(Please check out this later post.)
'TodoTroilo', the available recorded works, consists of 464 tracks out of the 480-odd that were released: a few seem to have have gone missing, but it's great that so many are still around. I've been listening a lot recently to the recordings made between 1939 and 1944. & then, late one evening, a question hit me: who wrote all this music?
'TodoTroilo', the available recorded works, consists of 464 tracks out of the 480-odd that were released: a few seem to have have gone missing, but it's great that so many are still around. I've been listening a lot recently to the recordings made between 1939 and 1944. & then, late one evening, a question hit me: who wrote all this music?
After
all, tango is written music. Tangos are often composed as piano
scores, simple basic music on two staves, or as a chord sequence for
guitar. Anyone with good basic music skills can compose a piano piece
and write it down for someone else to play. But what we hear on a
recording is quite different, it's an arrangement. To write an
arrangement, a tango score, requires much more advanced skills,
skills of composing, of orchestration: it involves imagining and
creating the drama of a three-minute track, deciding how it begins
and ends, how the sounds of the different instruments are used, the
speed and mood of the whole; it involves writing the lines for each instrument. Tango,
the music we hear, is the art of the arranger, and sadly the arranger
is rarely mentioned. We know the orquesta, the composer of the
original, the author of the words – but very rarely the person who
wrote the music we actually hear! Or if we know it, their name is
hardly mentioned, which seems extraordinary. The arranger really is a
composer. Baroque composers like Bach and Handel would take a melody
from music written by another composer and re-arrange it, and it then
became their own composition. Sadly, not in tango.
The
general view is that Troilo's best music was made between 1939 and
1944. Most of the great tracks, the high-energy Troilo, powerfully
rhythmic
with
wonderfully tender passages, the music we dance to
at milongas, are
from the 110
tracks released in these years. The
Orquesta
Típica
Aníbal
Troilo
formed in
1937
and
in
the following year
released just
one
78,
two tracks, on
the Odeon
label.
Nothing in 1939,
nothing
in 1940.
Then
in
1941
the orquesta was with Victor, and suddenly in
that year a
dozen
78s
were
released, 24 tracks. Two
tracks a month, all year!
&
they kept coming: altogether,
108
tracks were released between
1941 and 1944.
So
who was writing this music? Who was Troilo's arranger? & yes,
his name is
known:
Astor Piazzolla.
Piazzolla's
family had emigrated to New York, where he picked up the bandoneon
and
learned to play Bach with a student of Rachmaninov.
When
he
was
15 his family returned to Mar del Plata, where he began to play in
local orquestas. In 1938 he moved to Buenos Aires to continue his
musical career,
and he
was still
just
19 in
1939 when
Troilo auditioned him
to
fill in temporarily
for his third bandoneon, who was ill. The legend is that Troilo asked
him what he could play, and
he replied that he could play
the bandoneon parts
of all Troilo's
music.
'So play something else' said Troilo. Piazolla played Rhapsody in
Blue, and got the job. When the third bandoneon returned, Troilo kept Piazzolla on as fourth bandoneon, as a fill-in pianist (his
band
pianist
was apparently a
bit
unreliable) –
and as an arranger. As
Troilo's arranger, Piazzolla
wrote
the music we hear and dance to, although
for
sure Troilo
and the musicians had control, and
no
doubt made
changes
during rehearsal. Which
isn't to say that Troilo played exactly the same phrases in exactly
the same way every time, but a group of eight or ten musicians can't
change direction on the spot. Jazz allows space for improvised solos,
but tango has
a much tighter structure.
Piazzolla certainly
didn't
create the 'Troilo sound', which
is
already
there
in the two 1938 Odeon recordings. Listen
to Troilo's 1938 recording of
Comme il Faut. It's
sharp,
percussive, lively, with tender lines, recognisably Troilo. Troilo
doesn't seem to have recorded this track again, but compare
it
with Yo Soy el Tango from three years later: the sound is
similar, but much
more
assured and
compact,
and
the
syncopation more daring. But
I think the sheer volume of music from
those years is
the sign of an arranger. Someone
spent a lot of time planning each tango and composing the music in the
orquesta's style.
By
1941 Piazzolla
was
earning enough with
Troilo to
pay for music lessons with
the
eminent
Argentine classical
composer
Alberto Ginastera, with
whom he
studied the scores
of Stravinsky, Bartók, Ravel. He
got up early
to hear the Teatro Colón opera
orchestra
rehearse, and
he
performed
with
Troilo in
the tango clubs at night: a
21 year-old passionate about music. He
stayed with the
orquesta
until
1944, when it's
said that Troilo
began to feel he was trying to develop tango too far from the popular
music people wanted to dance to, and
their partnership dissolved:
I
think this shows
how strong his influence was.
I
didn't used
to think well of Piazzolla: I was never that
keen on his music, which
developed away from
the music we dance to. &
it's kind of irritating that his music has also
come to displace public
awareness of tango:
classical musicians have
fallen over themselves to record 'tango',
which always
means the
later music of Piazzolla, the concert-hall
music of his main career.
& he devised the description 'tango
nuevo'! Of course, making
danceable music wasn't a priority
or even financially viable
at a time when few
people were
dancing tango. In
any case
he seems to have wanted to be remembered as a 'serious composer', not
as someone who wrote dance music; composers and
arrangers of dance music
hardly got remembered anyway.
But I think I should
remember him with huge
gratitude and affection for
his legacy with Troilo: that
flood of over 100 great recordings, any
one of which will get
me onto
the floor with minimum
delay, music that's astonishingly
consistent in sound and quality. To
me that's his great legacy.
I'm not a DJ, but I'd imagine you could make a good
Troilo tanda pretty much at
random out of the 1938-44 recordings. I'm not sure you could do that
with any other orquesta.
2 comments:
I can understand your preferences about music, but, implying that Piazzolla didn’t composed “danceable music” just because it wasn’t “financially viable “ or because he wanted to be remembered as a “serious composer” is at least a very simplistic comment and shows a total ignorance about the most famous Argentinean composer and the music in general.
If you consider Piazzolla’s great legacy only for his arrangements to Troilo, well…,maybe you should listen more music, not only tangos for dance…Don’t let you taste for dance music blind yourself. Maybe you don’t like his music, but it’s impossible to ignore the enormous work of Astor Piazzolla. Tango music goes far beyond the dance floor and it doesn’t stop in the 50’s. Gardel didn’t composed for dancers. Should we also blame him for displacing public awareness of tango?
Thanks, anon, but I think you've misunderstood what I wrote. I wrote to draw attention to a part of Piazzolla's work that hasn't received much, if any, attention, and which deserves to be acknowledged. I also wrote to draw attention to the arrangers of tango in general, who rarely receive credit for their work.
In addition I pointed out that tango dance was in rapid decline for most of Piazzolla's adult career. Troilo and Pugliese, and perhaps others too, continued to play, but their music also developed away from dance music. Times had changed: no one saw a future in tango dance and music, it was the past, they felt they had to move on. Sad that they didn't live to know how popular their earlier music would be again. For those who still enjoyed dancing tango in the 1960s and 70s, there were stacks of recordings, a vast legacy of music.
& I said that Piazzolla had ambitions as a musician far beyond being an arranger of dance music, and why not? He learned the bandoneon when he was 13 – by playing Bach on it. & he'd never have been a student of Nadia Boulanger if he wasn't a 'serious' composer. He knew that Bartok had taken the idiom and folk music of Hungary and Romania and used it as a basis for his own music, that Stravinsky had taken the melodies and rhythms of Russian folk music and composed Rite of Spring. In fact I've sometimes wished he'd gone further away from tango. My favourite Piazzolla are the five Piezas on the Naxos recording of the complete flute and guitar music. The first of these alternates (as far as I can make out) bars of five and nine beats: nothing could be further from tango, or tango nuevo for that matter, and it's some of the most beautiful, melancholic, and reassuring music I know.
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