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Ástor Piazzolla, the visionary Argentinian composer, band leader and bandoneon virtuoso who created the revolutionary nuevo tango style in the 1950s, is being celebrated around the world today, March 11 — and beyond —on the centennial of his birth.
A legend during and beyond his lifetime, Piazzolla died in 1992 at the age of 71. His daring, genre-blurring music is still played around the word — the coronavirus pandemic not withstanding — by symphony orchestras, chamber ensembles and jazz groups. It can also be heard on his many albums, including a live recording with jazz vibraphone great Gary Burton, and in the music for such films as “12 Monkeys,” “Frantic” and “Infierno Tan Temido.”