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by Sergio
Pujol
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Poet, composer, actor and playwright. (March 27, 1901 December 23, 1951) Family name: Enrique Santos Discépolo |
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Philosophy in small coins
That was not the first time which Discépolo´s
work aroused interest in the field of thought. The Spaniard Camilo José
Cela included him among his preferred popular poets and Ernesto Sabato had no doubt in identifying himself with the pessimistic philosophy
of the one who wrote "Que vachaché": "True love got drowned in
the soup". Several years before these recognitions, the lunfardo (slang)
poets Dante A. Linyera and Carlos de la Púa defined Discépolo
as an author "with philosophy". Another writer from Buenos Aires, Julián
Centeya, when reviewing one of his films, talked of "philosophy in small
coins", and at the same time was risking an analogy undoubtedly
exaggerated- between Discépolo and... Charlie Chaplin.
Unlike other popular creators who displayed their talent
in an instinctive and somewhat naïve way to be later recognized
as future exegetes, Discépolo was always conscious of his contribution.
It could also be stated that all his artistic renderings were articulated
by common sense, a certain Discepolian air or spirit which people immediately
recognizes with affection and admiration as if his work more than
once defined as "prophetic"- should express the common sense of the
Argentines. Discépolo´s singularity keeps on disquieting
either in the tango universe or outside it. While most of his contemporaries
are today strange to new generations, the man who wrote and composed
"Cambalache" persists, is in force. Or to say it with one of his most
loved images: he keeps on biting.
Enrique grew up seeing theater guided by his brother
Armando, the great playwright of the River Plate grotesque, and soon
later he was attracted by popular arts. He arrived at tango after having
tried with uneven success, play writing and acting. In 1917, he made
his début as an actor, in the company of Roberto Casaux, a comic
star of that time, and a year later he wrote together with a friend
the play Los duendes, mistreated by critics. He later improved his level
with El señor cura (adaptation of a Maupassant´s story),
Día Feriado, El hombre solo, Páselo cabo and, especially,
El organito, fierce social painting sketched with his brother in the
mid- 20s. As an actor, Discépolo evolved from chorus member to
a cast name, and his work in Mustafá, would be remembered, among
many other renditions.
Although the worlds of tango and theater were not divorced
in the Argentina of Yrigoyen and Gardel, Discépolo´s decision
to be an author of popular songs was resisted by his elder brother -Armando
had been responsible for Enrique´s education after the early death
of their parents-, and it cannot be said that things had been easy for
the feeble and shy Discepolín. A mild familiar influence (Santo,
his father, was a noted Neapolitan musician settled in Buenos Aires)
may have been the first evidence towards the combined art of sound organization
and lyrics, but the revelation was not immediate. On the contrary, either
the anodyne "Bizcochito", his first composition commissioned by the
playwright Saldías, or the remarkable and revulsive "Que vachaché",
published by Julio Korn in 1926 and premiered at a theater in Montevideo
where it was noisily whistled, were a bad start or, at least, that was
what people in Buenos Aires, used to appraise Manuel Romero's,
Celedonio Flores' and Pascual Contursi's tangos, thought.
The luck of the stubborn author changed in 1928 when,
in a revue, the singer Azucena Maizani sang "Esta noche me emborracho",
a tango with Horatian touches (because of Horacio, author of Odes) and
with an entirely River Plate subject: an old cabaret woman who was mercilessly
treated by time. Days after its début, the lyrics of that tango
were heard throughout the country. Argentine musicians on tour of Europe
included it in their repertories, and in Alfonso XIII´s Spain,
the composition achieved an enormous popularity. That was Discépolo
birth in tango. That very year, the actress and singer Tita Merello
returned to the previously critized "Que vachaché" and drove
it to the same stature of "Esta noche me emborracho". Finally, 1928
would be the year of love for an intellectual full of uncertainties.
Tania, a Spanish singer of cuplés settled in Buenos Aires, who
would turn out to be an adequate interpreter of his tangos, was to accompany
Discépolo until the end of his life.
At a time when lyric writing and musical composition
were clearly differentiated within the frame of cultural industries,
Discépolo wrote lyrics and music, even though the latter was
conceived with just two fingers on the piano keyboard, to be later committed
to staff sheet by some friend musicians (generally Lalo Scalise). This
twofold capacity allowed Discépolo to develop each tango as a
perfect unit of lyrics and music. With an extremely sharp sense of rhythm
and dramatic progression, with an impeccable melodic sense (Carlos de
la Púa defined him as a "Philharmonic Tom Thumb"), Discépolo
managed to make of his short and, most times, violent stories, an authentic
River Plate human comedy. He set aside a big portion of the modernist
influence which viciated other lyricists (Rubén Darío
was the literary hero for hundred of Argentine poets, for many years)
and translated to the "minor" format of song, certain predominant ideas
of the age: theatrical grotesque, Croce´s idealism, Pirandellian
estrangement...
The profusion of ideas in each lyric found in the witty
humor and in the lyricism of music, a certain balance, a sensory compensation,
a way "to tell things" in and through tango. No other author would go
so far.
Of course, the fact that Carlos Gardel had recorded
almost all his early tangos greatly helped to divulge and legitimate
Discépolo as author and composer in a genre plenty of authors
and composers. In this sense, Gardel´s rendition of "Yira yira"
in October 1930 stands amongst the great numbers of Argentine music.
The intensity of the recording, where there were not special theatrical
resources and the singer avoided all unnecessary emphasis, is given
by the immediacy of Gardel´s expression. There are no instrumental
preambles to make the listener familiar with the material beyond a brief
introduction by the guitarists who present the bridge with tremolos
and phrasings in the low strings so typical of the period. The melodic
line, with deceptive simplicity suddenly breaks in, with a force which
excludes complaint.
"Yira yira" was listened to and interpreted as
a claim loaded with skepticism. The ridiculed militant in "Que vachaché"
comes back to assault, but this time he is backed by a profound material
crisis. Now the conceited one, who resisted to believe that "true love
got drowned in the soup", is taking the place of a cynical voice. The
principles have been changed by reality. This is the triumph of disbelief
but now without the cynicism and even less the grotesque- of some
years before. The character of "Yira yira" trusted the world but
the world failed him. Such as in other Discépolo´s tangos,
the lyrics tell us of a "fall", a cruel sunrise: there is no more space
for deceipt and fraud. (From this perspective, those who saw in Discépolo
a moralist disappointed by modernity are not completely mistaken, but
perhaps he is much more than that).
The trend that begins with "Que vachaché" and
ripens in "Yira yira" is continued in the tangos "Qué sapa
señor" and, in 1935, "Cambalache". But this is not the only style
of the compositional art of Discépolo. He was romantic in the
waltz "Sueño de juventud", mocking in "comic" tangos such as
"Justo el 31" and "Chorra", expressionist in "Soy un arlequín"
and "Quién más, quién menos", passionate in "Confesión"
and "Canción desesperada" and somewhat nostalgic and elegiac
in "Uno" and "Cafetín de Buenos Aires", both written together
with Mariano Mores. He was not as prolific as Enrique Cadícamo,
and a portion of his work lacks in interest. Undoubtedly, Discépolo´s
musical variety had to do with his interest in theater and cinema. His
staging of "Wunder Bar" and his most known movies - "Cuatro corazones",
"En la luz de una estrella"- made known several songs some almost
forgotten- which the director and actor wrote with his "programmatic
sense".
Enrique Santos Discépolo was born in the neighborhood
of Once, Buenos Aires, on March 27, 1901, and died on December 23, 1951,
at his downtown apartment which he shared with Tania. His commitment
with Peronism, made public through his brief and shocking participation
in a controverted radio program, caused a troublesome distance between
him and his old friends. Two years after his death, when the political
trenches no longer needed him but several of his tangos kept on striking
on the collective consciousness, Discépolo was remembered by
the writer Nicolás Olivari on a remarkable article. There Olivari
asserted that "Yira... yira...´s" author had been the bolt of Buenos
Aires humorism, smeared with grease for anguish. In a way, that was
a Discepolian definition.
Sergio A. Pujol is historian and
music critic. Among other books, he published Discépolo. Una
biografía argentina (An Argentine biography) (Emecé, 1997).
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