Ming Mar wrote:

<<The earliest known tango is "Dame la lata" by Juan Perez.  
It was written around 1880 or in the 1880's.  It had 
lyrics.  According to your assertion, tango music existed 
in 1840 and nobody ever sang to tango music until 1880.  Do 
you really think that is the case?>>

There is probably no "first" tango.  For all anyone knows, it could have been a 
Neopolitan folk song played on the flute.  Like most music, tango was a hybrid 
of several musical styles that evolved, but Keith is correct about the lack of 
lyrics, although nothing is strictly black or white. There are exceptions but 
it is true that the first tangos were instrumentals, especially the ones that 
people were dancing to.  Songs with lyrics were always written but if you went 
to a dance in the early days you would not find a vocalist, just as if you find 
any very old recorded tangos, you will find few with lyrics.  Words were 
sometimes added after the fact, as in La Cumparsita and others, then gradually 
a few were written as dance tangos with lyrics.   As vocalists first began to 
appear though, their role was secondary and only added near the end or as 
back-up accompaniment or harmony to the orchestra (or quartet or whatever the 
size of the group.)  The words often didn't mean much !
 other than to harmonize with the music.  They were known as estribillistas and 
often came in only at the end of the song, a tradition that persisted into the 
era of vocalists.  Notice that even many sung tangos have very long 
instrumental beginnings and often the verse is the last part of the song, and 
sometimes very short.  Over the years dance tangos with lyrics became more 
common but instrumentals continued to be written.  But even with lyrics, there 
was always a distinction between dance tangos and tangos to listen to.   Later 
vocalists (Angel Vargas, notably) were prized for their ability to be 
danceable.  If you take a taxi ride in Buenos Aires you will often hear "Todo 
Tango" on the radio playing many sung tangos that you will never hear at the 
milongas.

Cheers,
Charles

_______________________________________________
Tango-L mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/tango-l

Reply via email to