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Summary of his life and career
In 1893 his mother arrived in Argentina with her small
child who was around two years old.
His childhood was spent in the surroundings of the
Mercado de Abasto, his adopted neighborhood, so then "El Morocho
del Abasto" was born.
He attended grammar school at San Carlos and San Estanislao
schools and gave up studying at the second year of high school, in 1906.
His vocation was singing and encouraged by the payador
José Betinotti, who named him "El Zorzal Criollo", he
started singing at commitee meetings (political centers) and eating
houses of the Abasto area.
By the time of the Centennial of the May Revolution (1910),
he was the artistic number at the café O'Rondemann owned by the
Traverso brothers.
In 1911, together with José Razzano, a singer
at the café El Pelado in the neighborhood of Balvanera, he formed
the Gardel-Razzano duo, which would designate a stage of his artistic
life.
In 1912 the guitar player and singer Francisco Martino
was added to the duo. This trio appeared at the Casa Suiza Festivals
on 254 Rodríguez Peña street.
Some time later Gardel was called by Casa Tagini for
recording his early discs on Columbia Records label.
By then, his repertory had no tangos, but folk songs.
In 1913 the trio was enhanced and turned into a quartet
adding the singer Saúl Salinas, they went on tour of the province
of Buenos Aires countryside. When the new member Salinas left they went
on under the name Terceto Nacional and in December 1913, Martino split
with them, and therefore the "Dúo Nacional Gardel-Razzano" was
definitely put together. In December in that year they had their debut
at the prestigious Cabaret-Restaurant Armenonville, singing native songs.
On 8 January 1914 the duo appeared at the Teatro Nacional
of Buenos Aires and since then they started to sing at every Buenos
Aires theater, touring the main Argentine cities, Rosario, Santa Fe
and Córdoba.
In 1915 they had their debut in the República
Oriental del Uruguay, at the Teatro Royal in Montevideo, that same year,
they began a tour of Brazil and on that trip Gardel met his great idol,
the Italian tenor Enrico Caruso.
In the late 1915, at a quarrel Gardel was shot in the
lung what deprived him some time from singing. That bullet would be
lodged in his body during all his lifetime. By then, the guitarist José
Ricardo, called El Negro joined the duo.
In 1916, already recovered, he resumed alongside Razzano
his season in Mar del Plata.
The following year he decided to sing publicly a tango,
and so one evening at the Teatro Empire in Buenos Aires he premiered
"Mi noche triste" by Samuel Castriota and Pascual Contursi. Since then
he would include tangos in his repertory.
On 9 April 1917 the Glücksmann house hired them to
record. He is starred on a silent movie: "Flor de Durazno" and together
with Razzano he started his first tour of Chile.
From 1918 to 1922 the duo often worked at theaters
in Buenos Aires, Montevideo and all the cities of the countryside of
the Argentine Republic. As of 1921 the duo is accompanied by the guitarists
José Ricardo and Guillermo Desiderio Barbieri.
By 1923, and with Gardel already immersed in tango,
he began with Razzano, together with the Compañía Rivera-De
Rosas, a tour of Mar del Plata, Montevideo, Brazil and Spain, making
their debut at the Teatro Apolo in Madrid.
In 1924 he returned to Buenos Aires and sang on Radio
LOW Gran Splendid and recorded for the first time accompanied by Francisco
Canaro´s orchestra and a year later he would do it accompanied
by Osvaldo Fresedo´s orchestra.
In Rafaela, a city in the province of Santa Fe, the
duo sang for the last time. So as of 1925 Gardel turned into a soloist,
traveling to Spain together with the Compañía Rivera-De
Rosas. He sang on 5 de November 1925 at the Teatro Goya in Barcelona,
where he recorded his first discs with the electric system.
On his comeback to Buenos Aires, he made his first
electric take in the country on November 8- by singing the pasodoble
"Puñadito de sal".
In November 1927 he traveled again to Spain and in
January the following year he sang on Radio Catalana and recorded again
in Barcelona to later tour all Spain.
In the mid- 1928 he returned to Buenos Aires, and the
Uruguayan guitarist José María Aguilar joined the accompanying
group.
After a brief stay in Buenos Aires and Montevideo they
traveled to France and made their debut at the theater Fémina
in Paris on 30 September 1928.
In October he performed at the cabaret Florida in Paris,
with a remarkable boom and he besides recorded discs.
In January 1929 he made a short tour of Italy and on
February 5, already back in France, he sang at the Paris Opera, traveling
later to the Cote d´Azur where he strikingly succeeded.
In March he came back to Paris and made his debut at
the Empire theater, producing some recordings, later he went to Spain
where he performed at the Principal Palace in Barcelona and at the Teatro
Avenida in Madrid, a city where the guitarist José Ricardo split
from the group.
In the mid- 1929, he returned to Buenos Aires full
of glory together with Barbieri and Aguilar.
His success alternated on both margins of the River
Plate, he recorded discs and, in 1930, his famous short movies with
soundtrack were shot.
In 1930 he made a new trip to France performing at
the Empire in Paris and the next year at the Mediterranean Palace in
Nice, with the guitars of Barbieri and Riverol, but without Aguilar
who had returned to Buenos Aires. In March he came back to the Empire
of Paris and later changed to the Palace of Paris where he remained
several months.
In Joinville, for the French Paramount, the film "Luces
de Buenos Aires" was shot.
He returned to South America and after a brief stay
in Buenos Aires and Montevideo he again went to Europe without his guitarists.
Between the late 1931 and August 1932 Gardel made tours of the Cote
d´Azur, Italy, London, Paris, Vienna, Berlin and Barcelona.
Between September and November he is starred for the
French Paramount in "Esperame" and together with Imperio Argentina in
"La casa es seria" and "Melodía de arrabal". For these movies,
Alfredo Le Pera began to work alongside Gardel, and their early tangos
in collaboration were born: "Melodía de arrabal", "Silencio", "Me
da pena confesarlo", etc.
In 1933 they returned to Buenos Aires, and his guitar
lineup was: Barbieri, Riverol, Vivas and Pettorossi, they worked in
Montevideo and in the Argentine and the Uruguay's countryside. This
would be the last time his public saw him.
His last recording in Buenos Aires was on 6 November
1933 when he committed to disc "Madame Ivonne", a tango by Eduardo Pereyra and Enrique Cadícamo.
On November 7 he left for ever. Again in Europe, after
a brief passing through Barcelona and Paris he traveled to the United
States, to make a debut on the most important radio network in the world,
the NBC of New York, on 31 December that same year.
In 1934 with Alfredo Le Pera's collaboration, in the
scriptwriting, Gardel shot "Cuesta abajo", "Mi Buenos Aires querido"
and "Tango en Broadway", for Paramount Pictures of New York.
After a brief trip to France, in the late 1934 he again
performed at the NBC and was starred, participating in the Paramount
musical "Cazadores de estrellas" with Bing Crosby, Richard Tauber and
Ray Noble, among other greats.
Between January and February 1935 he was starred on
the films "El día que me quieras" and "Tango Bar" where he sang
his most remembered hits.
In April, Gardel decided to set out for a tour of Puerto
Rico, Venezuela, Aruba, Curaçao, Colombia, Panamá, Cuba
and Mexico, but destiny prevented its completion by the tragic air crash
in Medellín which ended his life on 24 June 1935.
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