The 20th
century has been a century of unprecedented developments in
technology, and it has disparately influenced our daily lives.
Technological developments invariably bring about changes in the way
things are done. Some changes are auspicious, others turn out to have
detrimental consequences.
Without the invention of
the phonograph, tango would not enjoy its current popularity. Of
course, there were dance fads before tango became a world-wide
phenomenon, but this was the first time that the originators of the
music were recorded and preserved for posterity. It is the unsurpassed
performance quality of the great tango orchestras of the “golden
age” that is still attracting to tango music dancers and music
lovers of all ages in all parts of the world.
1. Recording Music
The possibility to record music is a remarkable fact by itself. The technology at the time the recordings were made (1910's-1940's) was primitive, and so was the result: the sound quality produced by the old technology is meager measured by modern standards (let alone the degradation the records have suffered in the course of time). Nevertheless, it is the quality of the performances that shines and makes one soon hear past the surface scratchiness and appreciate the artistic value.
In the course of time, the
recording technology improved, but one thing remained a constant
until the 1950s: once made a recording could not be altered.
Recordings were cut on wax or lacquer master discs from which the
final record was pressed. There was no post-recording doctoring of
the performance. If errors had been made and were unacceptable, the
recording had to be repeated. In other words: in recordings made
before the 1950s, we are essentially listening to live performances.
For a musician, playing
for a recording is more taxing than playing for an audience. A
mistake made during a public performance is, if noted at all, quickly
forgotten. On a record, however, it is preserved permanently.
Recording engineers of the wax matrix period have reported that
recording sessions were particularly stressful experiences for
classical musicians -- they played pieces that are considerably
longer than a tango. Frequently the performers got so nervous that
each take turned out worse than the one before. In the end, it was
often decided to take the first recording since it had the fewest
mistakes.
Compared to present-day
standards, the recording techniques were primitive as well. At the
time of acoustical recordings—when the earliest tango recordings
were made—performers had to play or sing more or less directly into
the “horn”, a large funnel that collected the sound.
Electromagnetic microphones came into use in the late 1920s. They
were much more sensitive and allowed musicians to perform at a
greater distance. Orchestras were positioned in a circular sector in
front of the microphone. The sound balance was arranged by
distributing the musicians in the studio: soloists would be placed
closer to the microphone to make them clearly audible whereas the
instrument sections and louder instruments were placed in the back.
The microphone, therefore,
acted as an “imagined listener” to whom the orchestra played. The
instruments were positioned in such a way that this listener received
the sound in the desired balance. Today, the instruments are isolated
during recording, either by playing into independently regulated
microphones, by being placed in separate cubicles, or by being
recorded successively on different tracks. The latter is a much more
economical way of recording, since errors can be isolated and
corrected one by one. It had, however, one great—and adverse, in
our opinion—side effect: it shifted the control (and some
responsibility) of the performance increasingly from the musician to
the recording technician. In fact, it is not uncommon today in
popular music that the musicians have no say in the final stage of a
recording, the sound mixing. This phase is often left entirely to the
sound engineers.
Before the late 1950s, the
responsibility of playing well and flawlessly lay with the musicians.
Playing well did not only mean to impress the audience, it also meant
to get a job done quickly and get on to the next one. The tango
recordings of the “golden age” are a testament to highly trained
and experienced musicians that do not take a backseat to performers
of more demanding musical genres.
2. Singing Without a
Microphone
Microphones were available before the music record technology was developed. Without a microphone telephony, for example, would have been impossible. However, the quality of the sound registered by the early microphones was unsatisfactory for music. It was not until the late 1920s that microphones were developed that rendered music sufficiently well to be used for music recordings.
It may seem unthinkable
today but it was a reality at least into the 1930s: singers of
popular music performed without a microphone. Their voices had to be
sufficiently strong to carry even with orchestra accompaniment and in
large spaces.
Another striking aspect
about tango singers of the “golden age” is that many of them sang
with a very clear diction. That is to say, the text is readily
understood: the words are so clearly articulated that they could be
taken for dictation.
The volume of a voice and
clear diction are among the indicators of trained singers. This
should come as no surprise: many tango instrumentalists had attended
conservatories or had studied with other known instrumentalists. The
image of the singer of popular music, however, is not that of a
trained vocalist. Unlike an opera singer, for example, who takes
pride in belonging to a school of singing, the singer of popular
music “just sings”. We have, therefore, practically no
information on how tango singers learned to sing.
We have, however, little
reason to doubt that singers were formally trained. Canaro, for
instance, hired singers that could perform in the plays that he
staged with Ivo Pelay. Singing in a theater without amplification,
issuing a text with clear diction requires good vocal technique that
must be learned.
We also know of one tango
singer who had not received voice training: Tita Merello. Tita
Merello was actually an actress, but at the time it was expected from
actors to sing as well. Very early in her career Merello had tried
her luck as a singer in varieté but it turned out to be such flop
that she did not pursue a singing career any further. Yet, as she
advanced in her acting career, singing became part of the job. In
1932, she was engaged to act in La muchachada del centro,
a play by Ivo Pelay with music by Francisco Canaro. As part of the
role, she had to sing two pieces with Canaro's orchestra. During the
rehearsals she bemoaned that the orchestra was too loud, and that she
was afraid not to be heard since she did not have a big voice. Canaro
set her at ease and promised to keep the orchestra down.
The play and Tita Merello were a huge success with the audience and was performed with the same cast nearly 600 times. Yet, two years later, the Argentinian magazine Caras y Caretas reported: “Tita Merello has finally decided to take voice lessons under the direction of Maestro Longomuto.”
The play and Tita Merello were a huge success with the audience and was performed with the same cast nearly 600 times. Yet, two years later, the Argentinian magazine Caras y Caretas reported: “Tita Merello has finally decided to take voice lessons under the direction of Maestro Longomuto.”
3. The Singing Tradition
At the time when tango was
developing as an indigenous urban music of Buenos Aires, Argentina
witnessed the “great European immigration wave”. The largest
groups of immigrants came from two countries: Italy and Spain. The
influence of the immigrant communities on tango was decisive. Most
tango musicians, if they were not born in Europe themselves, were
children of “tanos” or “gallegos” who had immigrated.
The immigrants brought
along their musical traditions, but not only that: there were
musicians and music teachers among them to cultivate and propagate
their aesthetics and styles of music making. Also, Buenos Aires was
not a provincial backwater but a growing metropolis in which visiting
or resident musicians from Europe where commonplace.
The common style of
singing practiced and taught in southern European countries during
the 19th and early 20th century originated from
the Italian bel canto opera tradition. In this style, the
quality of sound emitted by the singer is of paramount importance.
The aim is to control the intensity and color of the tone in such a
way that it is consistent throughout the singer's range, from high to
low. Musical phrases and melodies must be articulated as larger,
uninterrupted units with a smooth transition from note to note while
being audible in a theater even when sung softly.
Singers sing, of course,
not just musical notes but texts that are structured as syntactical
phrases. In the bel canto style of singing, it is imperative that
words and text lines are clearly articulated. The words are to be
stressed, at the same time, so that they convey an interpretation of
the text. In order not to disrupt the smooth transition from note to
note, this is usually achieved through a mode of singing called
rubato (“stolen”). Rubato
singing means that the emphasized notes are sung longer than their
value indicated in the score. This extra value is “stolen” from
the surrounding notes, which must be sung shorter so that the
performance still maintains the tempo and meter.
Tango was in its
beginnings primarily instrumental music, but it turned into
predominantly vocal music with the “invention” of the tango
canción in the mid-1920s. Listening to the music that was recorded during the
following 20 years, one cannot but be amazed about the abundance of
excellent singers that performed and recorded tangos and its related
song types at that time. Towering above all others was, of course,
Carlos Gardel, an exceptional singer who also played the guitar,
composed a number of enchanting songs, and was one of the Argentinian
silver screen idols of the day. But there were others, no less worthy
of exaltation. One of them, Oscar Serpa, though not completely
forgotten but commonly only mentioned inter alia, deserves—in our
opinion—far greater recognition.
4. Oscar Serpa (1919-1982)
Unfortunately, hardly anything is known
about Serpa's musical training. His parents sent him to a
conservatory where he learned to play the guitar and probably singing
as well. At age 17, he was “discovered” by Abel Pelaia, a singer
who had lost his partner and, looking for a replacement, had heard
about the young singer. Serpa and Pelaia worked on a repertory and a
few months later began to perform as a duo. Serpa's career as a tango
singer began in 1942, when he joined the orchestra of Osvaldo
Fresedo.
Alberto Podestá on Oscar Serpa (2012)
Serpa
owes his singing style to a long-established tradition, which slowly
but inexorably disappeared from popular music in the course of the
20th
century due to the introduction of the microphone and technological
progress. His voice stands out for elegance of phrasing and
homogeneity of timbre. The production of sound is clear
and effortless, uninterrupted, and naturally vibrant. In Serpa's
singing there is no search for dramatic effects, no signs of
harshness, no mirky sounds. The impression is that he could sing
beautifully despite being in front of a microphone, rather than
thanks to it. Serpa learned to sing when microphones were not part of
the singing technique and certainly, from his recordings, extending
over a period of about 20 years (from Niebla del Riachuelo in
1937 to Verdemar in 1955), one can hear that he never changed
his style.
5. Niebla del Riachuelo
When he was only 18, a year after becoming a professional
singer, Serpa recorded Niebla del Riachuelo
(1937). In this piece, one can appreciate the singer's clarity of
diction which brings the text to life. It is an honest tenor voice, which
does not try to sound like something it is not, does not use effects,
and, perhaps against today's taste, never produces what to a
classically-trained ear is an unpleasant sound. A comparison with a
modern recording of Niebla del Riachuelo by the flamenco
singer Diego “El Cigala” will clarify the differences.
One may object that Diego
“El Cigala” sings a completely different style of music with its
own aesthetics, one that values spontaneity over control. Certainly,
Serpa and Cigala stand at opposite ends of a spectrum. Serpa's goals
of producing clear and smooth sound, musical phrasing, and diction
are not Cigala's. Unlike Serpa's, Cigala's voice is raspy, he
swallows syllables, blurs vowel sounds, even changes words.
Disruptive of the vocal line are also the strong guttural “k”
sounds (see, for example the line “... barcos
carboneros que
...”) which may be due to the fact that Cigala is singing directly
into the microphone). Also, it is impossible to get an idea of the
volume of Cigala's voice since the microphone equalizes the
difference between loud and soft passages and an artificial
reverberation is added.
Serpa's performance was a
“live” performance, that is, a recording cut on a wax disc. All
musicians (singer and three guitarists, we guess) were placed in
front of the same microphone, the singer being closest yet still
keeping some distance. As much as the technology of the day allows
it, the recording offers a natural rendition of the voice, that is,
without added technical effects.
In Serpa's version the
text becomes clear, on the one hand, because Serpa produces clear and
consistent vowels; and “o” sound is always an “o”. The sound
may be shorter or longer, but it is always an “o”. On the other
hand, Serpa enunciates the consonants even if they occur at the end
of a word. One hears unmistakably “recalar”, “quedar”, and
“dolor”, and not “recalá”, “quedá”, or “doló”.
Like good classically trained singers, Serpa sings “on the vowels”,
that is, he carries the vowel sound into the next pitch, sounding any
consonant just a heartbeat before the next vowel. This is also a
reason why Serpa's “k” sounds are not as conspicuous as Cigala's.
6. Uno
As a singer with
tango dance orchestras, Serpa made his mark with two of the most
important ensembles of the 1940s-50s: those of Osvaldo Fresedo and
Carlos Di Sarli. Both Fresedo and Di Sarli cultivated a soft,
violin-dominated orchestra sound that made a perfect match with
Serpa's mellifluous and elegant singing. Perhaps it is due to
different recording techniques, but Serpa blended particularly well
with Fresedo's sound, making his voice sound as if it were another
instrument of the orchestra. Fresedo's recording of Mariano Mores'
tango Uno, recorded six years after Niebla del Riachuelo,
presents Serpa as a matured singer with a remarkable singing
technique and expressiveness.
Oscar
Serpa (left) and Osvaldo Fresedo
|
Formally, Uno is a tango canción, that is, it consists of two sections, the first setting the verse of the poem to music, the second the refrain. The first part, in turn, divides into two phrases, antecedent and consequent, of 8 and 15 measures length, respectively. We shall examine here only the antecedent phrase and its transition to the consequent one as an example of Serpa's singing, but we invite the readers to listen to the full-length recording and compare it to versions by other singers (many of which are available through online resources).
The
antecedent phrase is composed of two melodies with a length of four
measures. They unfold an ascending chromatic (half-tone) scale in
relatively fast note values. This ascending melodic line
continues to be developed until it reaches its apex at the beginning
of the consequent phrase. After the apex is reached, the melodic
motion gradually descends again.
The melodic motion
is emphasized through dynamics. The score indicates a piano at the beginning of the antecedent phrase, followed by a crescendo to
a forte in the second melodic segment in measure 5. The
crescendo continues to reach a fortissimo with the
first note of the consequent phrase, the apex, and the dynamic
strength decreases again with the descending melodic motion.
One may, thus,
compare the musical setting of the first section to a wave that
gradually surges to its highpoint and then ebbs away again. The
Fresedo orchestra beautifully conveys this swelling and abatement in
their recording. The violins articulate each note of the ascending
melody with broad tenuto strokes (interrupted only by a short
staccato passage added for variety), proceeding to the
subsequent phrase by gradually increasing volume and intensity. With
the subsequent phrase the surge of intensity reaches its climax in
the fortissimo that is effectively underscored by the
percussion instruments. Uno
appears to be a composition tailor-made for the orchestration of
Fresedo's orchestra.
Serpa's
rendition of Uno
with Fresedo is a textbook example for clarity of diction. It evinces
another aspect of his excellent technique: his breath control, which
makes the long ascending phrases of Uno
sound effortless. He
only takes breaths when the inevitable sound interruption does not
interfere with the musical (or poetical) phrase. In this recording
one can appreciate the perfect intonation and the free, constant
vibrato in the voice. He shows great sensitivity in stressing the
right syllables so that the phrase makes sense musically and
poetically.
Serpa's voice blends perfectly with the orchestra, in fact, it seems more
like another musical instrument rather than soloist singer. He makes a tasteful use of portamentos (that is, bringing a note up or
down seamlessly to the next pitch) and of the rubato (see above). The
second occurrence of the word “uno”, the fortissimo
apex of the section, is breathtaking. Rather than bellowing out the
word after a long crescendo
in fortissimo, he
beautifully serves the “u” on a tray and continues effortlessly
to the end of the phrase (“...amor”) where he takes a quick
breath before the next sentence—not out of necessity but for the
sake of phrasing. If
there is beauty in tango singing, it is exemplified in this passage.
We have chosen to write about Serpa because, to our opinion, he represents well the singing of his day. Serpa mastered the centuries-old art of singing in his production of a clear, effortless sound. His naturally vibrant voice was endowed with exceptionally clear diction where consonants were no obstacles but rather helped the vowels to shape words into meaningful text and thus song. This style of singing has all but disappeared from popular music. Modern technology—microphones, electronic sound enhancement, editing techniques, etc.—has made it easy for lesser voices to sound grand and it has affected popular taste. Yet, we must be grateful to technology for preserving so many great musical recordings for us to enjoy today.
We have chosen to write about Serpa because, to our opinion, he represents well the singing of his day. Serpa mastered the centuries-old art of singing in his production of a clear, effortless sound. His naturally vibrant voice was endowed with exceptionally clear diction where consonants were no obstacles but rather helped the vowels to shape words into meaningful text and thus song. This style of singing has all but disappeared from popular music. Modern technology—microphones, electronic sound enhancement, editing techniques, etc.—has made it easy for lesser voices to sound grand and it has affected popular taste. Yet, we must be grateful to technology for preserving so many great musical recordings for us to enjoy today.
© 2018 by Wolfgang Freis
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