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True Name: Rafael Rossa
Bandoneonist, composer and leader. (28 December 1896 - 24 December 1982) Orlando del Greco, in his book Carlos Cardel y
los autores de sus canciones, and Horacio Ferrer, in El libro
del tango, give as birth date 30 December 1896. However, Rafael
Rossi, on a long interview made by the magazine "El tango 100 años
de historia" (Editorial Perfil), gives as his birth date 28 December
1896. Del Greco, as well in the cited book, states that his true surname
was Rossa.
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He was born in Mercedes (a city placed 80 km far from
Buenos Aires) on December 28, 1896 and, as he himself said, since early
age he was passionately devoted for two things: bandoneon and adventure.
In 1912 he went to Buenos Aires with another guy from Mercedes, and
they firstly worked as house painters. But Rossi, who had heard Juan
Maglio (Pacho) in Mercedes, on Saturdays he used to hear him play
at the café Garibotto (Pueyrredón and San Luis streets),
making his inclination for bandoneon grow deeper.
He started his studies at the Conservatory run by don
José De Caro, Julio's father, which he gave up when in 1914 the
war burst out, to return to Mercedes, now with a basic knowledge of
the instrument and having learnt a bunch of music pieces. Playing those
first tangos and studying on his own, he fairly completed his musical
training.
In late 1914, with that training, his spirit of adventure
and with the guitarist Pedro Lafourcade as sideman, he embarked on his
first tour. They commenced in Junín and, town after town, they
were visiting a great portion of the province of Buenos Aires, Arenales,
Arribeños, Ascensión, Sol de Mayo, until, out of leaving
bills unpaid at hotels and practically playing for cents, they arrived
at Vedia.
There they settled and began to improve financially.
In 1915 they reached the city of Rufino (an important city in the province
of Santa Fe), where he contacted a good bandoneonist of the time, Ángel
Danesi. He advised them to play in Huinca Renancó (a city in
the province of Córdoba) and there they finally consolidated.
They earned seventy pesos a month, with house, food, maté and
kerosene. Lafourcade split and he put together a trio, with Roque del
Cagneo and Timoteo Palacios.
From Huinca Renancó he went to Del Campillo,
where he lined up another trio, to play in Rio Cuarto, Firmat, Elortondo,
again Rufino (localities in the provinces of Córdoba and Santa
Fe), until he went back to Mercedes, to comply with the military service.
Later he found another guitarist from Mercedes and
he made off again towards the towns of the province of Buenos Aires.
When he crossed to Santa Fe, from Rufino he sent for the violinist Udelino
Toranzo. Then in a trio setting, they played again in Junín,
where they met with Pacho, to whom Rossi
had sent one of his early tangos, precisely titled Pacho. That meeting
and that composition meant for Rossi the invitation to join the outfit
of the legendary bandoneonist. So he disbanded his trio and went on
tour with Pacho. When the tour ended, Rafael Rossi definitively settled
in the Capital, in 1919 becoming associated with another important tango
musician, the pianist and composer José
Martinez.
![]() Quartet Rafael Rossi After several presentations he assembled his first
important quartet. It was formed by, besides the leader on bandoneon,
the violinists Fernando Franco and Emilio De Caro and the pianist Francisco
De Caro. After the dismembering of this outfit, he joined with Francisco
Canaro and Roberto Firpo the big orchestra
for the carnival balls in 1920. From that year until 1935 he was with
Canaro, taking part in other small outfits
he put together for performances in the provinces, in which the pianist
Eduardo
Pereyra (El Chón) and the violinist Alberto Castellanos were
featured.
In 1920, through Pacho,
he met Gardel, to whom he was delivering
a series of works he had composed, which El Morocho immediately recorded:
"Por el llano", "Ave
cantora", "Perdonada", "La
milonga", "Fiesta criolla", "Senda
florida" all of them tangos- and the waltz "Rosas
de abril", these seven with lyrics by Eugenio
Cárdenas; "Ebrio", "Corazoncito", "Primero
yo", lyrics by José
Rial; the remarkable "Como
abrazado a un rencor", with lyrics by the journalist Antonio
Podestá; "Sos de Chiclana", with Julio
Navarrine, "Recordándote", the zamba "Cañaveral",
the estilo "Como las margaritas" and the ranchera "La
pastelera".
Also with José
Rial he composed Rafael Rossi "Buena pilcha", "Ponete
paquete", "De corazón a corazón" and "Lo
que pide el corazón".
With Enrique Cadicamo
he composed another quite beautiful tango "Cuando
tallan los recuerdos". With Udelino Toranzo he made known a
long lasting tango, strictly instrumental "Jueves".
His first tango, from 1916, was "Don Leandro",
which was followed by the abovementioned "Pacho", "A
Horacio", "La cañada", "Estás triste",
"Renacimiento", "Cañaveral", continuing a
long list of works which would result risky to enumerate, because new
numbers written by the lavish composer are always being discovered.
He recorded, nearly always folk numbers, in Odeon (as
Firpo had signed a contract of exclusivity
to record tangos with orchestra for the Max
Glücksmann company, Rossi was pigeonholed to cut folk pieces).
Later, with his famous "Conjunto chacarero", he recorded
a little of all our national music, including several tangos. Herminia
Velich and the Casadei brothers were almost on all occasions his
vocalists.
A player of simple style, it was in composition where
his name achieved the necessary reputation to add his name to the definitive
tango directory. His dedication as musician ran even with his spirit
of adventure.
He went on performing and touring until his late times.
He died in Buenos Aires on December 24, 1982.
Originally published in "Tango y Lunfardo",
Nº 110, Chivilcoy, 16 November 1995.
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