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Leopoldo Corretjer: from "Saludo a la Bandera" (Salute
to the Flag) to tango compadrón
by León
Benarós
Who didn't ever sing in his childhood, at a singing class, that of: "Salve argentina bandera azul
y blanca (Hail blue and white Argentine flag,
sky scrap where the sun reigns; Thou, the noblest, the most glorious and saint, the firmament gave thee its color.) It was, undoubtedly, a beautiful march that pleased
our infantile ears.
Who was the author? Lyrics and music corresponded to
a Catalonian, Leopoldo Corretjer. The lyrics seem to be a touching homage
by someone who found among us an adoptive homeland and sang for her
with devotion.
Leopoldo Corretjer was a great choir conductor. It
is said that, for the celebrations of the Centennial of the May Revolution,
at the Plaza de los Dos Congresos, in front of the National Congress
he conducted an incredible choir of children, that it was reported amounting
to thirty thousand voices.
Corretjer according to the laborious and documented
historian of our music, Vicente Gesualdo was born in Barcelona
in 1862 and died in Buenos Aires in 1941. He was an outstanding student
at the Royal Conservatory of his native town. At the age of 18 he was
already an orchestra conductor. He arrived in Buenos Aires in 1887
Was tango for so distinguished musician a sin of youth?
However, after the first he composed, "El afilador", followed
others like "Mi negra" and "Apuntá
pa' otro lao". Unlike the previous ones, the latter does not
bear mention of the publisher. It seemed to have been a private release.
It is dedicated "to the officers of the Mounted Grenadiers Corps". It
has no lyrics.
No little courage must have been needed by these distinguished
music maestros, who dared to compose and publish tangos, when still,
for the "good families" it was a kind of banned music. It was necessary
that the boys from the "haute" society returned from Europe and taught
dancing tango to their little sisters, behind closed doors, so that
the austere society of yore decided to put their ears to what Lugones
had called he, especially!" a brothel's reptile".
Originally published in the history magazine Desmemoria
# 12, Buenos Aires
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