Composer
Astor Piazzolla (1921-1992); ARG
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"For me," Astor Piazzolla once said, "tango was always for the ear rather than the feet." Piazzolla expanded upon one of the great popular dance traditions of the Western Hemisphere, constantly crossing and recrossing the line between popular and classical music.
A tango master not of the barrooms but of the concert hall, Astor Piazzolla was born in Mar del Plata, Argentina in 1921. His family moved to New York's Little Italy, and his musical education was shaped by American jazz and pop. But his father gave him a bandoneón, a large Argentine concertina, to keep the family's connection to Argentine culture alive, and he also studied classical music. In 1934, he recorded with the Argentine tango pioneer Carlos Gardel, who soon would be killed in a plane crash. Returning to Argentina, he played the bandoneón in a Buenos Aires tango orchestra from 1936 to 1944, but the world of classical music had made a deep impression on him. A chance meeting with the great pianist Artur Rubinstein brought him into contact with Alberto Ginastera, Argentina's leading composer, and that led to several years of classical study. Piazzolla's Sinfonia Buenos Aires gained international acclaim but was poorly received in the composer's home country.
In 1954, Piazzolla went to Paris for further classical studies with the most famous composition teacher of the time, Nadia Boulanger. However, the experience led him to reconnect with the tango; Boulanger, after hearing him play one of his tango pieces, told him to discard the rest of his compositions. Back in Argentina, Piazzolla created nuevo tango (new tango), which broke sharply with the genre's traditional sound, and once again antagonized tango's Argentine partisans (he was even beaten up on the street on one occasion). Abroad, however, Piazzolla's reputation began to spread. Often written for his Quinteto Tango Nuevo (formed in 1960), featuring violin, guitar, piano, bass, and bandoneón, Piazzolla's more than 750 tango compositions included complex harmonies drawn from the world of modern concert music. The 1968 stage work Maria de Buenos Aires, inspired by Gershwin's Porgy and Bess, finally won over tango traditionalists, and for the last two decades of his life Piazzolla was an Argentine hero. Internationally, his reputation with both popular and specialized audiences continued to grow; his compositions became part of the 1986 musical Tango Argentina and also attracted progressive musicians like the members of the Kronos Quartet, who recorded Piazzolla's Five Tango Sensations of 1989. He died in Buenos Aires on July 5, 1992.
Piazzolla reawakened interest in the tango, and the international exposure given his works touched off a series of tango films, stage productions, and recordings. The key to Piazzolla's popularity was that no matter how much he experimented with the musical materials of the tango, he never lost touch with its sensual yet despairing emotional essence. The popularity of Piazzolla's unique blend of tango, classical music, and jazz continued to grow after his death. Jazz musicians, such as guitarists Al di Meola and Charlie Byrd and the vibraphonist Gary Burton have used Piazzolla's music as a point of departure, and classical performers as well took to his music; at the end of the 1990s, recordings by the famed Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer showed that despite its association with the bandoneón, Piazzolla's music could be transferred to other instruments. At the turn of the century, Piazzolla's boundary-crossing music was continuing to gain listeners of all kinds.
© AMG, All Music Guide
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"For me," Astor Piazzolla once said, "tango was always for the ear rather than the feet." Piazzolla expanded upon one... More
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Stage Works
50 tracks
- María de Buenos Aires (operetta)
50 tracks
- María de Buenos Aires (operetta)
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Chamber Works
515 tracks
- Works for Guitar
132 tracks
- Chau Paris, tango
4 tracks
- L'histoire du tango, tango cycle for flute and guitar
82 tracks
- 5 Piezas for Guitar
35 tracks
- Tango Suite for 2 Guitars
9 tracks
- Triunfal, tango
1 track
- Tangata Silfo y Ondina (consists of Fugata, Soledad and Final), tango suite
1 track
- Chau Paris, tango
-
Other Chamber Works
383 tracks
- Adiós nonino, tango for chamber ensemble
18 tracks
- Amelitango, for chamber ensemble (arr. D. De Sena for brass quintet and percussion)
1 track
- Ángel series, tangos for chamber ensemble
44 tracks
- Años de Soledad, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Ave Maria, for oboe and piano
1 track
- Baires 72, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Bandoneón, tango for chamber ensemble (from Suite Troileana)
5 tracks
- Biyuya, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Buenos Aires hora cero (Zero Hour), tango for chamber ensemble
4 tracks
- Calambre, for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Chau Paris, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Cierra tus ojos y escucha, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Concierto para quinteto, tango
1 track
- Contrastes, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Coral, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Cuatro estaciónes porteñas (The Four Seasons), tango cycle for chamber ensemble
103 tracks
- Decaríssimo, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- Escualo, tango for chamber ensemble
7 tracks
- 6 Études tanguistiques, for flute solo
18 tracks
- Finale, tango for chamber ensemble (with C. Lemesle and others)
1 track
- 4 for Tango, for string quartet
4 tracks
- Fracanapa, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Fuga 9, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Guardia Nueva, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Homenaje a Córdoba, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Kicho, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Le grand tango, for cello and piano
14 tracks
- Libertango, tango for chamber ensemble
30 tracks
- Lo que vendrá, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- Meditango, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Melodia en La menor (Melody in A minor), for bandoneón and strings
1 track
- Michelangelo '70, tango for bandoneon, violin, electric guitar, piano and double bass
7 tracks
- Midnight, tango for bandoneón and string quartet (from Sette sequenze, not included in Five Tango Sensations)
1 track
- Milonga en Re, tango for violin and piano
2 tracks
- Milonga sin palabras, for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Novitango, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- Nuestro tiempo, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Oblivion, tango for chamber ensemble
32 tracks
- Oda para un Hippie, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Picasso, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- 3 Piezas Breves, for cello and piano
3 tracks
- Retrato d'Alfredo Gobi, for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Revirado, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- Romance del diablo, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Río Sena, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- S.V.P. (S'il vous plait), tango for accordian
1 track
- Sentido Unico, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Sinfonietta, for chamber orchestra
3 tracks
- Soledad, tango for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- Suite Punta del Este, for bandoneón solo and chamber orchestra
3 tracks
- Tangata, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Tango Ballet, for octet
1 track
- 5 Tango Sensations, for bandoneón and string quartet (abridgement and arrangement of Sette sequenze)
11 tracks
- Tanguedia, tango for chamber ensemble (from film, Tango: El exilio de Gardel)
1 track
- Tanti anni prima, tango for chamber ensemble (from film, Enrico IV)
4 tracks
- The Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night, tango suite for chamber orchestra
2 tracks
- Tristango, for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Tristezas de un doble A, tango for chamber ensemble
2 tracks
- Triunfal, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Tzigane tango, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Undertango, for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Vayamos al diablo, tango for chamber ensemble
1 track
- Violentango, tango for chamber ensemble
5 tracks
- Adiós nonino, tango for chamber ensemble
- Works for Guitar
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Orchestral Works
57 tracks
- Contemplación y danza, for clarinet and strings
2 tracks
- Fugata, tango for saxophone and orchestra
3 tracks
- Las 4 Estaciones Portenos, for violin and string orchestra (after Vivaldi's 4 Seasons)
12 tracks
- Mar del Plata 70, tango for saxophone and orchestra
2 tracks
- Milongon festivo, for orchestra
1 track
- Sinfonía Buenos Aires ('Tres Movimentos Sinfónicos')
9 tracks
- Suite for Oboe and String Orchestra, Op.9
8 tracks
- Tangazo
6 tracks
- 3 Tangos for bandoneon and orchestra
3 tracks
- 2 Tangos, for string orchestra
8 tracks
- Tres movimientos tanguísticos porteños
3 tracks
- Contemplación y danza, for clarinet and strings
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Vocal Works
26 tracks
- Balada para un loco, tango song
4 tracks
- Canción de las venusinas, tango song
2 tracks
- Chiquilín de Bachin, tango song
9 tracks
- Jacinto chiclana, vocal milonga
1 track
- La bicicleta blanca
1 track
- La misma Pena, tango song
1 track
- La última grela, tango song
2 tracks
- Los pajaros perdidos, tango song
2 tracks
- Preludio para la cruz del Sur, tango song
2 tracks
- Retrato d'Alfredo Gobi, tango song
1 track
- Se potessi ancora
1 track
- Balada para un loco, tango song
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Piano Works
5 tracks
- Pigmalion, tango song
2 tracks
- 3 Preludes, for piano
3 tracks
- Pigmalion, tango song
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Film
9 tracks
- Lumière, film
7 tracks
- Tango: El exilio de Gardel, film
2 tracks
- Lumière, film
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Concertos
30 tracks
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Chamber Works
4 tracks
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Other Chamber Works
4 tracks
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Other Chamber Works
Below are works by A.Piazzolla that every music lover should explore:



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