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Astor Piazzolla

 
Artist: Astor Piazzolla
Astor Piazzolla

Similar Artists:

Gran Quinteto Real, Vayo Raimondo

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Fernando E. Solanas

Worked With:

Aldo Pagani, Oscar Lopez Ruiz, Pablo Ziegler, Fernando Suarez Paz, Horacio Malvicino, Hector Console, Daniel Binelli, Kip Hanrahan, Gary Burton
  • Born: March 11, 1921
  • Died: July 05, 1992
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Latin
  • Instrument: Bandoneon
  • Representative Albums: "Tango: Zero Hour," "Piazzolla Classics," "Messidor's Finest, Vol. 2"
  • Representative Songs: "Adios Nonino," "Libertango," "Milonga del Angel"

Biography

It's not hyperbole to say that Astor Piazzolla is the single most important figure in the history of tango, a towering giant whose shadow looms large over everything that preceded and followed him. Piazzolla's place in Argentina's greatest cultural export is roughly equivalent to that of Duke Ellington in jazz -- the genius composer who took an earthy, sensual, even disreputable folk music and elevated it into a sophisticated form of high art. But even more than Ellington, Piazzolla was also a virtuosic performer with a near-unparalleled mastery of his chosen instrument, the bandoneon, a large button accordion noted for its unwieldy size and difficult fingering system. In Piazzolla's hands, tango was no longer strictly a dance music; his compositions borrowed from jazz and classical forms, creating a whole new harmonic and rhythmic vocabulary made for the concert hall more than the ballroom (which was dubbed "nuevo tango"). Some of his devices could be downright experimental -- he wasn't afraid of dissonance or abrupt shifts in tempo and meter, and he often composed segmented pieces with hugely contrasting moods that interrupted the normal flow and demanded the audience's concentration. The complexity and ambition of Piazzolla's oeuvre brought him enormous international acclaim, particularly in Europe and Latin America, but it also earned him the lasting enmity of many tango purists, who attacked him mercilessly for his supposed abandonment of tradition (and even helped drive him out of the country for several years). But Piazzolla always stuck to his guns, and remained tango's foremost emissary to the world at large up until his death in 1992.

Piazzolla was born in Mar del Plata, Argentina, on March 11, 1921. His parents were poor Italian immigrants who moved to New York City in 1924, affording the young Piazzolla extensive exposure to jazz artists like Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway. His father also played tango records by the early masters, especially the legendary vocalist/composer Carlos Gardel, and gave Astor a bandoneon for his ninth birthday. In addition to lessons on that instrument (which encompassed American music, like Gershwin, as well as tango), Piazzolla also studied with classical pianist Bela Wilda in 1933, becoming an ardent fan of Bach and Rachmaninoff. Around the same time, the budding prodigy met and played with Carlos Gardel, appearing as a newspaper boy in Gardel's watershed tango film El Dia que Me Quieras. The teenaged Piazzolla turned down an offer to tour South America with Gardel in 1935, a fortuitous decision that kept him out of the tragic plane crash that claimed Gardel's life.

In 1936, Piazzolla's family returned to Mar del Plata, and his passion for tango music was fired anew by violinist Elvino Vardaro's sextet. The still-teenaged Piazzolla moved to Buenos Aires in 1938, seeking work as a musician. After about a year of dues-paying, he caught on with the widely renowned Anibal Troilo orchestra, where he spent several high-profile years. In the meantime, he continued his study of piano and music theory, counting future classical composer Alberto Ginastera (1941) and pianist Raul Spivak (1943) as his teachers. He began composing for Troilo during this period, although his more ambitious, classically influenced pieces were often edited for accessibility's sake. In 1944, Piazzolla left Troilo's group to become the orchestra leader behind singer Francisco Fiorentino; two years later, he formed his own group, playing mostly traditional tangos, yet already with hints of modernism. This group broke up in 1949, and Piazzolla, unsure of his musical direction, sought a way to leave tango behind for more refined pursuits. He studied Ravel, Bartók, and Stravinsky, also immersing himself in American jazz, and worked mostly on his compositional skills for a few years. His 1953 piece "Buenos Aires" caused a stir for its use of bandoneon in a classical orchestral setting.

In 1954, Piazzolla won a scholarship to study in Paris with the hugely influential Nadia Boulanger, who also taught Aaron Copland, Philip Glass, and Quincy Jones, among many others. Boulanger encouraged Piazzolla not to ignore tango, but to reinvigorate the form with his jazz and classical training. Piazzolla returned home in 1955 and immediately set the tango world on its ear, forming an octet that played tango as self-contained chamber music, rather than accompaniment for vocalists or dancers. The howls of protest from traditionalists continued unabated until 1958, when Piazzolla disbanded the group and went to New York City; there he worked as an arranger and experimented with a fusion of jazz and tango, also composing the famed "Adios Nonino," a lovely ode to his recently departed father.

Returning to Buenos Aires in 1960, Piazzolla formed his first quintet, the Quinteto Tango Nuevo, which would become the primary vehicle for his forward-looking vision. Over the course of the '60s, Piazzolla would refine and experiment heavily, pushing the formal structure of tango to its breaking point. In 1965, he made a record of his concert at New York's Philharmonic Hall, and also cut an album of poems by Jorge Luis Borges set to music. In 1967, Piazzolla struck a deal with poet Horacio Ferrer to collaborate exclusively with each other, resulting in the groundbreaking so-called "operita" Maria de Buenos Aires, which was premiered by singer Amelita Baltar in 1968 (she would later become Piazzolla's second wife). Piazzolla and Ferrer next collaborated on a series of "tango-canciones" (tango songs) which produced his first genuine commercial hit, "Balada Para un Loco" ("Ballad of a Madman"). In addition to composing songs and more elaborate pieces for orchestra (such as 1970's El Pueblo Joven), Piazzolla also flexed his muscles scoring numerous films of the period.

The '70s started out well for Piazzolla, as an acclaimed European tour brought the opportunity to form a nine-piece group to play his music in especially lush fashion. However, all was not well. Argentina's government was taken over by a conservative military faction, and everything that Piazzolla symbolized -- modern refinement, an ostensible lack of respect for tradition -- suddenly became politically unwelcome. In 1973, Piazzolla suffered a heart attack, and after recovering, he decided that, with sentiments running high against him, it would be wiser for him to live in Italy. There he formed a group called the Conjunto Electronico, which placed bandoneon at the forefront of what was essentially, instrumentation-wise, an electric jazz ensemble; this period also produced one of his most celebrated compositions, "Libertango." In 1974, Piazzolla cut an album with jazz baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan called Summit, with backing by Italian musicians; the following year, he found a new favorite vocal interpreter in Jose Angel Trelles. 1976 brought a major concert back in Buenos Aires, with the Conjunto Electronico premiering the piece "500 Motivaciones."

Tiring of electric music, Piazzolla formed a new quintet in 1978 and toured extensively all over the world, also composing new chamber and symphonic works in the meantime. His reputation grew steadily, making him a prime candidate for exposure in the U.S. during the world-music craze of the latter half of the '80s. In 1986, Piazzolla entered the studio with his quintet and American producer Kip Hanrahan and recorded what he considered the finest album of his career, Tango: Zero Hour. The same year, he played the Montreux Jazz Festival with vibraphonist Gary Burton, resulting in the live set Suite for Vibraphone and New Tango Quintet. The official follow-up to Tango: Zero Hour, The Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night, won equally glowing reviews, and Piazzolla staged a major homecoming concert in New York's Central Park in 1987.

Unfortunately, at the height of his international fame (and belated celebration at home), Piazzolla's health began to fail him. He underwent quadruple bypass surgery in 1988, but recovered well enough to mount an international tour in 1989, including what would be his final concert in Argentina. La Camorra, another excellent recording, was released in 1989, the same year Piazzolla formed a new sextet with an unheard-of two bandoneons. In 1990, he recorded a short album with modern-classical iconoclasts the Kronos Quartet, titled Five Tango Sensations. Sadly, not long afterward, Piazzolla suffered a stroke that left him unable to perform or compose. Almost two years later, on July 4, 1992, he died in his beloved Buenos Aires due to the lingering after-effects, leaving behind a monumental legacy as one of South America's greatest musical figures ever, and a major composer of the 20th century. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Discography: Astor Piazzolla
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Tango Appassionato

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Buenos Tangos

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Tango del Angel [Orfeon]

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Piazzolla Clasico II

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Tangamente: 1968-1973

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Tango Fever

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Essential Tangos

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Histoire du Tango: Piazzolla - Music for Violin and Guitar

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Desde Argentina

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Astor Piazzolla [Music of the World]

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Tango Way/The Classic Way

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Music of Latin America

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Piazzolla en Suite

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Piazzolla Concertant

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Piazzolla and el Conjunto Electronico

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Milano 1984

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Maria de Buenos Aires [#6]

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Selection of Astor Piazzolla

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Musico y el Poeta

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Astor Piazzolla [Music Hall]

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History of Tango [Box Set]

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Song Of The Angel

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Live in Colonia, 1984

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Tango [Absolute Best]

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De Mi Bandoneon

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Gold Collection: 40 Classic Performances

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Tanguedia de Amor

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Tanguedia de Amor

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Maria de Buenos Aires [Milan]

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Chador

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Libertango [Personality]

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Impressions of Latin America

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Unmixed

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Remixed

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Best of Astor Piazzolla [BMG]

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Tangos: His Greatest Hits

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Astor Piazzolla: Remixed/Unmixed

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Tango [EPM]

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Bandoneon Di

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Decameron Negro

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History of Tango

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Best 11

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Cafe 1930

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Desbande

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Se Armo 1946-1948

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Adios Marinero

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Tanguedia

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Tangazo

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Muerte del Angel

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Concierto de Nacar

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Tres Minutos con la Realidad

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Ensayos

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Homenaje Adios Nonino Y Sus Temas Mas Recordados

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Libertango [EMI]

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Astor Piazzolla with Amelita Baltar

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Tutto Piazzolla: Il Re del Tango

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Milva & the Tango of Astor Piazzola

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Piazzolla & Cello Passion

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Inspiracion

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Inspiracion

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Music for Two Guitars

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Tango Piazzolla: Key Works: 1984-1989

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Tango [Kontrapunkt]

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Trio Fundacion

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Adios Nonino [2007]

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Libertango [ANS]

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Vuelvo Al Sur

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Original Tangos from Argentina

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Original Tangos from Argentina, Vol. 2

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Historia del Tango

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Historia del Tango, Vol. 2

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Adios Nonino [Membran]

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Best Tangos: Verano Porteno

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Live: Best Of

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Live at the Montreal Jazz Festival [DVD]

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Eternal Bandoneon

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Pizzontango Sinfonico

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Tango Classico

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Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night [Nonesuch]

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Piazzollissimo

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Su Primera Orquesta

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Suite Punta del Este

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Tangology

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Alma de Bandoneon

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3 Preludes/Grand Tango/6 Etudes

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Four Seasons of Buenos Aires

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Libertango [Æon]

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Soul of Tango: Greatest Hits

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57 Minutos con la Realidad

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Live at the Montreal Jazz Festival

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Live at the BBC 1989

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1943-1982

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A Intrusa: El Infierno Tan Te

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Adios Nonino [Diap]

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Agri

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Concierto Para

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Concertante

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Coleccion

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Exitos: The RCA Years

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Homenaje: Adios Nonino

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Mejor De

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Mis 30 Mejores Canciones

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Mundial

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Musica Popular Contemporanea, Vol. 1

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Musica Popular Contemporanea, Vol. 2

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Teatro Regina

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Piazzolla en el Regina

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Piazzolla Interpreta Piazzolla

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Piazzolla Interpreta Piazzolla

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Piazzolla...O No?

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RCA Victor 100 Anos

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Serie Historica

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Suite Troileana

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En Persona

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En Persona

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Live in Tokyo 1982

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10th Anniversary

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Tango Ballet

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Grand Tango/Musica Camerata Montréal

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Mas Grandes Exitos

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Saexotango

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Next Tango

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Best of Astor Piazzolla [Wagram]

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Buenos Aires Tangos

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Adios Nonino [Yoyo Music]

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Astor Piazzolla Plays Piazzolla

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Sueno de una Noche de Verano

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New Tango, Brazilian Touch

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Tango Malambo

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Bandoneon di Astor Piazzolla

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Homenaje, Vol. 2

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Anos de Soledad

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Homenaje a 10 Anos

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Escualo and Sette Sequenze

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Libertango [Orchard]

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Maestro & Revolutionary: Introduction to Astor Piazzolla

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Lausanne Concert

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Ballet Tango

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Adios Nonino [Circular Moves]

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Para Colleccionistas

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Grandes Exitos [Universal]

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Aconcagua Tres Tangos

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Octeto Buenos Aires

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Serie Tangos del Sur

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20 Greatest Hits

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Persecuta

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Best of Astor Piazzolla

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Libertango [Jual]

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Grand Tango Dances

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Tango Forever

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Tango Forever

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Adios Nonino [Milan]

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Homage a Liege

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Adios Nonino [Le Chant du Monde]

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Musical Revolutionary

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Spirit of Buenos Aires [#1]

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20 Supersucessos

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Maria de Buenos Aires [Dynamic]

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Pleut Sur Santiago

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In Montreal

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Teatro Regina [Bonus Tracks]

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Musica Popular Contemporanea: De La Ciuda

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Musica Popular Contemporanea: De la Ciuda [Bonus Tracks]

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Goyeneche en Vivo

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Piazzolla...O No? [Bonus Tracks]

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Concierto Para Quinteto [Bonus Tracks]

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Quinteto

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En Vivo en el Regina

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Noches del Regina: En Vivo Mayo 1982

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Piazzolla & Jose Angel Trelles

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Essential Tango

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Nuevo Tango de Buenos Aires

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Rough Guide to Astor Piazzolla

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Rough Guide to Astor Piazzolla

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Histoire du Tango: 5 Pieces for Guitar/Tangos for Flute & Guitar

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Primeros Anos [Sos]

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Rain over Santiago

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Pulsacion [1995]

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Astor Piazzolla & Oswaldo Berlingieri

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Astor Piazzolla & Jose Angel Trelles

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Oblivion [Personality]

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Biyuya

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Oblivion [Koch]

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Oblivion [Koch]

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Armaguedon, Vol. 2

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Balada para un Loco, Vol. 4

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Fuga Y Misterio, Vol. 1

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Otono Porteno, Vol. 2

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Tribute

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Oblivion [ANS]

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Infierno Tan Temido, Vol. 1

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A Intrusa, Vol. 3

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Edicion Critica

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Libertango [Best]

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Nuestro Tiempo

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Tango Para una Ciudad

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Bicicleta Blanca

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Concierto Para Quinteto

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Astor Piazzolla & Robert Goyeneche

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Astor Piazzolla Y Su Conjunto 9

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Amelita Baltar Interpteta A: Piazzolla-Ferrer

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Tango Contemporaneo

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Messidor's Finest, Vol. 2

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Tiempo Nueve

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Music of Astor Piazzolla

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Tangos [Harmonia Mundi France]

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Vienna Concert

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Vienna Concert

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Itinerary of a Genius

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Tango, El Exilo de Gardel

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Astor Piazzolla [Membran]

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Astor Piazzolla [Germany Box Set]

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Maestro del Tango

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Tango: Zero Hour

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Tango: Zero Hour

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Tangos for Solo Piano

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Libertango [Latin Sounds]

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Libertango [Tropical]

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Bandoneón Inmortal

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Homage to Astor Piazzolla

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Historia del Tango, Vol. 1

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Concierto de Tango

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13 Selections

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Tango: Astor Piazzolla

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Milonga del Angel [Bonus Tracks]

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Solo Piazzolla

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Lausanne Concert [Reissue]

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Pulsación [2003 Circular Moves]

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Resurreccion del Angel

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Maria de Buenos Aires [Teldec]

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Libertango [Classic Options]

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Libertango [Milan]

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Adios Nonino [A World of Music]

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Adios Nonino [A World of Music]

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Bandoneon Sinfonico

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Songs from a Heavy Heart: Essential Tangos 1984-1989

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Concerto for Bandoneon

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En Suite

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Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night [American Clave]

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Late Masterpieces

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Piazzolla Classics

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Luna

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Woe

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Grandes Exitos

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Maria de Buenos Aires [RCA]

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Astor Piazzolla: 1977-1978

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Astor Piazzolla: 1979-1983

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Adios Nonino [Music Hall]

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Concierto para Bandoneon

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New Tango

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Astor Piazzolla: The Central Park Concert

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Sur

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Tristezas de un Doble A

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Camorra

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Pulsacion: Fuga y Misterio [Trova/Inter]

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Pulsacion: Fuga y Misterio [Trova/Inter]

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Astor Piazzolla: 1974-1975

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Adios Nonino [Personality]

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Revoluçionario

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Inolvidables RCA: 20 Grandes Exitos

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Maria de Buenos Aires, Segunda Parte

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Maria de Buenos Aires, Primera Parte

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Milonga del Angel [Bonus Track]

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Bandoneon Concerto

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Wikipedia: Astor Piazzolla
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Astor Piazzolla

Ástor Piazzolla with his bandoneon in 1971.
Background information
Birth name Ástor Pantaleón Piazzolla
Born March 11, 1921(1921-03-11)
Mar del Plata, Argentina
Died July 4, 1992 (aged 71)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Genres Nuevo tango
Occupations Composer, Bandoneón player

Astor Pantaleón Piazzolla (March 11, 1921 – July 4, 1992) was an Argentine tango composer and bandoneón player. His oeuvre revolutionized the traditional tango into a new style termed nuevo tango, incorporating elements from jazz and classical music. An excellent bandoneonist, he regularly performed his own compositions with different ensembles.

Contents

Biography

Piazzolla was born in Mar del Plata, Argentina in 1921 to Italian parents, Vicente Nonino Piazzolla and Asunta Manetti. His grandfather, a sailor and fisherman named Pantaleone Piazzolla, had immigrated to Mar del Plata from Trani, a seaport town in the southeastern Italian region of Apulia, at the end of the 19th century. Ástor Piazzolla spent most of his childhood with his family in New York City, where he was exposed to both jazz and the music of J.S. Bach at an early age. While there, he acquired fluency in four languages: Spanish, English, French, and Italian. He began to play the bandoneon after his father, nostalgic for his homeland, spotted one in a New York pawn shop. At the age of 13, he met Carlos Gardel, another great figure of tango, who invited the young prodigy to join him on his current tour. Much to his dismay, Piazzolla's father deemed that he was not old enough to go along. While he did play a young paper boy in Gardel’s movie El día que me quieras [1], this early disappointment of being kept from the tour proved to be a blessing in disguise, as it was on this tour that Gardel and his entire band perished in a plane crash. In later years, Piazzolla made light of this near miss, joking that had his father not been so careful, he wouldn't be playing the bandoneon—he'd be playing the harp.

He returned to Argentina in 1937, where strictly traditional tango still reigned, and played in night clubs with a series of groups including the orchestra of Anibal Troilo, then considered the top bandoneon player and bandleader in Buenos Aires. The pianist Arthur Rubinstein—then living in Buenos Aires—advised him to study with the Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera. Delving into scores of Stravinsky, Bartók, Ravel, and others, he rose early each morning to hear the Teatro Colón orchestra rehearse while continuing a gruelling performing schedule in the tango clubs at night. In 1950 he composed the soundtrack to the film Bólidos de acero.

At Ginastera's urging, in 1953 Piazzolla entered his Buenos Aires Symphony in a composition contest, and won a grant from the French government to study in Paris with the legendary French composition teacher Nadia Boulanger. In 1954 he and his first wife, the artist Dedé Wolff, left Buenos Aires and their two children (Diana aged 11 and Daniel aged 10) behind and travelled to Paris to study with Boulanger. The insightful Boulanger turned his life around in a day, as Piazzolla related in his own words:[1]

When I met her, I showed her my kilos of symphonies and sonatas. She started to read them and suddenly came out with a horrible sentence: "It's very well written." And stopped, with a big period, round like a soccer ball. After a long while, she said: "Here you are like Stravinsky, like Bartók, like Ravel, but you know what happens? I can't find Piazzolla in this." And she began to investigate my private life: what I did, what I did and did not play, if I was single, married, or living with someone, she was like an FBI agent! And I was very ashamed to tell her that I was a tango musician. Finally I said, "I play in a night club." I didn't want to say cabaret. And she answered, "Night club, mais oui, but that is a cabaret, isn't it?" "Yes," I answered, and thought, "I'll hit this woman in the head with a radio...." It wasn't easy to lie to her.

She kept asking: "You say that you are not pianist. What instrument do you play, then?" And I didn't want to tell her that I was a bandoneon player, because I thought, "Then she will throw me from the fourth floor." Finally, I confessed and she asked me to play some bars of a tango of my own. She suddenly opened her eyes, took my hand and told me: "You idiot, that's Piazzolla!" And I took all the music I composed, ten years of my life, and sent it to hell in two seconds.

Astor Piazzolla, A Memoir

Piazzolla returned from New York to Argentina in 1955, formed the Octeto Buenos Aires to play tangos, and never looked back.

Upon introducing his new approach to the tango (nuevo tango), he became a controversial figure among Argentines both musically and politically. The Argentine saying "in Argentina everything may change — except the tango" suggests some of the resistance he found in his native land. However, his music gained acceptance in Europe and North America, and his reworking of the tango was embraced by some liberal segments of Argentine society, who were pushing for political changes in parallel to his musical revolution.

During the period of Argentine military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, Piazzolla lived in Italy, but returned many times to Argentina, recorded there, and on at least one occasion had lunch with the dictator Jorge Rafael Videla. However, his relationship with the dictator might have been less than friendly, as recounted in Ástor Piazzolla, A manera de memorias (a comprehensive collection of interviews, constituting a memoir):[2]

One year before the Los Largartos issue you went to Videla's house and had lunch with him, why did you accept that invitation?

What an invitation! They sent a couple of guys in black suits and a letter with my name on it that said that Videla expected me a particular day in a particular place. I have a book around in some place, with pictures of all the guests: Eladia Blázquez, Daniel Tinayre, Olga Ferri, the composer Juan Carlos Tauriello, there were painters, actors [...]

Ástor Piazzolla, A manera de memorias

In 1990 he suffered thrombosis in Paris, and died two years later in Buenos Aires.

Among his followers, his own protege Marcelo Nisinman is the best known innovator of the tango music of the new millennium, while Pablo Ziegler, pianist with Piazzolla's second quintet, has assumed the role of principal custodian of nuevo tango, extending the jazz influence in the style. The Brazilian guitarist Sergio Assad has also experimented with folk-derived, complex virtuoso compositions that show Piazzolla's structural influence while steering clear of tango sounds; and Osvaldo Golijov has acknowledged Piazzolla as perhaps the greatest influence on his globally oriented, eclectic compositions for classical and klezmer performers.

Musical style

Piazzolla and Horacio Ferrer around 1970.

Piazzolla's nuevo tango was distinct from the traditional tango in its incorporation of elements of jazz, its use of extended harmonies and dissonance, its use of counterpoint, and its ventures into extended compositional forms. As Argentine psychoanalyst Carlos Kuri has pointed out, Piazzolla's fusion of tango with this wide range of other recognizable Western musical elements was so successful that it produced a new individual style transcending these influences.[3] It is precisely this success, and individuality, that makes it hard to pin down where particular influences reside in his compositions, but some aspects are clear. The use of the passacaglia technique of a circulating bass line and harmonic sequence, invented and much used in 17th and 18th century baroque music but also central to the idea of jazz "changes", predominates in most of Piazzolla's mature compositions. Another clear reference to the baroque is the often complex and virtuosic counterpoint that sometimes follows strict fugal behavior but more often simply allows each performer in the group to assert his voice. A further technique that emphasises this sense of democracy and freedom among the musicians is improvisation that is borrowed from jazz in concept, but in practice involves a different vocabulary of scales and rhythms that stay within the parameters of the established tango sound-world. Pablo Ziegler has been particularly responsible for developing this aspect of the style both within Piazzolla's groups and since the composer's death.

With the composition of Adiós Nonino in 1959, Piazzolla established a standard structural pattern for his compositions, involving a formal pattern of fast-slow-fast-slow-coda, with the fast sections emphasizing gritty tango rhythms and harsh, angular melodic figures, and the slower sections usually making use of the string instrument in the group and/or Piazzolla's own bandoneon as lyrical soloists. The piano tends to be used throughout as a percussive rhythmic backbone, while the electric guitar either joins in this role or spins filigree improvisations; the double bass parts are usually of little interest, but provide an indispensable rugged thickness to the sound of the ensemble. The quintet of bandoneon, violin, piano, electric guitar and double bass was Piazzolla's preferred setup on two extended occasions during his career, and most critics consider it to be the most successful instrumentation for his works.[4] This is due partly to its great efficiency in terms of sound - it covers or imitates most sections of a symphony orchestra, including the percussion which is improvised by all players on the bodies of their instruments - and the strong expressive identity it permits each individual musician. With a style that is both rugged and intricate, such a setup augments the compositions' inherent characteristics.

Despite the prevalence of the quintet formation and the ABABC compositional structure, Piazzolla consistently experimented with other musical forms and instrumental combinations. In 1965 an album was released containing collaborations between Piazzolla and Jorge Luis Borges where Borges's poetry was narrated over very avant-garde music by Piazzolla including the use of dodecaphonic (twelve-tone) rows, free non-melodic improvisation on all instruments, and modal harmonies and scales.[5] In 1968 Piazzolla wrote and produced an "operita", María de Buenos Aires, that employed a larger ensemble including flute, percussion, multiple strings and three vocalists, and juxtaposed movements in Piazzolla's own style with several pastiche numbers ranging from waltz and hurdy-gurdy to a piano/narrator bar-room scena straight out of Casablanca.

By the 1970s Piazzolla was living in Rome, managed by the Italian agent Aldo Pagani, and exploring a leaner, more fluid musical style drawing on more jazz influence, and with simpler, more continuous forms. Pieces that exemplify this new direction include Libertango and most of the Suite Troileana, written in memory of the late Anibal Troilo. In the 1980s Piazzolla was rich enough, for the first time, to become relatively autonomous artistically, and wrote some of his most ambitious multi-movement works. These included Tango Suite for the virtuoso guitar duo Sergio and Odair Assad; Histoire du Tango, where a flutist and guitarist tell the history of tango in four chunks of music styled at thirty-year intervals; and La Camorra, a suite in three ten minute movements, inspired by the Neapolitan crime family and exploring symphonic concepts of large-scale form, thematic development, contrasts of texture and massive accumulations of ensemble sound. After making three albums in New York with the second quintet and producer Kip Hanrahan, two of which he described on separate occasions as "the greatest thing I've done", he disbanded the quintet, formed a sextet with an extra bandoneon, cello, bass, electric guitar, and piano, and wrote music for this ensemble that was even more adventurous harmonically and structurally than any of his previous works (Preludio y Fuga; Sex-tet). Had he not suffered an incapacitating stroke on the way to Notre Dame mass in 1990, it is likely that he would have continued to use his popularity as a performer of his own works to experiment in relative safety with even more audacious musical techniques, while possibly responding to the surging popularity of non-Western musics by finding ways to incorporate new styles into his own. In his musical professionalism and open-minded attitude to existing styles he held the mindset of an 18th century composing performer such as Handel or Mozart, who were anxious to assimilate all national "flavors" of their day into their own compositions, and who always wrote with both first-hand performing experience and a sense of direct social relationship with their audiences. This may have resulted in a backlash amongst conservative tango aficionados in Argentina, but in the rest of the West it was the key to his extremely sympathetic reception among classical and jazz musicians, both seeing some of the best aspects of their musical practices reflected in his work.[6]

Musical career

Piazzolla, after leaving Troilo's orchestra in the 1940s, led numerous ensembles beginning with the 1946 Orchestra, the 1955 "Octeto Buenos Aires", the 1960 "First Quintet", the 1971 "Noneto", the 1978 "Second Quintet" and the 1989 "Sextet". As well as providing original compositions and arrangements, he was the director and Bandoneon player in all of them. He also recorded the album Summit with jazz baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan. His numerous compositions include orchestral work such as the "Concierto para bandoneón, orquesta, cuerdas y percusión", "Doble concierto para bandoneón y guitarra", "Tres tangos sinfónicos" and "Concierto de Nácar para 9 tanguistas y orquesta", pieces for the solo classical guitar—the "Cinco piezas", as well as song-form compositions that still today are well known by the general public in his country, like "Balada para un loco" (Ballad for a madman) and Adiós Nonino (dedicated to his father) which he recorded many times with different musicians and ensembles. Biographers estimate that Piazzolla wrote around 3,000 pieces and recorded around 500.

In the summer of 1985 he appeared with his Quinteto Tango Nuevo at the Almeida Theatre in London for a week-long engagement. On September 6, 1987, his quintet gave a concert in New York's Central Park, which was recorded and, in 1994, released in compact disk format as The Central Park Concert. [2]

Discography

  • Adiós Nonino (1960)
  • Tiempo Nuevo (1962)
  • La Guardia Vieja (1966)
  • ION Studios (1968)
  • María de Buenos Aires (1968)
  • Roma (1972)
  • Libertango (1974)
  • Reunión Cumbre (Summit) (1974) with Gerry Mulligan
  • With Amelita Baltar (1974)
  • Buenos Aires (1976)
  • Il Pleut Sur Santiago (1976)
  • Suite Punta Del Este (1982)
  • Concierto de Nácar (1983)
  • SWF Rundfunkorchester (1983)
  • Live in Wien Vol.1 (1984)
  • Enrico IV (1984)
  • Green Studio (1984)
  • Teatro Nazionale di Milano (1984)
  • El exilio de Gardel (soundtrack, 1985)
  • Tango: Zero Hour (1986)
  • The New Tango (1987) with Gary Burton
  • Sur (1988)
  • La camorra (1989)
  • Hommage a Liege: Concierto para bandoneón y guitarra/Historia del Tango (1988) with Liège Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Leo Brouwer. The concerto was performed by Piazzolla with Cacho Tirao, the Historia by Guy Lukowski and Marc Grawels.
  • Bandoneón sinfónico (1990)
  • The Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night (Tango apasionado) (1991)
  • Five Tango Sensations (1991) with Kronos Quartet
  • Original Tangos from Argentina (1992)
  • The Central Park Concert 1987 (1994)

See also

References

  1. ^ Piazzolla, Ástor. A Memoir, Natalio Gorin, Amadaeus, 2001, pp. 70-1
  2. ^ Piazzolla, Ástor. A manera de memorias, Libros Perfil 1998, ISBN 9500809206, p. 85
  3. ^ Carlos Kuri: Piazzolla: la música límite. Buenos Aires: Corregidor, 1997.
  4. ^ See Kuri (ibid); also Natalio Gorin, Piazzolla: A Memoir, Amadeus Press 2001.
  5. ^ El Tango, Polygram S.A. LP 24260 / Polydor 829866-2, 1965, Argentina (currently out of print).
  6. ^ See Azzi and Collier, Le Grand Tango: The Life and Music of Astor Piazzolla, Oxford University Press, 2000.

External links

video recordings

 
 
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Compadres (1998 Album by Quartango)
Music of Buenos Aires, Vol. 2 (1993 Album by Tango 7)
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