años con el tango" (My 50 years with tango), crowded with
hyperboles. A strange illness, Paget's disease, drove him to death.
His fortune was apportioned in equal shares between his legal wife,
"the French one", on one part, and the daughters born out of the love
with the choir girl of one of his musicals, on the other. The city of
Montevideo honored him with a name of a street. Until today no cinema,
no theater, no street has been named in his honor in Buenos Aires.
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