In 1913, a second wave of musicians came from the Río
de la Plata, It was especially them who will make Parisians
dance. Among them was Murga Argentina, a trio of the
Vicente Loduca(bandoneon), Celestino Ferrer(piano)
and Eduardo Monelos (violin). They will be joined
shortly after by, Carlos Geroni Flores (piano) and En-
rique Saborido (violin and piano), who also a dancer.
These musicians play ev-
erywhere people danced
— apartments, bars, large
hotels, tea rooms, dance
halls, and gradually in the
popular dance halls such
as Saint-Mandé, the huge
halls of amusement parks,
like Magic City and Luna
Park at Porte Maillot and
in the cabarets that be-
gan to appear, especially in
Montmartre.
As the war approached, some musicians re-cross the At-
lantic, casting a last glance at the posters that celebrated
the tango even more by announcing on the walls of the
capital the release of Max, Tango Teacher, a short film by
Max Linder. The first chapter of the tango’s Parisian his-
tory ends with outbreak of the war in August 1914. The
second chapter does not begin until after 1918, since
the all dances were banned, and the dancehalls closed.
After the war, t
The places for tango multiplied, settling in what came to
ve called the golden triangle — Pigalle, Blanche, and Mont-
martre. Beyond that places could be on the Champs-
Elysées and in Montparnasse. All of them welcome musi-
cians playing in the morning, evening and sometimes after
midnight, often sharing the space with a jazz orchestra, or
more rarely Cuban. Some musicians had returned, others
were new to discover Paris. Among them was the ban-
doneonist and conductor Manuel Pizarro, who arrived
in 1920 and was to become a dominant figure of tango
in Paris, until WWII, with performances at the El Garrón
cabaret on rue Fontaine, and other places. Many musi-
cians dressed in gauchos, as the style of the time.
1928. Carlos Gardel, with his guitarists, at his first con-
cert in Paris at the Theater Femina, in rue de Clichy, re-
corded for Odeon. In 1931/32. He returned to sing and
to shoot four films at the studios of Joinville. Four years
later, Enrique Santos Discépolo comes with his orches-
tra and his wife, the singer Tania (Ana Luciano Divis).
If the Paris of the Roar-
ing Twenties was a Mecca
for Tango, then between
the wars, it became a
must for any tango mu-
sician who wanted to
become an artist with
public recognition. Paris
was the city that dictates
the cultural modes of
the world, introducing
of tango dances to the
Enrique Discépolo & Tania
United States. Vernon &
Irene Castle, ballroom
teachers in New York, recommended to their students
to choose a teacher studied in the French capital. From
Paris, the tango infiltrated the world, to Japan, Turkey, the
southern Mediterranean, the Arab world and thr Eastern
countries/ What followed was the fashion of cabarets and
a sense of Western modernity.
The numbers were impressiv. There were about two
hundred good tango musicians, with almost as many
singers. They continued to perform until after WWII
with a repertoire that would reach nearly a thousand
songs, composed by the musicians, themselves. There
were hundreds of lyricists that gave their heart’s content
for these compositions, mainly in French and quite far
from tango’s big brother on the Río de la Plata.
But, although the dancers and musicians who made the
trip participated in this development, the real creators of
the of Paris tango establishment were the lyricists of tan-
go cancións. They dreamt of qeiting literature and sought
models from French culture, the mother of arts and let-
ters. The majority of them will never set foot in Paris, but
their lyrics are full of French and Parisian references. In
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