Two cities face each other across the Río de la Plata, and both claim tango as their own. Montevideo points to Barrio Sur, where candombe rhythms first intertwined with the bandoneón's melancholy breath. Buenos Aires points to La Boca, the port bars where immigrants drowned their loneliness in dance. The truth belongs to neither — tango lives in the river between them.
The Conventillo as Conservatory
In 1905, on calle Isla de Flores in Barrio Sur, musicians gathered in the back courtyard of a conventillo every Sunday evening. The drums — chico, repique, piano — laid down polyrhythms that bandoneón players absorbed without notation, without conservatory training, without anyone's permission. This was port music: displacement meeting invention, African memory folding into European instrument.
Tango was never composed. It was overheard — fragments of milonga drifting from a courtyard, a bandoneón chord caught between floors of a tenement, the scrape of a shoe on cobblestone at two in the morning.