Lágrima Ríos

Lágrima Ríos (Tear Rivers) was the stage name of Lida Melba Benavídez Tabárez (Durazno, September 26th, 1924 - Montevideo, December 25th, 2006), a prominent candombe and tango singer of Afro-Uruguayan descent.[1] Her voice was powerful and she is also known as the "Black Pearl of the Tango" and the "Lady of Candombe".[2] Her rendition of Vieja viola was listed in the book 1001 Songs you must hear before you die (London, 2010).

Biography

Lida Benavídez was born in Durazno, Uruguay,[3] in 1924, to a teenaged mother who was employed as a maid, and a father who was a day labourer.[4] During her childhood, she lived in extreme poverty.

Her breakthrough as a singer came in 1956, when she won a singing competition organised by the newspaper La Tribuna Popular and the CX24 radio station.[5] She adopted the stage name Lágrima Ríos and went on to sing with a number of well-known bands.

She died in Montevideo at the age of 82.[6]

References

  1. Kacey Link and Kristin Wendland, Tracing Tangueros: Argentine Tango Instrumental Music (Oxford University Press, 2016), p. 15.
  2. Rubén Carámbula, El candombe (Buenos Aires, 1995), p. 32.
  3. George Reid Andrews, Blackness in the White Nation: A History of Afro-Uruguay (Chapel Hill, 2010), p. 97.
  4. Elvia Duque Castillo, Aportes del Pueblo Afrodescendiente (Bloomington IN, 2013), p. 307.
  5. Elvia Duque Castillo, Aportes del Pueblo Afrodescendiente (Bloomington IN, 2013), p. 307.
  6. Il libro ANSA 2007. Notizie, immagini, personaggi (Rome, 2007), p. 385.
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