- El Barrio de Tango, Vol. 1 (Die Ersten Aufnahmen Mit Astor Piazzolla) [feat. Astor Piazzolla] · 1995
- Anibal Troilo y Sus Cantores - RCA Victor 100 Años · 1943
- RCA Victor 100 Años: Anibal Troilo · 2001
- Anibal Troilo y Sus Cantores - RCA Victor 100 Años · 2007
- El Inmortal "Pichuco" · 1995
- El Inmortal "Pichuco" · 1995
- A Bailar · 2002
- Cafetín de Buenos Aires · 2004
- Mi Noche Triste (feat. Edmundo Rivero, Aldo Calderón & Jorge Casal) · 2012
- Mi Noche Triste (feat. Edmundo Rivero, Aldo Calderón & Jorge Casal) · 2012
- The Most Famous Argentinian Tango Orchestras, Vol. 2 · 2004
- El Barrio de Tango, Vol. 2 (Die Ersten Aufnahmen Mit Astor Piazzolla) [feat. Astor Piazzolla] · 1962
- Tinta Roja · 2003
Albums
Compilations
About Aníbal Troilo
Tango pioneer Anibal Troilo was born in 1914, cutting his teeth playing bandoneón behind Ciriaco Ortiz, Julio De Caro, Angel D´Agostino and Enrique Santos Discépolo prior to founding his own orchestra in 1937. During the 1940s he ranked among the most influential figures in Argentinian music, famed for his oft-imitated "Troilo Sound" -- a rich, fluid approach to the tango which juxtaposed staccato and legato figures. A celebrated composer and arranger, Troilo was also a superb bandleader with a rare eye for talent -- the legendary Astor Piazzola, virtuoso bassist Kicho Diaz and singers Francisco Fiorentino, Alberto Marino, Floreal Ruiz and Roberto Goyeneche are just a handful of the notables who passed through his orchestra's ranks. During the 1950s Troilo also helped lay the groundwork for the emergence of the "nuevo tango" sound popularized by Piazzola, and he recorded regularly for labels including Odeon, T.K and Victor until his death in 1975. ~ Jason Ankeny
- HOMETOWN
- Latin Continuum
- BORN
- 11 luglio 1914
- GENRE
- Raíces