Carlos Canzani

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Carlos Canzani (born January 15, 1953 in Fray Bentos , Uruguay ) is a Uruguayan singer and producer.

Live and act

Canzani, also known as Pájaro Canzani , began his musical career in 1971 when he performed with Revelación at the Salto Festival. Before joining Los Jaivas in Buenos Aires in 1975 , he recorded the two records Aguaragua and Algún día , which Ayuí brought to market in a new edition 24 years later . Two years later he moved to Paris, where he has lived since 1977. In 1981 Canzani founded Trasante Atlántico together with "Negrito" and subsequently toured Europe.

Otherwise, in the course of his career, tours have taken him through Europe, South America, Canada, the USA and Japan, where he played in almost all of the major event halls in France and in some cases in the Benelux countries, Switzerland and the USA. His other records include, for example, Rock latino , released in 1994 , Pájaro Canzani - Trópico de Capricornio from 1999 and Transamericana , published in 2008 by Random Records , on which he sings in Spanish and Portuguese.

In the following years he also excelled as a producer. In 1983, Canzani produced and arranged both the first album by the rock group Corazón rebelde , which was released in Spain and France, and the score for Eric Rohmer's Les nuits de la peine lune . The 1988 album De corazón , which he produced for Francis Lalanne , earned him the gold record due to 100,000 records sold . In 2000 he founded the digital recording studio Angel Studio in Paris , for which he works as an independent producer. In the following year, the CD Lágrima Ríos - En el Sena and the record by the American group The Wedding Band were among his productions. Río Negro for export was the name of another, in 2002 with artists Río Negros recorded CD.

Discography (excerpt)

  • 1974: Aguaragua
  • Algún día
  • 1994: Rock latino
  • 1997: Los Jaivas y amigos with Leon Giecco , Illapu and Los tres
  • 1997: La rubia with Elli Medeiros
  • 1999: Pájaro Canzani - Trópico de Capricornio
  • 1999: Aguaragua and Algún día , new edition by Ayuí
  • 2008: Transamericana , published by Random Records

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ El sonido transamericano del Pájaro Canzani en la Zitarrosa (Spanish) in La República of April 15, 2009, accessed on May 13, 2012