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Mercedes Simone: The Lady of Tango

The refined voice who helped define female tango singing in its golden age

Pioneers2 min de lectura2 citas

Among the women who gave tango a female voice, Mercedes Simone was the most elegant — so much so that she was known simply as "La Dama del Tango," the Lady of Tango.[1]

A singer from Villa Elisa

Mercedes Simone was born on 21 April 1904 in Villa Elisa, in Buenos Aires Province.[1] She made her debut as a singer in 1926, touring with the duo led by her husband, the guitarist and composer Pablo Rodríguez, and quickly established herself as one of the most accomplished voices of her generation.[1]

"Cantando" and the screen

Simone holds a special place in tango history through film. She appeared in the landmark 1933 movie ¡Tango! — one of the first Argentine sound films — performing "Cantando," a song for which she wrote both music and lyrics and had recorded in 1931.[1] Refined, warm, and technically assured, her singing helped raise and define the art of the female tango vocalist during the genre's golden age in the 1930s and 1940s.[1]

Her devotion to the music lasted a lifetime: in 1966 she opened her own tango venue, "Cantando," in Buenos Aires, where she performed regularly, accompanied by the maestro Lucio Demare.[1] She died on 2 October 1990.[1]

Why she matters

Mercedes Simone matters because she brought elegance and craft to the female voice of tango at the moment it was being defined. As both a singer and a composer — a rarity for women of her era — she shaped the genre from within, and her recording and film legacy made her a model for the singers who followed. Alongside Tita Merello, the Lady of Tango stands among the women who proved that the genre's deepest emotion could be carried by a woman's voice.

Referencias

  1. 1.Mercedes SimoneWikipedia, 2026
  2. 2.¡Tango!: The Dance, the Song, the StorySimon Collier et al., Thames & Hudson, 1995