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Tsunami Megata
and the rise of tango in Japan. |
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By Carlos
Manus
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![]() The Baron Tsunayoshi "Tsunami" Megata, was born in Japan on November 17, 1896. He was the grandson of the samurai Kaishu Katsu -the first noble warrior to travel to the United States-, and the son of a Japanese diplomat. In 1920 Megata went to Paris to undergo a surgical operation. He remained in the City of Lights until 1926, where he learned and mastered the art of dancing tango while patronizing the cabaret "El Garron". Upon his return to Japan, Megata brought with him numerous tangos recorded by "Le Véritable Orchestre Argentin Tano Genaro" (directed by Genaro Espósito), the "Orchestre Argentin Manuel Pizarro", the "Orchestre Bianco-Bachicha" (directed by Eduardo Bianco and Juan Bautista Deambroggio) and by several French orchestras. Initially, the Japanese believed that the tango originated in France due to the French labeling on the records. Megata later opened a tango academy in Tokyo to teach to the Japanese aristocracy free of charge how to dance the tango. He also published a book entitled "A Method to Dance the Argentine Tango". In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Noriko Awaya and other singers popularized the Japanese style of tango. The tango experienced even greater popularity due to the prohibition of jazz during WW II. Several tango orchestras were formed in Japan, and by the 1950s more than twenty orchestras had embraced this music. The most popular orchestra was the Orchestra Típica Tokyo directed by Shimpei Hayakawa.
The first Argentine orchestra to play in Japan was one directed by Juan Canaro (1954). Other Argentine orchestras soon followed suit, like the ones directed by Osvaldo Pugliese and Francisco Canaro.
"A lo Megata" was played for the first time in Japan on May 29, 1982 -the 14th anniversary of the passing of Baron Megata. The translation of the lyrics to the piece follow:
And so he introduced the tango He taugh to dance the tango, |
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