Juan José Mosalini Explained

Juan José Mosalini
Birth Date:29 November 1943
Birth Place:José_C._Paz,_Buenos_Aires, Argentina
Instrument:Bandoneon
Occupation:Musician
Genre:Argentinian Tango
Years Active:1961–2022
Background:non_vocal_instrumentalist

Juan José Mosalini (29 November 1943 – 27 May 2022)[1] was an Argentinian bandoneon player. He specialized in tango nuevo and resided in France.

Biography

Background

Juan José was born into a family of artisans who were passionate about music. His father and grandfather, who both played the bandoneon, brought him to Argentina's musical traditions. Eight years old, he started himself to learn this instrument. Mosalini was a largely self-taught musician who learned a lot of music on the street. At the age of 13, he had already started playing in ballrooms as a member of an orchestra consisting of four bandoneons, four violins, one piano, one bass and two singers.

Career

In 1961 he won first prize in a contest organized by the Argentine television. 17 years old, he became a professional musician. While most of the young people of the time were more interested in rock music, he devoted his entire life to traditional music. Until 1976 he lived in Argentina where he played with some of the most famous orchestras and soloists. He composed, arranged, interpreted, accompanied and produced recordings with, among others, José Basso, Leopoldo Federico, Astor Piazzolla, Osvaldo Pugliese, Susana Rinaldi, Edmundo Rivero and Horacio Salgán. There, he formed his first ensemble, Guardia Nueva quintet with the bandoneonist Daniel Binelli and had a profound impact on avant-garde tango .

In 1977 he moved to France. Along with other Argentine musicians he formed the band Tiempo Argentino and recorded an album titled Tango Rojo with a pianist Gustavo Beytelmann, flautist Enzo Gieco and guitarist Thomas Gubitsch. Later he formed the quartet Canyengues (with Gustavo Beytelmann and Patrice Caratini) and released numerous recordings, including a solo bandeneon album that received some critical success..

In 1987 Moselini work with Italian singer-songwriter Francesco Guccini, playing bandoneon in album Signora Bovary.

Mosalini worked to disseminate knowledge and taught bandoneon in France and in 1999 founded the first bandoneon course in Europe at the Conservatory of Music in Gennevilliers. As a composer, he has also written film scores including Serge Leroy's Double Face and Le 4ème Pouvoir and Peter Lilienthal's Das Autogramm.

Discography

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.pagina12.com.ar/424896-murio-el-bandoneonista-juan-jose-mosalini Murió el bandoneonista Juan José Mosalini