El Sur del Sur The Southernmost South Cultural Identity |
|||
|
| Tango
and lunfardo are certainly not blood brothers. Tango has black blood and
lunfardo has gringo blood. I am not taking sides, as far as tango is concerned,
in the controversy between Hispanists and Nigroists; I am just saying that
what is Spanish in tango is of African lineage, including Andalusian tango,
which had been Afro-Cuban before being Andalusian. I am more certain about
the "lunfardo scion" grafted onto the tree of the popular speech of
Buenos Aires, where rural voices and turns were strong. I think it inaccurate to speak of tango as a whole. I rather suspect that compadrito's tango (which was cheerful, brazen, speedy for dancing and merry) is not the same tango of immigrant's children, which was sad, sentimental, withdrawn and whose lyrics were full of grim stories of love and betrayal. I choose Villoldo to embody the former and Contursi the latter. Villoldo's tango already drew on lunfardo, though not through a very wide range, because by that time, lunfardo itself did not cover a wide range. If lunfardo had been the mixture of compadrito's speech with that of immigrant, it would have turned Papiamento, Creole, mixed language. But, although the public school, by strengthening national language (Spanish), prevented a linguistic muddle more typical of a free port than of a new and glorious nation, it could not keep some voices of Italian origin (derived from Genoese, Neapolitan, Furbesque) from starting to flow through the compadrito's lips, who started to "italianize" and merge European and rural voices, as did the protagonist of Ivette, a tango by Pascual Contursi: "¿No te acordás que conmigo / usaste el primer sombrero / y aquel cinturón de cuero / que a un esmujen le amuré? / ¿No te traje pa tu santo / un par de zarzos debute, / que una noche a un farabute / del cotorro le pianté? / Y con ellos unas botas / con la caña de gamuza / y una pollera papusa / hecha de seda crepé". (Don't you remember that I made you wear your first hat and a leather belt I stole? Didn't I bring you, for your name day, a pair of beautiful ear-rings I stole from a jerk's room? And besides, suede boots and a cool silk skirt." Translator's note: The preceding lines are the prose explanation of the meaning of Contursi's verses. Of course, this explanation lacks the charm and the climate of the lunfardo version) Tango (not couple prefiguring it, but tango taken from the dancers' feet to the lips) begins having lyrics when Contursi writes it. The first lyrics, in terms of relevance if not of chronology, is that the tango named Lita, which was renamed as Mi noche triste (My Sad Night). Those memorable octosyllabic verses start with a lunfardo term: " percanta que me amuraste" (Woman, you who left me). After Contursi's pattern, many other lyricists "lunfardized", mainly Celedonio Esteban Flores, who did it with great talent. Homero Manzi, in whose poetic genealogy are González Castillo and Borges, did without that wild vocabulary and so did Discépolo in his last years. Homero Expósito only "lunfardized" once in a while. And modern tango, whose prince is Horacio Ferrer, wisely turns to it as a literary touch rather than a language. |
| José Gobello |
| The definitions, taken from"Nuevo Diccionario Lunfardo" (New Lunfardo Dictionary), by José Gobello, are restricted to the particular sense in the sentence and do not include all its possible meanings. |
| |
|
|
|
Cultural Identity |
| Privacy policy | Use policy |
|
© 1996-2007 Mario E. Farber, Irene N. Raizboim.All rights reserved. webmaster@surdelsur.com |