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César
Chelala

CAMINITO: BIRTH OF
A TANGO, AND OF A STREET
By César Chelala
- The
tango is a musical style that is always being
reborn, as the renewed popularity of tango in
several world capitals can testify. Few musical
styles are as associated with a country as the tango
is with Argentina, where it was born. The tango
resulted from the fusion of different rhythms: the
“candombe” (a rhythm of South American Blacks), the
Cuban “habanera,” brought to Argentina in the
nineteenth century by Cuban sailors, the Buenos
Aires “milonga,” and the Madrilenian “cuplé.” Tango
evolved slowly, following the great immigration
waves to Argentina since the 1880s.
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- One
of tango’s best definitions is that of expert
Horacio Ferrer, “Tango is music, a dance, a way to
see the world, a philosophy, a feeling, a
sensitivity, an emotion. It is the mythical
dimension of reality, nostalgia, abandonment. It is
lovers’ separation, the sadness of lost love, the
indifference of the world to pain, the poetry of
neighborhoods, the value of friendship…” .
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- To
those themes one should add those tangos that were
devoted to a particular street or neighborhood. One
of the first tangos dedicated to a street is the one
called Caminito (Little Walk), a street located in
the neighborhood of La Boca, in Buenos Aires.
Although it was created in the decade of the 1920s,
Caminito is still one of the most popular tangos of
all times.

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La Boca
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All
neighborhoods in Buenos Aires have their own soul, but
perhaps in no other neighborhood is that soul as vibrant
as it is in the one called La Boca. Located in the
Southern part of Buenos Aires, it is an area of tenement
houses, many of them made with the wooden planks from
the ships which used to dock nearby in the port of a
river called Riachuelo. Initially, those precarious
houses were painted with left-over paint from those
ships, a feature which gave this neighborhood a unique
characteristic.
La Boca is
one of the first areas the original Spanish conquerors
came to in Buenos Aires. Since the 1880s, Italian
immigrants -particularly those from Genoa- who came to
Buenos Aires, lived there. That neighborhood was also
inhabited by gauchos, creoles and country people. La
Boca is now one of Buenos Aires' poorest neighborhoods.
Only the street called Caminito, whose houses are now
being repainted, retains something of its older allure.

Caminito
- The
birth of the tango Caminito
is an unlikely story of a musician and a poet, both
of them tango experts, and how their friendship with
an artist, a painter who gave the name to the
street, sparked the creation of that tango. It is
also the story of how the street called Caminito
became one of the most visited streets in Argentina,
an obligatory stop for all tango lovers worldwide.

The Composer
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The creator of
Caminito’s music was Juan de Dios Filiberto, a
native of La Boca. The writer of the lyrics was the
poet Gabino Coria Peñaloza, born in Mendoza, a
province in Argentina bordering Chile. And the
artist was Benito Quinquela Martín, also a native of
La Boca. Quinquela Martín has immortalized that area
in a gigantic collection of paintings characterized
by their bold colors.
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The history of
the tango Caminito is still shrouded in mystery.
According to some, the name comes from a small road
in the town of Olta, in the province of La Rioja.
For other tango enthusiasts, the name of the tango
is related to the street in La Boca, the
neighborhood where the musician Filiberto was born
and grew up. Both sides seem to have part of the
truth.
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The composer
Filiberto didn’t achieve his musical expertise very
easily. When he was young he worked in different
trades. Talking about his musical beginnings he used
to say, “When I entered the musical Conservatory I
was over twenty-five, and my shoulders were used to
the work of the stevedore, blacksmith, metal fitter
and caldron maker. My fingers were stiff and clumsy
for the keyboard and the fingerboard.” He was,
however, passionate about tango and when he became
famous he used to say, “My music is many things put
together but, overall, it reflects my feelings. In
art it is not enough to feel, but to know how to
express that feeling.”
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He studied
violin and music theory in a musical academy in
Buenos Aires. Later, Filiberto was given a
scholarship to study with a well-known musician,
Alberto Williams, and took lessons in counterpoint,
piano and guitar. But it was in Teatro Colón, Buenos
Aires’ most prestigious classical music theater,
where he worked as a technical assistant, where he
had a shattering musical experience. In Teatro
Colón, Filiberto heard for the first time
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, which opened new musical
horizons in his life. “Beethoven,” he used to say,
“was my musical God.”
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Filiberto frequently
walked through one of La Boca’s narrow roads to meet
his friends. They were frequently greeted from a
window by a young woman living in that area. Some
believe that he created the music of Caminito as an
homage to that little walk and to that woman.
Filiberto later formed his own orchestra, continued
composing and his music became known all over the
world. Ten years after his death, as a special
homage to him, the Juan de Dios Filiberto National
Orchestra of Argentine Music was created.
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The Poet
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When Filiberto
was looking for somebody to put words to his music,
the painter Quinquela Martín introduced Peñaloza to
him. Quinquela Martín, who called Peñaloza a “crazy
poet,” thought that he was the ideal person to put
words into Filiberto’s musical compositions.
Although Filiberto collaborated with Peñaloza in
creating other tangos, none of them surpassed the
popularity of Caminito.
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At a meeting in a
Buenos Aires coffee place, Filiberto told Peñaloza that
he had composed the music of a tango inspired in his
strolls through an alley in La Boca. After humming a few
bars he asked Peñaloza if he would write the lyrics for
that tango. Peñaloza responded that he already had
something he had written after a love affair in La Rioja
and recited it to Filiberto. Filiberto enthusiastically
adapted the music to those lyrics and Caminito was born.
Peñaloza’s lyrics
were written while visiting La Rioja, a province in
Argentina, where he had been stranded by heavy storms in
the town of Olta. In that town, Peñaloza met a pretty
young school teacher called María and created the lyrics
in a rapture of enthusiasm after meeting and falling in
love with her. With María, Peñaloza used to take long
walks along a narrow dirt road.

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Although he
felt a strong attraction for María, after the floods
recessed, Peñaloza had to go back to his native
province. A year later, when he returned to La
Rioja, María was no longer there. She had been sent
by her parents to another province to stop her
romance with the young poet. Peñaloza, unable to
find comfort for María’s absence, composed a tango
which reflected his longing for his lost love. Their
passionate romance gave birth to beautiful stanzas
that would later become lyrics for the tango, like
the one that says,
Since she went away (Desde que se fué)
she
never came back (nunca más volvió)
I
will follow her footsteps (seguiré sus pasos)
Little walk, goodbye.
(Caminito, adiós).
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Caminito was
first heard in Buenos Aires at a contest for native
songs for the carnival parade of that year, where it
won an award. Soon afterwards, it was performed at
the Rural Society of Palermo, in Buenos Aires and
was later recorded by Carlos Gardel, a tango singer
who went onto become a legendary singer from
Argentina. Since then, Caminito became one of the
three most famous tangos of all time.
Most Argentines can
repeat by heart the beginning of the tango’s lyrics,
Caminito that time has erased (Caminito que el
tiempo ha borrado)
and
that one day saw us passing by (que juntos un día nos
viste pasar)
I came
for the last time (he venido por última
vez)
I came
to tell you my woes. (he venido a contarte mi
mal).
The Artist
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Originally, the
name of the street Caminito was given by Benito
Quinquela Martín, an artist who lived in La Boca and
whose vibrantly colored paintings are a historic
portrait of life in that area. The story of his life
reads like a novel.
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In March of 1890, a
few weeks old child was left in a Buenos Aires orphanage
called Casa de Expósitos under the care of an
order of nuns called the Sisters of Charity. The child,
who was wrapped in expensive clothes, had with him a
handwritten note that said, “This child has been
baptized and given the name Benito Juan Martín.”
Together with the note there was a shawl with an
embroidered flower cut in half. Whoever left the child
thought that perhaps it would be possible to reclaim him
later by showing the shawl’s other half.
The child stayed
with the nuns until he was 6 years old, when he was
legally adopted by a poor couple, owners of a modest
charcoal business in La Boca. He was lovingly cared for
by this couple and forged a unique bond with his adopted
mother, a woman with humble origins. His father worked
as a stevedore in the nearby port area.
Because he had to
help at home, Benito was unable to finish elementary
school. When talking about his childhood he said, “I had
to leave school before learning the multiplication
tables.” When he was 15 years old his adopted father
asked him to help him with his work as a stevedore in
the port, a work that Benito did for several years. When
he was seventeen years old, and while still working at
the port, he started taking painting lessons at an
academy in La Boca, where he met Filiberto and started a
friendship that was to last all their lives.
Benito was part of
a group of rowdy youngsters who used to go from house to
house playing tangos. Once, when playing at a poor
tenement house, they learned that there was a woman
seriously ill. They were leaving the place when the sick
woman asked them to play a tango. As soon as they
finished playing, the woman died. Some of the youngsters
felt a sense of guilt that their music had provoked the
woman’s death but Filiberto retorted, “If she had to die
it is better that she died this way. It must be
wonderful to die listening to a tango!”
Benito had taken
his adopted father’s name and was now called Benito
Quinquela Martín. In the same way that Beethoven’s music
had “illuminated” his friend Filiberto, Rodin’s book on
art had illuminated Quinquela. He would later remark,
“Because my academic studies were rudimentary, I had to
rely a lot on intuition and emotion. In those two words
I found my best guides and teachers.”
Although at the
beginning Quinquela combined both his work as stevedore
and charcoal merchant with that of painter, he later
decided that he would dedicate himself only to painting
for the rest of his life. Most of his paintings reflect
harbor scenes and the shipyards in La Boca. They are a
song to the working men through the prodigal use of
color. It was that characteristic of painting workers
that made Mussolini exclaim, after meeting the painter
in Italy, “Lei e il mio pittore!” (You are my favorite
painter!). When Quinquela asked him why he said so
Mussolini responded, “Because you are a painter of the
working man.”
One day,
unannounced, Quinquela was visited in his precarious
studio by Pio Collivadino, who was the Director of the
National Academy of Art in Buenos Aires. It was a
meeting that would dramatically change Quinquela
Martín’s life. Collivadino was instrumental in Quinquela
Martín’s showing his work –since the beginning to great
critical and popular acclaim- at the Witcomb Gallery and
then in the aristocratic Jockey Club, both in Buenos
Aires. He later showed his work in Rio de Janeiro,
Madrid, Rome –where, in a visit to the Vatican he was
received by Pope Pious XI- New York, Havana, Paris, and
London.
Received and
admired by royalty in the countries he visited,
Quinquela Martín became one of the best known Argentine
painters. His paintings are now in the most important
museums in the world. He also became a philanthropist
who donated land to build schools, a children’s clinic,
a theater and a museum in La Boca.
The
Street
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When he became
famous and was financially comfortable, Quinquela
Martín decided to improve the looks of one of the
streets in La Boca which had been a pasture ground.
Through donations of painting to the people living
there, Quinquela helped to keep the tradition of
having the houses painted in bright colors.
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One of the
brightest streets was a little walk, through which both
Quinquela Martín and Filiberto used to walk. He decided
to call it Caminito, and wrote that name on a piece of
wood that was attached to one of the houses. In 1959,
that name was officially adopted by the Municipality of
Buenos Aires, in a ceremony with fireworks that had as
a background the howling of the ship’s foghorns.
Quinquela Martín would later say, “I think that we can
say with optimism that in La Boca we have won the battle
for color.”
In 1971, a street
called Caminito was inaugurated in La Rioja, a belated
homage to Peñaloza. Today, the other Caminito, the one
located in La Boca harbors an independent theater, an
open air art gallery where both professionals and
aficionados sell their work and where tango enthusiasts
dance to the music of tango. The name of Quinquela
Martín is now indelibly connected to that street, and to
La Boca.
Dr. César Chelala is an
international public health consultant and an award
winning writer and
photographer.
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