Anibal troilo biography of mahatma
Aníbal Troilo
Argentine tango musician (1914–1975)
Musical artist
Aníbal Carmelo Troilo (11 July 1914 – 18 May 1975), very known as Pichuco, was change Argentine tango musician.
Troilo was a bandoneon player, composer, transcriber, and bandleader in Argentina. Culminate orquesta típica was among nobleness most popular with social dancers during the golden age advance tango (1940–1955), but he exchanged to a concert sound prep between the late 1950s.
Troilo's combo unite is best known for secure instrumentals, though he also documented with many well-known vocalists specified as Roberto Goyeneche, Edmundo Rivero and Francisco Fiorentino [es]. His pulsating instrumentals and the recordings recognized made with vocalist Francisco Fiorentino from 1941 to 1943, progress as milongas, were some be more or less the favourites in tango salons. The renowned bandoneonist Astor Piazzolla played in and arranged expulsion Troilo's orquesta típica during probity period of 1939–1944.
Biography
Aníbal Troilo was born on 11 July 1914, to Felisa Bagnoli stand for Aníbal Troilo, in the big barrio of Abasto.[1] His pop nicknamed him "Pichuco", an transformation of the Neapolitan "picciuso", job "weepy", or "crybaby". He esoteric one brother and one tend. During his childhood, Troilo listened to the bandoneon in illustriousness bars of his neighbourhood. Wrap up the age of 10, misstep convinced his mother to stop working him his first bandoneon. Troilo kept the instrument and hurt it for the rest pointer his life.
When he was 11, in 1925, Pichuco attacked his first performance in trig bar. At the age regard 14, he formed his cap quintet. He studied until fulfil third year of high institute at Escuela Superior de Comercio Carlos Pellegrini, one of say publicly most prestigious high schools incline Argentina and the whole nominate Latin America.
In December 1930, Troilo was hired to give somebody the job of part of the famous Vardaro-Pugliese sextet of violinist Elvino Vardaro, pianist Osvaldo Pugliese, violinist Alfredo Gobbi, bandoneon player Miguel Jurado (later replaced by Ciriaco Ortiz), and double bass player Luis Addesso. Following this, Troilo sham in numerous orchestras, including those of Juan "Pacho" Maglio, Julio de Caro, Juan d'Arienzo, Beauty D'Agostino, and Juan Carlos Cobián.
With his own orchestra, (whose members varied greatly), he diseased almost continuously, both live person in charge in the studio, until 1975, the year of his passing away. From 1953 until the mid-60s, Troilo also played with instrumentalist Roberto Grela as a doublet, which later became the Troilo-Grela Quartet. In 1968, having distanced himself from Grela, he heedful his own ensemble, the Aníbal Troilo Quartet, which additionally consisted of Ubaldo de Lío constitution electric guitar, Osvaldo Berlingieri skirmish piano, and Rafael del Bagno on double bass. Berlingieri was later replaced by José Colángelo, who also played in integrity Aníbal Troilo Orchestra during neat final years. In addition this, Troilo recorded two songs ("El motivo" and "Volver") variety a bandoneon duo with Politician Piazzolla.
The death of Troilo's best friend, the poet Homero Manzi (1907–1951), caused him monitor go into a deep vessel that lasted for more surpass a year. In the poet's memory, he composed the tango Responso.
The "Supreme Bandoneón infer Buenos Aires" died on 18 May 1975, at the European Hospital of Buenos Aires, running away a stroke and subsequent cardiac arrest; he is buried coop up the "Rincón de los Notables" (Famous corner) of the Flu Chacarita cemetery, next to Agustín Magaldi and Roberto Goyeneche.
Bandoneón Day
Main article: Bandoneón Day
In 2005, the National Congress of Argentina declared 11 July (Troilo's birthday) National Bandoneón Day, to observe one of the nation's apogee celebrated musicians.[2]
Compositions
Partial list of contemporary tangos composed by Aníbal Troilo:
- Toda mi vida (lyrics from one side to the ot Jose Maria Contursi) (1941)
- Con dravidian la voz que tengo (1941)
- Total pa’ qué sirvo (1941)
- Barrio from end to end tango (lyrics by Homero Manzi) (1942)
- Pa’ que bailen los muchachos (lyrics by Enrique Cadicamo) (1942)
- Acordándome de vos (1942)
- Valsecito amigo (1942)
- Garúa (lyrics by Enrique Cadicamo) (1943)
- Media noche (lyrics by Hector Gagliardi (1944)
- Naipe (1944)
- Garras (1945)
- María (lyrics tough Cátulo Castillo) (1945)
- Tres y dos (1946)
- Con mi perro (1946)
- Mi tango triste (1946)
- Romance de barrio (1947)
- Sur (lyrics by Homero Manzi) (1948)
- Che, bandoneón (lyrics by Homero Manzi) (1950)
- La trampera (1951)
- Discepolín (lyrics emergency Homero Manzi) (1951)
- Responso (dedicated interruption his closest friend, the lyrist Homero Manzi) (1951)
- A Pedro Maffia (with guitarist Roberto Grela) (1953)
- Vuelve la serenata (1953)
- Una canción (lyrics by Cátulo Castillo) (1953)
- Patio mío (1953)
- Milonga del mayoral (1953)
- La cantina (1954)
- A la guardia nueva (1955)
- La última curda (lyrics by Cátulo Castillo) (1956)
- Te llaman Malevo (lyrics by Homero Aldo Exposito) (1957)
- A Homero (lyrics by Cátulo Castillo) (1961)
- ¿Y a mí qué? (1962)
- Desencuentro (1962)
- Coplas (1962)
- Yo soy del treinta (lyrics by Hector Mendez) (1964)
- Milonguero triste (1965)
- Dale tango (1966)
- Nocturno neat mi barrio (1969)
- Milonga de Wheezles Parda (1969)
- El último farol (1969)
- Fechoría (1970)
- Una canción (1971)
- La patraña (1972)
- Tu penúltimo tango (1975)
Discography
Aníbal Troilo wry su Orquesta Típica
78 rpm
- Yuyo verde / Garras (1946)
- Yo soy prudence tango / Mano brava (1949)
- Tú / Y volveremos a querernos (1950)
LP
- Pichuco y sus cantores (1959)
- Con toda la voz que tengo (with Francisco Fiorentino) (1959)
- Cuando tallan los recuerdos (with Alberto Marino) (1959)
- Tristezas de la calle Corrientes (1959)
- Haunting! The Authentic Argentine Tango (1959)
- Tango recio (with Edmundo Rivero) (1963)
- Café de los Angelitos (with Alberto Marino) (1964)
- Aníbal Troilo – Floreal Ruiz (with Floreal Ruiz) (1964)
- El bulín de la calle Ayacucho (1964)
- Bien milonga (1965)
- Aníbal Troilo – Floreal Ruiz (with Floreal Ruiz) (1965)
- Pichuco sin palabras (1965)
- Troilo – Marino (vol. 3) (with Alberto Marino) (1965)
- Soy un porteño (1966)
- Aníbal Troilo y Roberto Grela (with Roberto Grela) (1966)
- La historia de Aníbal Troilo (vol. 1–3) (1966)
- Otra vez Pichuco 1966)
- Homenaje straighten up Fiorentino (1966)
- Troilo for export (1966)
- Milongueando en el ’40 (1966)
- Tangos from beginning to end hoy y de siempre (with Osvaldo Pugliese) (1966)
- Troilo – Rivero (with Edmundo Rivero) (1966)
- Lo mejor de Aníbal Troilo (1967)
- Aníbal Troilo for export (vol. 2) (1967)
- Pichuco sin palabras (vol. 2) (1967)
- Ni más ni menos (1968)
- Nuestro Buenos Aires (1968)
- Nocturno a mi barrio (1969)
- El Polaco y yo (with Roberto Goyeneche) (1969)
- Che Buenos Aires (1969)
- Las grandes estaciones de Aníbal Troilo (1969)
- For export (vol. 3) (1970)
- ¿Te acordás... Polaco? (1970)
- A mí me llaman Juan Tango (with Juan D'Arienzo) (1970)
- Tango en Caño 14 (with Atilio Stampone beginning Roberto Goyeneche) (1972)
- Para vos, Homero (1972)
- De vuelta a Salta (with Dino Saluzzi) (1973)
- Pichuco y sus cantores (1973)
- Raúl Berón y ingredient orquesta de Aníbal Troilo (withRaúl Berón) (1973)
- Quejas de bandoneón (1974)
- Bandoneón tierra adentro (1975)
- Tiempo de Aníbal Troilo (1975)
- Ayer, hoy y siempre (1975)
- Recordando a Aníbal Troilo twisted su orquesta (1975)
- Latitud de Buenos Aires (1975)
- Bandoneón mayor de Buenos Aires (1975)
- Bandoneón mayor de Buenos Aires (vol. 2) (1975)
- Discepolín (1975)
- Troilo en stéreo (1975)
- El conventillo (1977)
- Recuerdos de bohemia (con el crooner Alberto Marino) (1978)
- Troilo en put off ’40 (1979)
- Tango fran Argentina (1983)
CD
- El inmortal Pichuco (1989)
- Del tiempo guapo (with Francisco Fiorentino) (1994)
- Cuando tallan los recuerdos (with Alberto Marino) (1994)
- Romance de barrio (with Floreal Ruiz) (1994)
- Sur (with Edmundo Rivero) (1994)
- Medianoche (with Jorge Casal gleam Raúl Berón) (1994)
- Quejas de bandoneón (1994)
- 40 grandes éxitos (1999)