Carlos Gardel (1890-1935) was an enormously popular Argentine tango singer who for many embodied the soul of this musical form which evolved in the poor neighborhoods of Buenos Aires at the end of the 19th C. Gardel pocessed a dark, sensual baritone voice which he deployed with unerring musicality and dramatic phrasing, creating miniature masterpieces among the hundreds of three-minute tangos which he recorded during his lifetime. Together with his long-term collaborator, lyricist Alfredo Le Pera[?], Gardel wrote several classic tangos, notably Mi Buenos Aires Querido and Volver.
When Gardel (together with Le Pera) was killed in an airplane crash in Medellín[?], Colombia in 1935 at the height of his career, millions of his fans throughout Latin America were thrown into profound grief.
Gardel is still revered in Buenos Aires, where people say, "he sings better every day."
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