Astillero
Astillero at the Chacarerean Theatre
Patricio Bonfiglio, bandoneon
Mariano Calo bandoneon
Peyo , vocals
Luciano Falcon, cello
Julian Peralta, piano
Felix, double bass
Osiris, violin
Julian, piano , live
Maestro Leopoldo Federico, bandoneon , Mariano
Luciano, cello
Tripa, bandoneon
Studio, recording second Cd
Mariano Calo bandoneon , studio
Ale Diez
Ale Diez

Songs

song in the womex mix
These are just preview samples. You need a valid account and be logged in to hear the full tracks.
  • country:Argentina
  • region:South America
  • style(s):Tango
  • label:De Puerto Producciones
  • type:Band, Composer/Songwriter
  • gender:male
  • instrumentation:instrumental, vocal
  • artist posted by:Patchamama / Ollin Kan

Line up

  • Adolfo Trepiana (bandoneon)
  • Alejandro Diez (Visuals)
  • Federico Maiocchi (double bass)
  • Julian Peralta (piano)
  • Luciano Falcon (cello)
  • Mariano Gonzalez Calo (bandoneon)
  • Martijn van der Linden (violin)
  • Miguel Suarez (vocals)

Links

ASTILLERO - red-hot Tango Nuevo from Buenos Aires; sextet plus singer; new, self-composed music; arranged by the members of the group; the live-appeal of a Rock-band; live-videoscreening; a new generation; post-Piazzolla; young. This is the substrate of a new popmusic- phenomenon from Buenos Aires.

Contact for meetings at Womex 2009
Maria Jose Ortiz : + 31 641 885 164

Biography
The sound of Astillero is forceful, vertiginous, breathtaking, raw yet sophisticated: a rollercoaster ride of throbbing accents modulating into earth-shattering pianissimos and beyond. Yet this wild sound is entirely hand-made, free of any gimmicks, 100 acoustic: the sound of just wood and strings, brought to searing life by an acute sense for translating the experience of 21st century urban life into new music, built on a solid traditional foundation of Buenos Aires' tango.

The orchestra, though featuring the typical instruments of a classic tango ensemble (two bandoneons, violin, piano, cello, double bass, and a singer) is a tango formation that has nothing to do with the 'tango' of our collective conciousness. Astillero proposes a completely new vision of tango, incisive and intense, rough and violent. The sounds of this group are the sounds of Buenos Aires today - the way they play their music reflects the incongruities and madness of this urban jungle; it kicks, breaks, hurts, jumps. Just as the world we live in.

From their all-original compositions, some instrumental, some with lyrics, emerges a tango that is stripped down yet rich and original. The fresh lyrics add to the rawness - a rough but tender voice, that cares and tears at the same time. The concept goes even beyond music, developed further by video images, both poetic and political, projected live to complement the deluge of sound.

The group's young members have been steeped in traditional tango from early on. At the forefront of the recent 'Maquina Tanguera' movement of contemporary tango in Buenos Aires, they have worked with a number of important groups from the scene before forming Astillero in 2005. Years of study and research have also led them to become themselves teachers to the younger generation, through their work with a number of independent organisations and social projects.

With two European tours in recent years, and a much-talked-about showcase at WOMEX 08 in Sevilla, Astillero are now fast building an international following. The secret is out, and the word is spreading