José Razzano

José Razzano

Razzano (left) and Carlos Gardel, 1926.
Background information
Birth name José Francisco Razzano
Also known as El Oriental
Born Montevideo
Died April 30, 1960(1960-04-30) (aged 73)
Buenos Aires
Genres Tango
Occupation(s) Guitarist, Singer
Instruments Classical guitar
Associated acts Carlos Gardel

José Razzano (1887–1960) was an Uruguayan singer and composer. He joined singer Carlos Gardel on a duo until 1925 when Razzano left due to vocal cord problems. Since then, Razzano became Gardel's manager until 1933.

Biography

José Francisco Razzano born in Montevideo, near Plaza Independencia, on February 25, 1887. When his father dead two years later, his mother moved to Buenos Aires, establishing in Balvanera district.

In 1903 he performed in the National Drama Company led by Adriana Cornaro as a singer. He also performed on Justicia Humana by Agustín Fontanella impersonating "Juancho" and singing payada with Damián Méndez in Calandria written by Martiniano Leguizamón. He also formed part of gaucho centre Los Pampeanos.

Razzano's prominent fame resulted in the signing of his first contract with Argentine filial of Victor Talking Machine Company in 1912. Razzano recorder 10 songs, being La China Fiera (singing in a duo with Francisco Martino) the first of them. A couple of years after Razzano signed a new contract with local label "Era".

He then joined other artists such as Francisco Martino, Carlos Gardel and Raúl Salinas. The Razzano-Gardel duo signed a contract with Austro-Hungarian entrepreneur Max Glücksmann. At the beginning of their collaboration, both artists signed as authors of all the compositions, although some versions refused this statement, based on there were not authors societies that could confirm that.[1]

The popularity of the Gardel-Razzano duo was in crescendo, touring on Uruguay, Brazil, Chile and Spain until 1925 when Razzano left his singing career due to health problems in his throat. In October, Gardel designed Razzano as administrator of his properties.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "José Razzano 'El Oriental'", El Litoral, 7 Sep 2013

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 25, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.