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I started life as a poor porteñito in La Boca.
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(Our home is on the top floor on the left.) |
(Including many touristas from whom we made a few pesos.) |
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In fact, here is a picture of my home with my uncle Pedro resting after a hard day at the milonga. |
My poor old mother, who used to wash other people's clothes (in our laundry room, above) to support us with her back bent over the wash basin often told me, "Juanito, one day you will be famous like Cachafaz and make sweet music like Carlitos (Gardel). "In fact, your friends will call you El Legendario." |
After working in many bean fields, my good friend, Chico, asked me, "Juanito, are you going to waste your life in the fields, or are you going to show your secrets to the gringos?" I knew it was time to make my talents known to the culturally starved gringos. |
After
many years of working without proper documentation I was granted amnesty
by El Grande Padre Blanco... |
...after teaching him the secrets of the gancho and sharing the seductive methods of El Mate. |
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I met my Beticita... |
Mi amor.... We danced under the moon. |
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The cultural wasteland of the gringo milongas were crying out, "Legendario, where are you? "We need music that reminds us of our homeland. "We need music to compel our dancers to get on the floor." |
So, Beticita and I gave up entertaining in La Boca for a time... |
...to bring music to the starving souls of the Gringo Milongas. |
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There was joy in the land... |
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