Coverbild der Sendung Tango Orchestras

Tango Orchestras

Podcast von Yüksel Sise

Englisch

Kultur & Freizeit

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When preparing the Tanda of the Week series, I conduct an extensive research process using not only my own knowledge but also a wide range of online sources. However, since my main focus is on the tanda itself, I’m often unable to include all the information I gather in the explanatory texts that accompany it. For this reason, I use Google’s NotebookLM tool to transform this research into a podcast. I’ve decided to share these podcasts here as well. I hope they become an additional source of insight and inspiration for you. Abrazos...

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Episode How Street Slang Hijacked Argentine Tango Cover

How Street Slang Hijacked Argentine Tango

This is Tango Orchestras for week 12 of 2026 — and this episode dives into one of tango's most subversive forces: Lunfardo, the secret street slang of Buenos Aires. If you love tango and want to hear the music with entirely new ears, this episode is essential. Subscribe, and don't miss a note. Lunfardo emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when waves of Italian immigrants crowded into Buenos Aires tenement houses known as conventillos. Speaking their own regional dialects, they fused vocabularies out of necessity, creating a lexical overlay on Spanish that effectively locked out authorities and the upper class. By 1917, this code had entered tango lyrics, turning the genre into sharp, satirical storytelling populated by recurring archetypes — the fake neighborhood tough guy skewered by Carlos Weis, or the underworld figure who falls for a dancer, brought to life by Eduardo Jolandini and voiced by Edmundo Rivera. Far from glorifying criminals, these lyrics served as a social mirror and a coping mechanism for a hard-pressed working class. The episode also unravels the remarkable three-orchestra tanda — a rule-breaking set unified not by a single bandleader but by shared Lunfardo storytelling — and examines the 1943 military censorship that tried to scrub street slang from Argentine culture. The ban was lifted in 1949 by Juan Domingo Perón, but the streets had never stopped speaking. Today's episode is built around the Lunfardo-driven three-orchestra tanda and the social world that gave it life. Read the full write-up, then come back to the episode. The music will never sound the same: https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-12-milonga-150768292 [https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-12-milonga-150768292]

16. März 2026 - 22 min
Episode Rafael Canaro: How He Conquered Paris with Tango Cover

Rafael Canaro: How He Conquered Paris with Tango

This is the Week 11 of 2026 episode of Tango Orchestras, tracing the remarkable transatlantic journey of Rafael Canaro— a gravedigger's son from the Buenos Aires tenements who conquered the most glamorous cabarets of 1930s Paris, armed with a double bass and a musical saw. If the hidden histories of tango fascinate you, subscribe and share this episode with fellow enthusiasts. Rafael's sound rested on two unlikely instruments: a thundering double bass shaped by the percussive innovations of Ruperto Thompson, and the eerie wail of a musical saw — the sarucho. Arriving in Paris in 1925 alongside Francisco Canaro's orchestra, French promoters forced the musicians into gaucho costumes to sell an exotic caricature of South America. The gimmick opened doors, but his bass and saw kept Parisian audiences coming back for good. The arrival of electrical recording in 1926 then allowed this extreme sonic range to be captured faithfully and distributed around the world. To cement his place in the city of light, Rafael slowed the tempo, hired virtuosos like pianist Lucio Demare and bandoneonist Hector Ortola, and embraced the lyric-forward intimacy of French chanson, bringing in vocalists such as the young Carmen Savilla to bridge the cultural gap. A close friend of Carlos Gardel, he moved in the highest European nightlife circles until World War II forced him back to Argentina in 1939 — leaving history to wonder how much further his sophisticated tango might have evolved. Today's episode digs into the story behind Rafael Canaro's European years. Read the full write-up that inspired it, then come back and listen again — you'll hear the music through entirely different ears: https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-11-rafael-150108768 [https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-11-rafael-150108768]

9. März 2026 - 17 min
Episode Edgardo Donato: His Shift from Acrobatics to Elegance Cover

Edgardo Donato: His Shift from Acrobatics to Elegance

Week 10 of 2026 is here, and Tango Orchestras explores one of tango's most remarkable evolutions. Subscribe, share, and leave a review — every bit helps the community grow. Edgardo Donato built his reputation as tango's most eccentric entertainer — tossing his violin mid-performance, composing classic tangos on streetcars, and once famously forgetting his wife on one. His early music matched the personality: loud, staccato, theatrical. Then 1945 brought disaster. His brother and longtime collaborator Osvaldo Donato left to form his own orchestra, taking much of the rhythm section with him. Rather than fold, Donato rebuilt. He brought in bandoneon players Oreste Tito Rossi — who also stepped into the arranger role — and Julián Plaza, and let their fresh musical breath shape a new direction. Out went the heavy dynamics and jarring punctuation of the early years. In came smooth, flowing legato phrasing — rhythmically clear, elegant, and designed to breathe. The new orchestra found its vocal counterpart in Carlos Almada, whose clear, controlled delivery floated effortlessly over the refined texture. Together they produced recordings for the Victor label designed for the milonga floor — music that carried dancers forward rather than disrupted them. Rarely heard at modern milongas, this late Donato era is a hidden treasure. Today's episode is built around these post-1944 recordings. Read the full write-up first — you'll hear the music differently: https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-10-edgardo-149688478 [https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-10-edgardo-149688478]

2. März 2026 - 21 min
Episode Francisco Canaro: How He Rewired the Tango Orchestra Cover

Francisco Canaro: How He Rewired the Tango Orchestra

This is the 9th week of 2026's Tango Orchestras podcast — dedicated to one of the most consequential architects of Argentine tango. If you love understanding the mechanics behind the music you dance to, this episode is unmissable. Subscribe, share, and join the conversation. Francisco Canaro — "Pirincho" to those who knew him — rose from extreme poverty, building his first violin from an oil can. On stage he held a prop guitar he couldn't play, giving audiences the traditional image they craved while quietly rewiring the orchestra behind it. He recruited Leopoldo Thompson on double bass to anchor the music with a pulse dancers felt physically through the floorboards. He then electrified the bandoneón — played by Mono Brava — to cut through that heavy foundation, and buried the haunting slide of a Hawaiian guitar across nearly 100 recordings to fill the sonic gaps between them. Canaro also reinvented the singer's role. He replaced the full-time vocalist with the estribillista — a guest voice dropping in for a brief, emotionally loaded hook. Charlo, whose melancholic phrasing earned him "La Voz Melódica de Buenos Aires," recorded nearly 600 tracks in this role. His personal life poured into the music too: a failed 1927 tango was reborn as a vals dedicated to his mother, while his stormy romance with Ada Falcón was immortalized in the sharp cuts of the vals cruzado — a genre he invented by pressing heavy syncopated bass into the European waltz. Read the full write-up, then come back to the episode. You'll hear the music differently: https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-09-canaro-149272697 [https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-09-canaro-149272697]

23. Feb. 2026 - 17 min
Episode Juan D'Arienzo: The King of The Beat Cover

Juan D'Arienzo: The King of The Beat

Tango Orchestras, Week 8 of 2026 — the podcast that goes deep inside the orchestras, musicians, and stories behind tango's golden age. If you haven't subscribed yet, now is the moment: every week brings a new layer of the music that drives the world's most passionate dance. This week's focus is Juan D'Arienzo, known across Buenos Aires as El Rey del Compás — the King of the Beat. Born in 1900, he learned early how to hold an audience, spending his boyhood demonstrating instruments on a music shop floor to close sales. By 1935, alongside pianist Rodolfo Biagi, he launched a revolution: he yanked tango out of its slow concert-hall drift and forced it back onto the dance floor with a relentless 2/4 marching pulse and punching staccato bandoneons. Critics called him a demagogue; dancers packed his cabarets until 5 in the morning. He demoted singers to instruments in service of the beat — including his defining collaborator Alberto Echagüe, who recorded 135 tracks with him. His philosophy fit into three words: beat, effect, nuance. When his entire orchestra mutinied in 1940, he rebuilt overnight with provincial unknowns, proving his rhythmic system was the real genius. He never flew, never compromised, and never slowed the tempo. Today's episode is built around D'Arienzo's life, rhythm, and uncompromising legacy — read the full piece that inspired it before you press play. You'll hear the beat differently: https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-08-juan-148706460 [https://tangoroute.com/posts/2026-08-juan-148706460]

16. Feb. 2026 - 19 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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