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Smyrna Trio

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Genres
  
Rebetiko

Origin
  
Athens, Greece

Years active
  
1930–193?

Genre
  
Rebetiko

Smyrna Trio httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Members
  
Roza Eskenazi, Agapios Tomboulis

Associated acts
  
Roza Eskenazi, Agapios Tomboulis, Dimitrios Semsis

Similar
  
Dimitrios Semsis, Antonios Katinaris, Maria Katinari, Loukas Daralas, Antonis Diamantidis

S agapo traditional song of smyrna trio vln cl pno composer d s svintridis


Smyrna Trio were a Rebetiko trio consisting of Roza Eskenazi (vocals, percussion), Agapios Tomboulis (Oud) and Lambros Leondaridis (Classical kemençe). The trio would briefly become a Quartet in 1932 when violinist Dimitri Sensis joined soon after the quartet would return to a trio when Lambros Leondaridis left the group some time in 1932.

Contents

Background

Roza Eskenazi started her career sometime in the 1920s as a solo performer where she would sing for patrons of the clubs in Greek, Turkish, and Armenian. It was in the club scene where she was first "discovered" by well-known composer and impresario Panagiotis Toundas in the late 1920s. Toundas immediately recognized her talent and introduced her to Vassilis Toumbakaris of Columbia Records. Roza, in 1929, cut four sides for Columbia, three of which were amanedes (Tzivaeri, Minore, and Matzore) and one demotic (Emorfi Pou Ein I Leivadia).

It was around 1929 when Rosa first met Oudist; Agapios Tomboulis. Tomboulis began playing for Roza on the club scene for the rest of 1929. The following year they both met Classical kemençe player Lambros Leondaridis, after the pair's meeting Leondaridis he began playing with them in the clubs. That year they formed the Smyrna Trio.

Early years (1930-32)

Roza continued recording records for Columbia with Tomboulis and Leondaridis playing the instrumentation on the record tho they were officially a trio Columbia credit the recordings to Just Roza. Some of the music was folk songs, especially from Greece and Smyrna (İzmir) in Turkey. Her most important contribution to the local music scene, however, was her recordings of Rebetiko and especially the Smyrna school of Rebetiko. She was, almost single-handedly, responsible for the breakthrough of this style into popular culture, and even today her unique sound is still identified with the genre but as they were not ceridited as a trio Agapios Tomboulis and Lambros Leondaridis were over shadowed as to their contribution to the genre becoming into popular culture.

References

Smyrna Trio Wikipedia