Vassilis Tsitsanis was born on January 18, 1915, and passed away on January 18, 1984, on his 69th birthday.
He was a Greek songwriter and bouzouki player.
Tsitsanis became one of the leading Greek composers of his time and is widely regarded as one of the founders of modern Rebetiko and Laiko music.
From a young age, Tsitsanis was interested in music and learnt to play the violin, mandola and the mandolin, which were the mainstay of so many of his songs.
In 1936 he left for Athens to study law, and by 1937, he also learnt how to play thebouzouki and made his first musical recording.
In 1938, he moved to Thessaloniki, where he served his military service, and stayed there for about ten years, during the German occupation of Greece.
There he became famous, opened an ouzeria, got married and wrote many of his best songs that were later recorded after the end of the war.
By the shut-down of the record companies by the German occupation Forces in 1941, he had already recorded about 100 of his own songs and played on many recordings of other composers.
In 1946, Tsitsanis returned to Athens and began recording many of his own compositions that made many of the singers that worked with him famous, such as Sotiria Bellou, Marika Ninou, Ioanna Georgakopoulou and Prodromos Tsausakis.
Tsitsanisis is said to have developed the “westernisation” of the rebetiko and made it more known to large sections of the population, setting also the bases for the future laiko.
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