Antonis Diamantidis
{{Short description|Greek musician (1892–1945)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2025}}
{{more citations needed|date=January 2017}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Antonis Diamantidis
| image = Antonis Dalgas.jpg
| caption = Antonis "Dalgas" Diamantidis
| alias = Dalgas
| birth_date = 1892
| birth_place = Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
| death_date = {{death year and age|1945|1892}}
| death_place = Athens, Greece
| genre = Rebetiko, Greek music, Smyrneiko, Laiko
| years_active = 1910–1933
| label = His Master's Voice
| instruments = Vocals, guitar, oud
}}
Antonis Diamantidis (Greek: Αντώνης Διαμαντίδης), also known as Antonis Dalgas (Greek: Αντώνης Νταλγκάς) was a Greek musician. He was notable for his rebetiko songs. He was also a songwriter and best known as a singer.{{cite journal|last1=Schwartz|first1=Martin|display-authors=et al|title=Greek-Oriental Rebetica: Songs & Dances in the Asia Minor Style|journal=Arhoolie Folklyric|date=1991|volume=CD 7005 liner notes}}
Life and career
Diamantidis was born in 1892 in the Arnavutköy suburb of Istanbul (then Constantinople) in the Ottoman Empire (present-day Turkey). He took up music from an early age, learning to play both the guitar and the oud, and by 1910 he began to work professionally as a singer. Because of the unusual and stirring "waves" in his voice, he was given the nickname Dalgas ("Νταλγκάς" which means "passion" in Greek, and "ripple" in Turkish), by which he would be known for the rest of his professional career. In 1919, he married Argyro Nikolaou in Istanbul, with whom he had one daughter, Anna. From 1920 to 1922, he and his band entertained Greek immigrants to America on the ocean liner "King Alexandros." It was during one of these voyages that he learned of the Catastrophe in Asia Minor, and he afterwards settled permanently in Greece with his family, first in Piraeus and later in Petralona. In the early years, he worked as a singer and musician in various cafés featuring Smyrneiko, Rebetiko and Laiko music. Among his associates at the time were Costas Tzovenos, Dimitrios Semsis, Kostas Karipis and Spyros Peristeris. During this time he also began to compose his own music. Between 1926 and 1933, he recorded more than 400 traditional and rebetiko songs, primarily under the His Master's Voice label. His vocal abilities were unprecedented, and as a result of his talent he emerged as one of the most lauded of his era, alongside other "manes" performers like Costas Nouri and Vangeli Sofroniou. After 1933, he stopped appearing as a musician, and largely disappeared from recording, preferring live performances in exclusive venues, and focusing on a lighter genre of popular romantic songs. His main partner in this era was Mark Philandros, who later married his daughter Anna. From 1937 to 1939, Dalgas made a brief reappearance in the music industry as a composer, recording a small number of songs, and he continued to perform until 1941. With the arrival of the Germans in Athens, however, Dalgas sunk into a deep depression, and he eventually died under mysterious circumstances in early 1945.{{cite web|url=http://rebetiko.sealabs.net/mediawiki/index.php?Αντώνης_Διαμαντίδης|publisher= rebetiko wiki (rebetiko.sealabs.net)|access-date=2016-11-25|title=Αντώνης Διαμαντίδης}}
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Notes
- {{note|autonomy_of_samos}} Then autonomous, subject to the Ottoman Empire
{{Authority control}}
{{Rembetika |state=expanded}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diamantidis, Antonis}}
Category:20th-century Greek male singers
Category:Constantinopolitan Greeks
Category:Greek male songwriters
Category:Turkish people of Greek descent
Category:Singers from the Ottoman Empire
Category:Greeks from the Ottoman Empire
Category:Greek rebetiko singers
Category:20th-century guitarists