"She’s a poor little student whose dedication never flagged. Always and everywhere she had the elegance to be the mistress of her own heart."
La Colegiala (The student)
Foxtrot, 1938
Words: Enrique Rodriguez
and Roberto “Chato” Flores
Music: Enrique Rodriguez
This song is interesting from a class point of view. Most tangos are about people of the working-class and the underworld, but LA COLEGIALA is about a young woman from a family wealthy enough to send her to college. In the Argentina of 1938 there was no middle class; only very wealthy families could send their sons to college. And to send a daughter? Very unusual. Enrique Rodriguez's "All-Rhythms Orchestra"—so-called because they played pasodobles, foxtrots, pasodobles, etc., thus obviating the need to hire a second orchestra, as was the custom—must have had some rather high-toned private clients; songs with upper-class heroines like this and the vals "Isabelita" would have appealed to them, and encouraged lucrative engagments for the orchestra. Just a guess, but it makes sense, no?
Thanks to Dr. Martha Santos of Buenos Aires for her generous assistance, advice, and all-round tanguera wisdom. Thanks also to mi viejo amigo Dmitry Pruss for post-pub translation support! Dmitry made several key corrections to the text. Please be sure to visit his fascinating blog, tango links & lists.
Ella es una pobre colegiala
que jamás salió de su pasión por doquier y siempre tuvo ganas de ser la dueña de su corazón. estudió la físiografía
nunca tuvo amores yo no sé por qué cupido enseña
|
She’s a poor little student whose dedication never flagged. Always and everywhere she wanted* to be the mistress of her own heart. She studied physiography;* She never had lovers I don’t know why Cupid teaches |
NOTES:
* she wanted to be the mistress of her own heart: All the available transcriptions of the lyrics give this phrase as tuvo gala de ser la dueña de su corazón (she had the elegance to be mistress of her heart).As Dmitry Pruss points out, "Chato" clearly sings, gana(s).
* Physiography: Dmitry again: The transcriptions say fisigeographía; Chato sings the much more sonorous fisiografía.
* breakup: sinsabor. The word doesn't usually carry the connotation of an amorous breakup; it's more like a painful moment, trouble, sorrow, uneasiness, worry. Dmitry suggested breakup; I checked it out with Martha de Buenos Aires, and she agreed that in this context, it could be taken to suggest an actual breakup rather than mere trouble.
"She used to have the elegance of being the owner of her own heart" ~~ but suddenly she's no longer in control!
"She didn't know loves, nor bitter breakups" (Sinsabor is roughly falling out of love; Donato has a tango titled Sinsabor, about the bitter end of love)
BTW it looks like comments has become functional :)
Posted by: Dmitry Pruss (aka MOCKBA) | 11/05/2014 at 04:12 PM
Good suggestions, Dmitry! Will incorporate them. You're the best!
Posted by: Tango Decoder | 11/05/2014 at 05:53 PM
Thanks man! You know that I'm partial to El Rey del Fox, and translated several of his "tangofoxes" too :)
BTW the letras transcribe it with minor errors AFAICT. Listen at 1:12 ... El Chato sings, "estudió la fisicografía" (which naturally rhymes with "armonía ") ~~ "studied physical geography", and which should most clearly be fisiografía (only elision would normally have made the vowels "io" a monosyllabic diphthong and broken the meter, so one stray consonant crept in).
Posted by: Dmitry Pruss (aka MOCKBA) | 11/05/2014 at 06:30 PM
Still listening, fun track and good memories :)
I don't think it's "siempre tuvo galas" either, sounds like "siempre tuvo ganas" to my ear. She always *wanted* to be in control of her heart.
People put far less effort into transcribing foxes than tangos, I'm afraid.
Posted by: Dmitry Pruss | 11/05/2014 at 06:39 PM
Excellent, Dmitry, your ears are as good as your mind! I agree, on the recording it does sound more like "ganas." And "fisiografia," most definitely. Thanks again and regards to your lovely wife--la tanguera fantastica!
Posted by: Tango Decoder | 11/06/2014 at 07:58 AM