Every tango enthusiast
recognizes the importance of Francisco Canaro and Lucio Demare. The
former was instrumental in the development of the orquesta típica
and contributed probably more than anyone else to the international
dissemination and success of tango. The latter—as a composer of
tangos such as “Malena”, “Mañana zarpa un barco”, “Telón”,
and many other well-known pieces—has left us a large body of
compositions that have been a mainstay of the standard repertoire
ever since. There are also musicians, however, whose names are not
immediately recognized by tango aficionados because their position
was not as prominent. Their influence, however, was nevertheless
significant. One of these musicians was Enrique “Minotto”
di Cicco, an outstanding bandoneonist, orchestra director and
composer who greatly influenced Canaro and Demare and thus
contributed to tango history.
I. "Canaro's Bandoneon"
Enrique “Minotto” Di
Cicco (1898-1979) grew up in Montevideo. At age 12, he started to
learn the piano but soon switched to the accordion. With this
instrument he performed for the first time professionally. At a the
piano sat Carlos Warren, who became later one of the prominent
orchestra leaders in Montevideo. Di Cicco then took up the bandoneon,
which played publicly first two years later with a new ensemble that
he had founded himself. The first recordings, which brought him in
contact with music scene in Buenos Aires, were soon to follow.
Minotto
Di Cicco, without date.
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The first documented
contact between Di Cicco and Canaro occurred in 1917 at the
often-cited carnival concerts in Rosario, for which Francisco Canaro
and Roberto Firpo had united their orchestras. Among the musicians
were Di Cicco and Osvaldo Fresedo. In an interview in 1976, Fresedo,
a renowned bandoneonist himself, remembered the former as one of the
musicians he most admired.
The concerts were a great
success and were scheduled again in the following year. Di Cicco's
collaboration with Canaro would continue for several decades, but
before the mid-thirties it was not continuous. At first, Di Cicco
pursued his own goals in Montevideo. In 1921 he founded another
orchestra with which he made recordings for Victor in the year
following. The brothers Julio and Francisco De Caro had joined his
orchestra at that time.
The
Orquesta Francisco Canaro, 1920. Left to right: Julio "El
Francés" Doutry, Violin; Minotto di Cicco, Bandoneon; Francisco
Canaro, Violin, Juan Canaro, Bandoneon; José Martínez, Piano
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In 1923, Di Cicco moved back to Buenos Aires. He collaborated occasionally with Canaro but also worked on many independent projects for theaters, radio, and recording companies. Julio De Caro, Juan Carlos Cobián, and Osvaldo Fresedo were among the other musicians he frequently performed with.
Orquesta
típica Francisco Canaro, ca. 1928. (Di Cicco third from the right,
Canaro third from the left)
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The association with
Canaro became closer after 1932. Slowly but surely Di Cicco became a
fixture in the orchestra. Canaro's entrepreneurial spirit was almost
boundless and was not limited to sound recordings. He experimented
with large orchestras (tango sinfónico) and small ensembles
(“Quinteto Pirincho“) and, in addition, wrote and produced music
for theatrical musical comedies, films, and radio broadcasts.
The fact that Di Cicco not
only became a fixture of the large orchestra but also of the quintet,
and that he proved to be one of Canaro's closest musical
collaborators for decades bespeaks the great esteem as a musician in
which he was held. No one else could be called “Canaro's bandoneon”
more aptly.
Canaro
and his orchestra during a radio recording (1959)
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II. Off to Paris
Before Canaro embarked on
his two-year sojourn to Paris in 1925, his orquesta típica
performed at the cabaret “El Tabarís” in Buenos Aires.
Alternating with Canaro's group was the jazz orchestra of Adolfo
Carabelli (possibly under the name of “River Jazz Band”). Di
Cicco played in Canaro's orchestra, and a talented sixteen-year-old
was the pianist for Carabelli: Lucio Demare.
Demare
had been working as a pianist in movie theaters since he was nine
years old. He accompanied the silent movies and during intermissions
played opera excerpts, songs, a bit of everything but tango for the
entertainment of the audience. At age fourteen, he began to play jazz
and soon joined the orchestra of Nicolás Verona at the “Cine Real”
(in which Juan D'Arienzo played the violin). When playing at “El
Tabarís” with Carabelli and hearing Canaro's orchestra every
night, he became interested in tango. His teacher became no other
than Minotto Di Cicco—but this was not without problems. Canaro did
not like to see his musicians socializing with those of other
orchestras. Therefore, Demare and Di Cicco had to wait until Canaro
had left. The lessons took place after three o'clock in the morning
when the show at the cabaret had ended. Only then could they get
together and Di Cicco show Demare how to play tango with the right
rhythm and phrasing.
When
Canaro organized his second concert tour to Paris in 1926, he hired Demare's
father, the violinist Domingo Demare, for the orchestra. Lucio asked
to take him along as a pianist. Canaro did not think the pianist from
the jazz orchestra could play tango, but Demare said he liked it and
was learning. Apparently Canaro could not find another pianist and
decided to take the “novice” along to Paris. It was the beginning
of a long and fruitful collaboration that continued for years when
both Canaro and Demare had returned to Buenos Aires.
III. Interlude
Demare got along well with Canaro, whom he described as a “very tough guy”, but being serious, responsible, and having a perspective. (The musicians of the orchestra called Canaro by his nickname, “Pirincho”, but for his brothers, he was only the “Kaiser”.) “Canaro et sa Symphony” performed for a few weeks in Paris. Then Canaro returned to Buenos Aires, but the orchestra, now lead by his brothers, remained in Paris. The orchestra worked a lot in Paris and earned very good money. Demare was able to bring his mother to Paris and rent an apartment for her, and to buy a car which he could hardly use, however, since he was working all the time.
1927 Canaro returned to
Paris as a tourist, accompanied by two singers from Buenos Aires,
Agustín Irusta and Roberto Fugazo, that he hoped employ in Paris.
His brothers had left trying to arrange performances for the
orchestra in Spain. Demare, worrying about the uncertain prospects
for the orchestra, teamed up with Irusta and Fugazo to form his
group. His younger brother Lucas joined them as a bandoneonist. They
travelled for several years through Spain, Cuba, and South America,
but it was difficult to make a living with tango in these countries.
Eventually the group dissolved and Demare returned to Buenos Aires in
1935. His brother Lucas remained in Spain to learn the film business.
He went on to become one of Argentina's best-known film directors.
IV. Back to Buenos Aires
After his return to Buenos
Aires, Lucio Demare worked again for Canaro, who had expanded his
field of activity to the theater and, in 1935, began producing films.
Demare wrote orchestrations for Canaro's musical comedies and
conducted the orchestra in the theater. He also contributed to the
music of Canaro's next film, “Ya
tiene comisario al pueblo”
(1936).
With
the outbreak of the Spanish civil war in 1936, Lucas Demare returned
to Buenos Aires. Lucio was able to procure him work at Canaro's film
studio, the “Estudios Río de la Plata”. In the following year
Lucas directed his first film, “Dos amigos y un amor”. Both
Canaro and Lucio Demare wrote the music for it. Even more, both made
also an appearance in the film: Canaro as the conductor of his
orchestra and Demare as its pianist. Inevitably, Minotto Di Cicco,
who by now had become Canaro's first bandoneonist, appeared in it,
too.
V. Epilogue
In 1938, after the release
of the film, Demare founded his own orchestra, which for ten years
counted among the best of Buenos Aires. He later remembered these
years, which largely fell into the period of the “golden forties”
of tango, as the most satisfactory of his life.
Canaro assembled in 1938
the „Quinteto Don Pancho“. This small ensemble—consisting of
two violins, a bandoneon, piano, and double bass—was created
exclusively for recordings. Two years later in was renamed „Quinteto
Pirincho“. Minotto Di Cicco was the regular bandoneonist of the
group and was only rarely substituted by another player. The
recordings of this ensemble continued until Canaro's death in 1964.
Canaro
and the Quinteto Pirincho (ca. 1940)
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