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Lyricist and poet (October 15, 1902 July 23, 1984) Full name: Carlos Andrés Bahr Nicknames: Alfa, Luke, J. y C. |
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Carlos Bahr: Love and tango
Tango que habla de recuerdos,
gris amigo de añoranzas; tango grave a cuya voz se estremece el corazón y se aviva la nostalgia. (Carlos Bahr, Otro tango)
However, little do we know about this author who arrived
at tango poetry by precocious inclination to literature, who, in his
beginnings, dug native songs, to later be attracted by our urban music.
Without high school instruction, his training was that of a typical
self-taught who through reading made since childhood, disorderly
and lacking an adequate guidance- was equally finding the means that
his natural intelligence was awaiting, until gathering some basic knowledge
to polish his language, enrich his intellect and stimulate his literary
inclination. This was evidenced when he was very young, by writing some
tales which did not catch anybody´s attention. But in his neighborhood
-la Boca- he had achieved a certain fame as a young intellectual and,
with those tales that nobody read, there were besides a bunch of rhymes
sung by costumed gangs from the neighborhood at carnival parties, stanzas
which time would also bury with oblivion. This may have been the first
antecedent of his approach to song, which began to get stronger with
some numbers as of 1936, to be consolidated in the famous 40s, to whose
literary plenitude and dignity contributed with the gravitation of his
work, which was sustained by a stressed expressive delicacy, plain and
direct, full of images and metaphores of genuine popular origin.
Furthermore, thematic diversity was clear in Carlos
Bahr, and even more evident by the fecundity of his work.
But his preferred subjects were love and tango itself,
which he portrayed and recreated on different compositions and with
different treatments, never far from the romantic flight and all them
full of urban taste and sincerity.
He was in touch with all the important leaders and
composers of that time, and vibrated with them on a similar spiritual
tuning, with tango and with the city of Buenos Aires, when both, tango
and city, were simultaneously historians and witnesses of an exceptional
circumstance in the country («Argentina was a party!»). All
directed through a specific wish of aesthetic consideration for a repertory
improvement. Leading that innovation crusade were then Homero
Manzi, Homero Expósito, José
María Contursi. Although Carlos Bahr did not establish a
definite style as they did, his influence in the genre and on that generation
was unquestionable.
Carlos Andrés Bahr was born in Buenos Aires,
on Almirante Brown street, neighborhood of la Boca, near the old River
Plate stadium (soccer club). His parents were Augusto Bahr (a German
from Hamburg) and Colette Dierken (French). Before Carlos Andrés,
a brother and a sister, Guillermo and Emma were born.
His father, a sailor, was owner of a whale ship, and
when World War I started, in 1914, he left for Europe with his ship
to enroll for his country service.
His departure was the last thing known about the seaman.
Maybe he reached Hamburg, but there all clue concerning his whereabouts
was lost. His grandson, Carlos Alberto Bahr, has made uncountable negotiations
through Chancellery and other organisms, but with no positive result.
Was the ship torpedoed? Was he accepted in the German Navy? What happened
to this man and his ship? An unsolved mystery for the family, and they
are still trying to find an answer for it.
This event damaged the family budget, and the Bahrs
moved to Bernal (a suburb in the city of Buenos Aires). Carlos ended
his grammar school studies and later he was walking on the streets.
He had some occasional occupations; he even was in
the mechanics school in the Navy. But artistic life, reading and literature
caught him early. He left home and tried fortune on the streets, living
as he could and where he could, with no permanent domicile, always writing.
Journalism, theater, poetry especially, but without any important result.
And so, disorderedly, he was growing up.
He read with voracity everything he put his hands on
and managed, with self-taught perseverance, to reach an important intellectual
level (he achieved command of three languages: German, French and Italian).
From that period of bohemianism and youth is the following quixotism:
when the Spanish civil war began, he decided to travel to Spain to fight
for the Republic. He arrived in Montevideo (República Oriental
del Uruguay), where he planned to embark, but he was rejected in the
medical checkup, because they found he had a lung trouble and sent him
back home.
After this return he started his steady direction towards
popular song. In the mid- 30s, and reaching 1940 he entered the list
of the most outstanding tango lyricists who brought hierarchy to its
literature. Also at that time his life began to be in order.
On Radio Porteña he met the female singer Lina
Ferro, a relationship which continued with more frequent meetings at
the Academia PAADI, owned by his friends Luis
Rubistein and Fidel Pintos, where Lina Ferro studied. Finally, in
spite of their different ages she was much younger-, they fell
in love. They married in l942 and moved to the neighborhood of Almagro,
on Medrano street and Corrientes avenue; later they settled on Pringles
and Corrientes. From that marriage, two children were born Carlos Alberto
and Inés Maria.
And an unexplainable contradiction. In spite of Carlos
Bahr´s enormous production, with a high percentage of broadcasting
and popularity, he never received from SADAIC (Sociedad Argentina de
Autores y Compositores) a payment according with the importance, in
quality and quantity of that work. To help his family needs he always
had to turn to other activities. As he was also familiar with entomology,
he produced and personally sold pictures with preserved butterflies,
he commercialized chinaware and other things, in short, he permanently
had to manage with ingeniousness, skill and perseverance to live with
self-respect.
Possibly, had he taken care with a better disposition
of his work´s destiny and somewhat adapted to the demands of the
bureaucracy and policies to which this institution has always been tied,
he would have achieved, in the latter, a better advocate for his interests
as author. But this type of negotiations for Carlos Bahr a man
with strict standards of ethics and behavior- meant, from his point
of view, a sort of renunciation to those codes. And he kept on writing
and "staying at home".
So as years were passing by, he grew accustomed to
the austerity imposed by a modest retirement and the mean payments by
SADAIC, but always showing the dignity which was characteristic of all
the actions of his life.
His literary vocation, already expressed when he tried
other disciplines for which he did not find the adequate field, was
driving him nearer to popular song. With a bandoneon player of his neighborhood,
Alfonso Gagliano, he started with his two first numbers "Cartas
viejas" (waltz) and the tango "Algo bueno". This happened
around 1934 or 1935. One year later, his association with another bandoneonist
Roberto Garza (José García López), made him be
more self-confident and firm. With him he wrote his first successful
number, the tango "Fracaso", which Mercedes
Simone committed to record on April 21, 1936 («Llevao por un
ansia que quiere ser muerte / castigo mis noches con vago ademán,
/ y fallan mis manos que buscan perderte / porque en cada impulso te
vuelvo a encontrar»).
This association with Roberto Garza then member
of the group which accompanied Mercedes Simone-
was the rung where Carlos Bahr firmly stepped in his early attempts.
After Fracaso followed another tango, "Maldición",
always with Garza, and "La Negra" Simone left a good recording of it
on September 1, 1936. Then in 1938 Carlos Bahr got the first prize on
a contest of milongas organized by SADAIC, with a number composed by
the bandoneonist José Mastro (José Mastropietro), named
"Milonga compadre", committed to record by Pedro
Laurenz on May 12, 1938, with Juan Carlos Casas' voice («Me
largó un candombero,/ me agarró un mayoral,/ y entre blancos
y negros/ aprendí a milonguear»).
When the famous 40s started also the Carlos Bahr´s
consecrating numbers began. One maybe, in the rush of that first production,
could be "Desconsuelo", a tango with music by Héctor
María Artola, bandoneonist and leader to whom he would be
associated in many hits, "Tango
y copas" and "Marcas",
amongo others. His made his most famous hits having as partner the pianist
Manuel Sucher: "En
carne propia", "Prohibido",
"Precio",
"Muriéndome
de amor", "Nada
más que un corazón" and the wonderfull "Dónde
estás". He would keep on producing booms by the dozen,
associated with the most important composers and very close of the musicians
of the major orchestras, with whom he would put forward his most remarkable
works. Of all this associations, the closest possibly had been the one
held with Miguel Caló's group, with
whose members he achieved a lot of booms: "Mañana
iré temprano", "Pecado",
"El
mismo dolor", "Canción inolvidable"
(Francini); "Cada
día te extraño más", "Corazón
no le hagas caso", "Cuando
talla un bandoneón" (Pontier);
"Caricias perdidas" (Stamponi);
"Valsecito", "Con la misma moneda" (Caló);
"De vuelta", "Estás
conmigo", "Como una de tantas" (Lázzari);
"Gracias"
(Elías Randal); "Sin comprender", "Siempre",
"Quise ser un Dios" (Nijensohn); "Cosas del amor"
(Domingo Federico).
Of that association with Miguel
Caló´s orchestra among many other hits made popular
by the group and about that time-, one remained as an example of what
a tango canción (tango with lyrics) is. I am talking of "Mañana
iré temprano", whose music belongs to Enrique
Mario Francini. This beautiful melody by the then first violin in
Caló´s orchestra, so moving, so neat, so painful we should
say, found in Carlos Bahr the literary treatment which its extremely
beautiful deepness was asking for. Those notes were suggesting sadness,
so it could not accept the contribution of a story which was not breathing
the same mood. The piece, so splendidly conceived, was committed to
record on August 10, 1943, and other two factors helped in its exaltation.
Firstly, the admirable instrumental arrangement by Osmar
Maderna, with wide exposure for the three basic instruments in Caló's
orchestra: bandoneon (Armadno Pontier), violin
(E. M. Francini) and piano (Osmar
Maderna). And secondly, the remarkable vocal interpretation by Raúl
Iriarte, who achieved the exact emphasis to express that story. No dramatic
raptures, no crying accents, which the stanzas could have easily tempted
to. However, the protagonist's distress and affliction were displayed
only through the voice.
This rendition of "Mañana
iré temprano" was, is and will keep on being a classic
of our popular music. There is, besides Julio Sosa's
version, another important recording of this composition by Osvaldo
Fresedo orchestra, with the voice of Oscar Serpa.
Published in "Tango y Lunfardo" Nº 108, Chivilcoy,
16 August 1995. Director: Gaspar J. Astarita.
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