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Singer
(April 27, 1922 - December 12, 1996) True Name: José Atilio Dattoli |
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There were also people who listened to him with indifference,
because they were fond of more musical orchestras, with better elaboration
and with other type of repertoire. But no one doubted at that time,
from the year 1935 on, that thanks to his appearance, tango recovered
his privileged position at a time when North American music was prevailing.
Musicians with a modern tango conception, stylistically
far removed from D'Arienzo, recognize that
for the revival of the genre, today the appearance of a new D'Arienzo
would be needed. This is said as an example, as an expression of will,
since the circumstances are very different.
As of 1940, D'Arienzo
had two emblematic singers. One was Alberto
Echagüe, with a repertoire deeply dramatic, at times scratching
the ridiculous and, in other cases, humoristic and in a language typical
of the outskirts.
The other, Armando Laborde, an excellent singer with
great in-born capacities, good intonation and a pleasant color of voice,
about which many have wondered what would have happened had he joined
other orchestras, more elaborate and with more paused beat. But the
truth is that D'Arienzo´s beat caught
him and in this the orchestra's success and the good pay had much to
do. So much so that he split with the outfit twice to try his luck somewhere
else but he had to return. His comebacks to the orchestra were received
with happiness since singer and leader needed each other.
Some time he confessed: «Juan used to kill us,
at the speed he played there was no throat that could resist.»
His work at the recording studios lasted forty years,
since his debut on record on December 26, 1944 with the numbers "Magdala"
and "Color de cielo", until 1984, when accompanied by the
orchestra led by the bandoneonist Alberto Di Paulo he committed to disc
ten numbers for the Magenta label, which nothing added to his career,
repeating some hits of yesterday and the sole novelty was "Malena".
He never gave up his simplicity of neighborhood boy,
either in his way of expression or in his simple but precise reasoning.
In a long interview once he told me: «I was born
as José Atilio Dattoli, on April 27, 1922, although I legally
was born on the day 30, because my Daddy, who worked for a living as
butcher, forgot to record his birth three days after the true date,
because of his obsession for horse racing. I went to grammar school,
later to high school and I have some knowledge of accounting... Later,
of course, I did my stuff, I sang with small outfits of my neighborhood,
Palermo. I was on several auditions on some radio stations with well-known
orchestras: Manuel Buzón, Ricardo
Tanturi and Horacio
Salgán, among others. My friends took there, but I was never
called.»
«Until one day when my friend, the composer Alberto
Tavarozzi, called me at the café where I used to go with my friends
to have a drink and play cards after work. He told me he had persuaded
Juan D'Arienzo for auditioning me, because the maestro was looking after
a voice, after the withdrawal of the singer Héctor
Mauré. They lent me some money to take a cab and I hurried
to Radio El Mundo. We waited about two hours for D'Arienzo
but he did not turn up, by then I thought it was a Tavarozzi´s
story, who many times used to imagine more than what was right.
«But the following day, in the afternoon, I was
phoned again, this time it was D'Arienzo´s
voice. Hours later he auditioned me, I sang around twenty tangos and
he accepted me. Some time later I came to know that the leader was hesitating
between Carlos
Bermudez, ex-singer of Pedro Laurenz
orchestra, and me. They chose my youth, my good-looking person and because
I was unknown.
«The maestro told me: You have to learn
two numbers, you go to Juancito Díaz's place (the pianist) and
rehearse until you have them ready.
«It was the end of the year and with almost no
time to rehearse with the orchestra I recorded my first two numbers,
my legs were trembling.»
All this was happening a few days before the trip to
Uruguay that D'Arienzo had planned for the season at the luxurious Hotel
Carrasco of Montevideo. About this tour, Laborde said: «There the
interviews started, everybody wanted to know who the new D'Arienzo´s
singer was. Among so many questions, I made a mistake when somebody
asked which orchestra I liked and I answered: «Aníbal
Troilo's». That evening D'Arienzo almost killed me and he
shouted at me: the only orchestra you like is D'Arienzo's.»
Another interesting story was that of his artistic
name: «I was for several days the no-name singer. Sometimes
I used a name and the following day I changed it. But due to my recordings
in Buenos Aires, the record company wanted a definitive name for the
record label, then the incredible happened. One night coming back by
bus from the Hotel Carrasco to downtown Montevideo, D'Arienzo
happened to ask the driver about his name:
¿Me, Mr.D'Arienzo?
Yes, you!. With that hoarse voice so rough, so his own. My name is Armando Laborde. Here it is, that´s your name. «And so my artistic name was born.» Coming back to his discography with D'Arienzo
with whom he recorded 145 numbers I want to highlight "Con
alma de tango", by D'Arienzo and Carlos
Waiss, "Desde aquella noche", by Fulvio Salamanca and
Carlos Bahr, and "Una
y mil noches", by Alberto San Miguel, Oreste
Cufaro and Carlos Bahr. All of them belonging
to the maestro's first stage.
He later sang with Héctor
Varela with whom he recorded 24 numbers, among which "Noches
de cabaret", by Alberto San Miguel and Antonio Fiasche stands out.
In 1952 he came back to the orchestra of D'Arienzo
with a hit, among others: "El
vino triste", by D'Arienzo and Manuel
Romero.
In 1957 he teamed-up with the singer Alberto
Echagüe with the background of the orchestra led by Alberto
Di Paulo, recording four numbers, and in 1959 he returned with Héctor
Varela.
In 1964 he returned to D'Arienzo's
orchestra for the second time, in which he stayed until 1974, and recorded
one of his greatest hits, "Yuyo
brujo", by Héctor Varela,
Benjamín García and Carlos Bahr.
Undoubtedly, Armando Laborde was a singer liked by
the connoisseurs of the best tango, his success was linked to D'Arienzo's,
but paradoxically, his artistic abilities were not exploited according
to what his quality deserved.
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