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Juan Carlos Cáceres

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Years active
  
1977–2015

Labels
  
Manana


Name
  
Juan Caceres

Role
  
Musician

Juan Carlos Caceres imagestodotangocomhistoriasCaceresJuanCarlosjpg

Born
  
4 September 1936 Buenos Aires, Argentina (
1936-09-04
)

Genres
  
Jazz, Tango, Milonga, Candombe, Murga

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, pianist, musician

Instruments
  
Vocals, piano, trombone

Associated acts
  
Paris Gotan Trio, Maquinal Tango, Chocolate, Gotan Project

Died
  
April 5, 2015, Perigny, France

Music director
  
Tango Negro, The African Roots of Tango

Albums
  
Gotan Swing, Piano: De Bardi a Piazzola, Malon

Similar People
  
Gotan Project, Ariel Prat, Jerry Adriani, Semino Rossi, Eduardo Makaroff

Juan carlos c ceres tango negro en vivo


Juan Carlos Cáceres (4 September 1936 – 5 April 2015) was an Argentine musician.

Contents

Born in the 1930s in Buenos Aires, Juan Carlos Cáceres became intimately involved with the existentialist movement that thrived in the city during the years of his youth. Cáceres was an accomplished jazz trombonist by his mid-twenties, and though he studied fine arts at the university rather than music, he quickly became a fixture in the Buenos Aires jazz community. He became a mainstay at the Cueva de Passarato jazz club, which was not only an important musical venue, but a gathering place for revolutionary and existential thinkers. In the late '60s Caceres relocated to Paris, where he engaged in a wide variety of artistic pursuits, including painting, producing, teaching, and above all, playing.

During this period, he became an expert on the music surrounding the Río de la Plata – styles such as tango, milonga, murga, and candombe. His musicianship flourished as he earned a reputation not only as a proficient trombonist, but as a pianist, vocalist, and songwriter as well. His debut record, entitled Sudacas, was released on the French/American label Celluloid Records. His second release, Tocá Tangó, was deeply influenced by his studies on the African origins of tango and its relationship with murga and candombe. It featured a non-traditional, fusion-oriented ensemble and the stunning candombe compositions "Tango Negro" and "Tocá Tangó." His fourth original release, Murga Argentina, found a home on the Mañana Music label. Caceres' 2007 release Utopia was the first to earn him the moniker The Lion, heralded as a triumph of both performance and musicology.

His interest in the various styles of tango led him to start other projects in widely different formats than his more percussion-guided solo records. He also founded the more traditional "golden age" tango group París Gotán Trío, along with Sedef Ercetin on cello and Sasha Rozhdestvensky on violin. He also started a project in the increasingly popular electronic tango genre, Maquinal Tango.

Juan Carlos Cáceres Juan Carlos Caceres Musician who made Paris 39the second capital of

He died of cancer at his home in Paris on 5 April 2015 at the age of 78.

Juan carlos c ceres 1 mirando pasar la gente


Solo


  • Solo (1993)
  • Sudacas (1994)
  • Intimo (1996)
  • Live à la Chapelle (1997)
  • Tango Negro Trio (1998)
  • Tocá Tangó (2001)
  • Murga Argentina (2005)
  • Utopía (2007)
  • "Noche de carnaval" (2011)
  • With París Gotán Trío

  • Champán Rosado (2004)
  • With Maquinal Tango

  • Maquinal Tango (2007)
  • With Tango Negro Trio

  • No me rompas las bolas (2011)

  • Juan Carlos Cáceres juan carlos cceres toca tango YouTube

    Songs

    Tango NégroTango Négro · 1998
    Toca TangoToca Tango · 2000
    Murga argentinaMurga Argentina · 2005

    References

    Juan Carlos Cáceres Wikipedia