Astor Piazzolla是已故现代探戈作曲家及阿根廷式手风琴手。他将爵士乐中的精神 - 即兴演奏,以另一种面貌及音响表现出来。他的乐曲主要以探戈独有的辛辣节奏所带动的反覆音形段落,以及旋律连绵不绝的抒情段落所组成。其精妙之处在于每首乐曲具有明确独特的旋律主题之余,亦必留有即兴空间,令每场演出皆有不同惊喜。就像Adios Nonino,四季三部曲Verano Porteno (夏),Primavera Porteno(春),Invierno Porteno(冬),Milonga Del Angel,Muerte Del Angel 等均是A. Piazzolla的名曲,甚至已成为新派探戈的Standard。
Piazzolla多以五至六人作小组演出,产生出唯Piazzolla乐曲独有的音响,就正如爵士乐熟悉的音响一样。Piazzolla同时将阿根廷式手风琴荒诞/柔情的表现力发挥得淋漓尽致,他负责的声部基本上已能带领整首乐曲的旋律,和声及节奏。再加上另一节奏主导声部小提琴,使乐曲在没有敲击乐器之下,亦能表现急激的节奏。另外,手风琴,钢琴及结他之即兴部份与乐曲结构紧扣,总在乐曲最适当的空间(旋律之中)或时间(段落之间)进行,与以连串的即兴为中心的爵士乐不同。Piazzolla于每次演出均展示传统探戈舞曲的可塑性,亦能透过探戈语言去创造一套自成一格的音响及即兴音乐模式。大家在听爵士乐之余,不妨感受一下不一样的即兴音乐!
by Steve Huey
Its not hyperbole to say that Astor Piazzolla is the single most important figure in the history of tango, a towering giant whose shadow looms large over everything that preceded and followed him. Piazzollas place in Argentinas greatest cultural export is roughly equivalent to that of Duke Ellington in jazz — the genius composer who took an earthy, sensual, even disreputable folk music and elevated it into a sophisticated form of high art. But even more than Ellington, Piazzolla was also a virtuosic performer with a near-unparalleled mastery of his chosen instrument, the bandoneon, a large button accordion noted for its unwieldy size and difficult fingering system. In Piazzollas hands, tango was no longer strictly a dance music; his compositions borrowed from jazz and classical forms, creating a whole new harmonic and rhythmic vocabulary made for the concert hall more than the ballroom (which was dubbed nuevo tango). Some of his devices could be downright experimental — he wasnt afraid of dissonance or abrupt shifts in tempo and meter, and he often composed segmented pieces with hugely contrasting moods that interrupted the normal flow and demanded the audiences concentration. The complexity and ambition of Piazzollas oeuvre brought him enormous international acclaim, particularly in Europe and Latin America, but it also earned him the lasting enmity of many tango purists, who attacked him mercilessly for his supposed abandonment of tradition (and even helped drive him out of the country for several years). But Piazzolla always stuck to his guns, and remained tangos foremost emissary to the world at large up until his death in 1992.
Piazzolla was born in Mar del Plata, Argentina, on March 11, 1921. His parents were poor Italian immigrants who moved to New York City in 1924, affording the young Piazzolla extensive exposure to jazz artists like Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway. His father also played tango records by the early masters, especially the legendary vocalist/composer Carlos Gardel, and gave Astor a bandoneon for his ninth birthday. In addition to lessons on that instrument (which encompassed American music, like Gershwin, as well as tango), Piazzolla also studied with classical pianist Bela Wilda in 1933, becoming an ardent fan of Bach and Rachmaninoff. Around the same time, the budding prodigy met and played with Carlos Gardel, appearing as a newspaper boy in Gardels watershed tango film El Dia que Me Quieras. The teenaged Piazzolla turned down an offer to tour South America with Gardel in 1935, a fortuitous decision that kept him out of the tragic plane crash that claimed Gardels life.
In 1936, Piazzollas family returned to Mar del Plata, and his passion for tango music was fired anew by violinist Elvino Vardaros sextet. The still-teenaged Piazzolla moved to Buenos Aires in 1938, seeking work as a musician. After about a year of dues-paying, he caught on with the widely renowned Anibal Troilo orchestra, where he spent several high-profile years. In the meantime, he continued his study of piano and music theory, counting future classical composer Alberto Ginastera (1941) and pianist Raul Spivak (1943) as his teachers. He began composing for Troilo during this period, although his more ambitious, classically influenced pieces were often edited for accessibilitys sake. In 1944, Piazzolla left Troilos group to become the orchestra leader behind singer Francisco Fiorentino; two years later, he formed his own group, playing mostly traditional tangos, yet already with hints of modernism. This group broke up in 1949, and Piazzolla, unsure of his musical direction, sought a way to leave tango behind for more refined pursuits. He studied Ravel, Bartók, and Stravinsky, also immersing himself in American jazz, and worked mostly on his compositional skills for a few years. His 1953 piece Buenos Aires caused a stir for its use of bandoneon in a classical orchestral setting.
In 1954, Piazzolla won a scholarship to study in Paris with the hugely influential Nadia Boulanger, who also taught Aaron Copland, Philip Glass, and Quincy Jones, among many others. Boulanger encouraged Piazzolla not to ignore tango, but to reinvigorate the form with his jazz and classical training. Piazzolla returned home in 1955 and immediately set the tango world on its ear, forming an octet that played tango as self-contained chamber music, rather than accompaniment for vocalists or dancers. The howls of protest from traditionalists continued unabated until 1958, when Piazzolla disbanded the group and went to New York City; there he worked as an arranger and experimented with a fusion of jazz and tango, also composing the famed Adios Nonino, a lovely ode to his recently departed father.
Returning to Buenos Aires in 1960, Piazzolla formed his first quintet, the Quinteto Tango Nuevo, which would become the primary vehicle for his forward-looking vision. Over the course of the 60s, Piazzolla would refine and experiment heavily, pushing the formal structure of tango to its breaking point. In 1965, he made a record of his concert at New Yorks Philharmonic Hall, and also cut an album of poems by Jorge Luis Borges set to music. In 1967, Piazzolla struck a deal with poet Horacio Ferrer to collaborate exclusively with each other, resulting in the groundbreaking so-called operita Maria de Buenos Aires, which was premiered by singer Amelita Baltar in 1968 (she would later become Piazzollas second wife). Piazzolla and Ferrer next collaborated on a series of tango-canciones (tango songs) which produced his first genuine commercial hit, Balada Para un Loco (Ballad of a Madman). In addition to composing songs and more elaborate pieces for orchestra (such as 1970s El Pueblo Joven), Piazzolla also flexed his muscles scoring numerous films of the period.
The 70s started out well for Piazzolla, as an acclaimed European tour brought the opportunity to form a nine-piece group to play his music in especially lush fashion. However, all was not well. Argentinas government was taken over by a conservative military faction, and everything that Piazzolla symbolized — modern refinement, an ostensible lack of respect for tradition — suddenly became politically unwelcome. In 1973, Piazzolla suffered a heart attack, and after recovering, he decided that, with sentiments running high against him, it would be wiser for him to live in Italy. There he formed a group called the Conjunto Electronico, which placed bandoneon at the forefront of what was essentially, instrumentation-wise, an electric jazz ensemble; this period also produced one of his most celebrated compositions, Libertango. In 1974, Piazzolla cut an album with jazz baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan called Summit, with backing by Italian musicians; the following year, he found a new favorite vocal interpreter in Jose Angel Trelles. 1976 brought a major concert back in Buenos Aires, with the Conjunto Electronico premiering the piece 500 Motivaciones.
Tiring of electric music, Piazzolla formed a new quintet in 1978 and toured extensively all over the world, also composing new chamber and symphonic works in the meantime. His reputation grew steadily, making him a prime candidate for exposure in the U.S. during the world-music craze of the latter half of the 80s. In 1986, Piazzolla entered the studio with his quintet and American producer Kip Hanrahan and recorded what he considered the finest album of his career, Tango: Zero Hour. The same year, he played the Montreux Jazz Festival with vibraphonist Gary Burton, resulting in the live set Suite for Vibraphone and New Tango Quintet. The official follow-up to Tango: Zero Hour, The Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night, won equally glowing reviews, and Piazzolla staged a major homecoming concert in New Yorks Central Park in 1987.
Unfortunately, at the height of his international fame (and belated celebration at home), Piazzollas health began to fail him. He underwent quadruple bypass surgery in 1988, but recovered well enough to mount an international tour in 1989, including what would be his final concert in Argentina. La Camorra, another excellent recording, was released in 1989, the same year Piazzolla formed a new sextet with an unheard-of two bandoneons. In 1990, he recorded a short album with modern-classical iconoclasts the Kronos Quartet, titled Five Tango Sensations. Sadly, not long afterward, Piazzolla suffered a stroke that left him unable to perform or compose. Almost two years later, on July 4, 1992, he died in his beloved Buenos Aires due to the lingering after-effects, leaving behind a monumental legacy as one of South Americas greatest musical figures ever, and a major composer of the 20th century.