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Hooked on Tango
A music mentor has opened up a whole world of alternative styles
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By Caeli Smith

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Photo Credit: LUKE HAGGERTY

Name: Caeli Smith
Age: 16
Instrument: Violin
Hometown: Philadelphia, PA
Schools: 21st Century Cyber Charter School, Settlement Music School, and Juilliard Pre-College Division
Activities: Studies chamber music at Settlement Music School and plays tangos with pianist Tim Ribchester; a violin student of Joey Corpus in New York; often heard in her other job as a roving reporter on NPR’s From The Top.

I got hooked on the nuevo-tango music of Argentine composer Astor Piazzolla (1921-1992) five years ago at a concert of violinist Gidon Kremer’s Kremerata Baltica in my hometown, Philadelphia. In all my life, I had never been so excited on first hearing a piece of music. As a classical violinist, I found the rhythms and textures of the tango irresistible. I absolutely had to play this music on my violin.

But I needed help.

My classical-violin teacher didn’t want to sidetrack my lessons from Bach, Mozart, and Sarasate, so I needed to find a mentor to help me understand tango. In the spring of 2006, I met pianist Tim Ribchester, a University of Pennsylvania grad student who was writing a dissertation about Piazzolla. Over the next couple of years, Tim taught me the history and background of tango music and coached me in tango style. He also wrote some new arrangements of Piazzolla’s music for violin and piano for us to play.

To play tango music well, you need to let go of many of the assumptions you’ve acquired during your lifetime as a classical player.

But I needed to learn a more authentic tango string technique from an experienced tango violinist.

Last fall, when I learned that Quartet San Francisco was coming to the East Coast, I contacted QSF violinist Jeremy Cohen and asked him to help me. I had been listening to the group’s Látigo album, which includes works by Piazzolla and other tango compositions. Jeremy, who is a frequent contributor to Strings and Teen Strings magazines, and violinist Kayo Miki, also of Quartet San Francisco, met me in Princeton, New Jersey, on a break from their busy concert schedule and gave me a marathon lesson in tango string technique that left my head swimming. I went home realizing that the differences between classical violin playing and good tango playing are even greater than I had ever imagined.


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This article also appears in Teen Strings, Issue #11




 
 

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