Dimitris Mitropanos | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Born | (1948-04-02)2 April 1948 Trikala, Greece |
| Died | 17 April 2012(2012-04-17) (aged 64) Athens, Greece |
| Genres | Laiko |
| Occupation | Singer |
| Years active | 1964–2012 |
Dimitris Mitropanos (Greek:Δημήτρης Μητροπάνος; 2 April 1948 – 17 April 2012) was a Greek singer. He was renowned for his mastery oflaïkó, aGreek music style.
Mitropanos lived in his native city ofTrikala in northwestThessaly until the age of 16, beginning his musical career in 1964.
Mitropanos was anAromanian.[1][2]
He worked with some of the most renowned Greek composers, such asMikis Theodorakis,[3]Stavros Xarhakos,Giorgos Zabetas,Manos Hatzidakis,Marios Tokas, andThanos Mikroutsikos.[4]
From an early age, Mitropanos worked summers to help his family financially. First as a waiter in his uncle's restaurant and later at ribbon cutting wood. After the third grade of junior high, in 1964, he went toAthens to live with his uncle on Acharnon Street. Before finishing high school, he began working as a singer.
At that time, with some encouragement fromGrigoris Bithikotsis, whom he met at a gathering at his uncle's company at which he sang, Mitropanos visited EMI-Lambropoulos Bros. Ltd. (EMIAL S.A.) There, Takis Lampropoulos introduced him toGiorgos Zampetas, with whom he would work alongside at "Ksimeromata". Mitropanos consideredGiorgos Zampetas to be a great teacher and a second father to himself. As he stated, "Zambetas is the only man in music who helped me without expecting anything. With all my other colleagues, I got something and I gave something in return."[citation needed] In 1966 Mitropanos metMikis Theodorakis and sang the Party songs "Romiosini" and "Axion Esti" in a series of concerts inGreece andCyprus.
In 1967, Mitropanos recorded his first 7" single "Thessaloniki". This followed the recording of "Chameni Paschalia", a song that was censored by theGreek military junta and thus never released.
In a course mapped out by folk art music, 1972 is a milestone. The composer Dimos Moutsis and the lyricist and poet Manos Eleftheriou released "Agios Fevrouarios" with Mitropanos and Petris Salpeas as the song's performers, marking a milestone in Greek music. In July 1999, Mitropanos and Moutsis met again on stage at the "Odeon" withDimitra Galani and the soprano Julia Souglakou for two nights at the Athens Festival. The concerts were recorded live and released in a double CD two months later. George Katsaros's "The Road to Kythera" andGiorgos Hatzinasios's "Ta Sinaxaria" follow suit, projects of high quality with a high profile in Greek society.
In a long career in theGreek music industry, Dimitris Mitropanos collaborated with leading artists of theLaïko andÉntekhno music.Giorgos Zampetas,Mikis Theodorakis,Dimos Moutsis,Apostolos Kaldaras,Takis Mousafiris,Christos Nikolopoulos ("Pare Apofaseis" with lyrics byLefteris Papadopoulos),Yannis Spanos were composers with whom Mitropanos collaborated, building a career intertwined with theLaïko tradition, until the late 1980s.
Mitropanos performed a North American Tour for the first time in 13 years since his last visit to the United States. During his tour, he performed a concert on 1 July 2010 atRadio City Music Hall[5] in front of a near capacity crowd. He performed many of his famous songs that had been written in the earlier stages of his career as well as more recent songs which continue to be popular among Greeks, such as "Roza", "Panta gelastoi", "Ta Ladadika" and many more. It was at this concert that he was accompanied by the Greek folk singer Margarita Zorbala, whose music is well known in their mutual homeland. Mitropanos concluded his concert with a passionate performance of his famous song "Alimono", with all in attendance giving him a standing ovation as he walked off the stage. As is commonplace among Greeks to show appreciation for a singer's performance at the conclusion of a concert, chants of "kialo" followed, meaning "more".
Following his performance at Radio City, Mitropanos cancelled the remainder of his North American tour. Greek news outlets such as ERT reported that Mitropanos was apparently ill and could not finish his tour.[6]
On 17 April 2012, Mitropanos was rushed to the Igia Athens hospital after he suffered a heart attack earlier that morning. He hadinsomnia and showed signs of apulmonary edema, from which he died of later on that day. He was buried inFirst Cemetery of Athens, not far from the singerRita Sakellariou. Mitropanos was survived by his two daughters and his wife, Venia.[7] Mitropanos instructed his family not to accept a state funeral if it was offered. It was indeed offered and his family declined the offer and covered the costs of the funeral themselves.
Distinguished writers like Kostas Krystallis and Christos Zalokostas were Vlach, as were contemporary composers like Apostolos Kaldaras, Kostas Virvos, Babis Bakalis, and Mitropanos.
I am reminding the reader of the Aromanian origins of famous musicians like Kaldaras, Bakalis, Virvos, Mitropanos, Tsitsanis, Mousafiris.