Nostalgias: A Tango of Drink and Longing
Cobián's melody and Cadícamo's lyric became one of tango's great laments
Recordings2 min read2 citations
Some tangos compress an entire emotional world into a single word. "Nostalgias" — a drinker's lament of memory and lost love — ranks among the most enduring songs in the tango repertoire, danced and sung for nearly a century, its very title naming the ache that drives it.[1]
Cobián and Cadícamo
"Nostalgias" joins the music of pianist-composer Juan Carlos Cobián to the verses of Enrique Cadícamo, two defining architects of the tango canción — the sung tango that wedded confessional lyric poetry to the dance's rhythmic frame.[1] Cadícamo's text, originally written for a stage work and cut from it, voices a man drowning heartbreak in wine, urging the bartender to keep pouring so he might forget the woman who left him.[1] The pairing is the form at its purest: Cobián's supple, piano-bred melodic line gives Cadícamo's image-rich first-person confession its long, sighing phrases — a melody that invites the suspended pauses and slow elasticity dancers reserve for tango's great laments.
From nightclub to the world
The tango reached the public in 1936, introduced by the singer Antonio Rodríguez Lesende with Cobián's own ensemble at a Buenos Aires nightclub.[1] Its ascent was immediate. The celebrated vocalist Charlo, upon hearing it, asked for the score and sang it over Radio Belgrano — and recorded it with guitar accompaniment in October 1936 — turning the song into a hit before it was even published; the major orchestras rushed to record it, and demand soon stretched to London, Paris, and New York.[1] After the Second World War, "Nostalgias" was among the tangos that carried the genre beyond the milonga floor and onto European concert stages.[2]
Why it endures
"Nostalgias" became one of the most recorded and most frequently performed tangos ever written, taken up by virtually every major tango vocalist of the generations that followed — and by singers well outside the Río de la Plata: the Italian star Mina recorded it in 1998 for her Spanish-language album of the same name, released in Spain and later in Argentina.[1] That reach is the measure of the song: the fusion of Cobián's refined melody with Cadícamo's bittersweet poetry secures its place beside canonical works such as Caminito and Cambalache at the very center of the tango songbook.[2]
References
- 1.Nostalgias — Wikipedia, 2026
- 2.¡Tango!: The Dance, the Song, the Story — Simon Collier et al., Thames & Hudson, 1995
How to cite this article
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Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Nostalgias: A Tango of Drink and Longing. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 17, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/tango-argentino/recordings/nostalgias
Bailar Editorial Team. “Nostalgias: A Tango of Drink and Longing.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/tango-argentino/recordings/nostalgias. Accessed 17 June 2026.
Bailar Editorial Team. “Nostalgias: A Tango of Drink and Longing.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 17, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/tango-argentino/recordings/nostalgias.
@misc{bailar-tango-argentino-nostalgias, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Nostalgias: A Tango of Drink and Longing}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/tango-argentino/recordings/nostalgias}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-17} }
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