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Robertito «Titae» Lindl
Born
Roberto Antonio Lindl Romero

(1967-06-08) June 8, 1967 (age 57)
Chile Concepción, Chile
NationalityChilean
Other namesTitae
Occupationmusician
Years active1983–present
ChildrenSimon Lindl

Roberto Antonio Lindl Romero[1] (Concepción, June 8th of 1967), known as Titae,[2] is a Chilean musician, bassist of the bands Los Tres, Ángel Parra Trío and occasionally of the electronic group Bitman & Roban.[3]

Son of Werner Lindl, an Austrian nationalized Chilean, first double bassist of the Orquesta Sinfónica of University of Concepcion during 45 years and mentor of multiple generations of double bassists, and María Angélica Romero, former teacher of french and member of the choir of the University of Concepcion.

He studied in the school Alianza Francesa of Concepcion. Por iniciativa de su padre, comenzó estudios de piano y contrabajo. Later, he continued his studies in Austria in Mozarteum and later in the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, where he graduated with highest grade.[4]

Biography

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His first band was called the Dick Stones, formed in 1983 with Álvaro Henríquez.

In 1984, taking advantage of his Austrian ancestry, he installed himself in Salzburgo to study classic double bass and play in ensambles and orchestras. Back in Chile he leaned more towards jazz, in the penquista scene. In some of those sessions participated guitarist Ángel Parra, who would promptly join the rock and roller rehearsals commanded by Henríquez.

He has a son named Simón.[5]

Los Tres

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Titae (in the middle) in a concert with Los Tres in 2006.

The history of Lindl while in los Tres was extended for a whole decade and his collaboration with Henríquez was translated into pieces of co-authorship, for songs like “La primera vez” or “Amores incompletos” (Los Tres, 1991); “Déjate caer” or “La espada y la pared” (La espada y la pared, 1995); “Claus” or “Largo” (Fome, 1997); and “El rey del mariscal” or “No me falles” (La sangre en el cuerpo, 1999). Between tours and performances of Los Tres, also traveled a double bass, and while the quartet rested, a bop trio went back to work: Parra, Lindl and Molina appeared like a completely different entity, switching towards swing and their preferences, such as Parker, Monk or Montgomery. The Ángel Parra Trio was formed.

After the collapse of Los tres in 2000, he kept his love for jazz, llegando a editar una serie de álbumes junto a Ángel Parra, sumándose posteriormente el baterista Moncho Pérez. En esta etapa, Lindl compuso piezas como “Patana”, “Trimno”, “Así pasa cuando sucede” y “Angélica y Werner”.

Su carrera seguiría con múltiples apariciones: desde el proyecto de revaloración de los músicos porteños (en "Una noche en el Cinzano" de 2002, y "Otra noche en el Cinzano" de 2007), el trío de Carlos Silva (en Solo, dúo, trío, 2003) y el grupo Doce Monos, hasta el liderazgo de cuartetos y quintetos de jazz chilenísimo, junto a hombres como el trombonista Héctor Parquímetro Briceño o el trompetista Ricardo Barrios y su colaboración con el dúo electrónico Bitman & Roban.

Ángel Parra Trío

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In 1991, Titae co-funded with Ángel Parra, Los Tres's guitarist, the jazz group Ángel Parra Trío, which remains active to this day, performing in parallel with Los Tres.

Discography

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Roberto Lindl during a concert of Los Tres in 2020.

With Los Tres

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With Ángel Parra Trío

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  • 1992 - Ángel Parra Trío
  • 1995 - Patana
  • 1996 - Piscola Standards
  • 1998 - Tequila!!!
  • 2000 - No junta ni pega
  • 2002 - La hora feliz
  • 2003 - Vamos que se puede
  • 2005 - Playa solitaria
  • 2007 - Un año más
  • 2009 - Espérame!!!

Colectivos

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  • 2009 - Roberto Parra: Invocado

Collaborations

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Publications

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  • Los tr3s, Historia en imágenes. 2011. Lindl Roberto, ISBN 9789562848237.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "http://transparenciaactiva.cultura.gob.cl/index.php/historicos/desplegarHistoricos?ano=2007&tipo=Transferencias_OtrasTransferencias_Fondos_Musica_Premios&width=1200&height=500". transparenciaactiva.cultura.gob.cl. Retrieved 31 de agosto de 2018. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help); External link in |title= (help)
  2. ^ "Roberto "Titae" Lindl: "A Álvaro todavía le queda mucha vida"". Culto. 9 de mayo de 2018. Retrieved 31 de agosto de 2018. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  3. ^ emol.com (3 de agosto de 2010). "Latin Bitman alista la verdadera cumbre local que presentará su aplaudido disco". Retrieved 7 de enero de 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |date= (help)
  4. ^ lostres.cl. "Biografías". Retrieved 7 de enero de 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  5. ^ los3.cl. "Roberto Lindl". Archived from the original on 12 de julio de 2011. Retrieved 7 de enero de 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Ril Editores. "LOS TR3S Y SU GALERÍA IMAGINARIA". Retrieved 7 de enero de 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
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[[Category:Rock bass guitarists]] [[Category:Jazz bass guitarists]] [[Category:Jazz double-bassists]] [[Category:Bassist]] [[Category:Chilean music people]] [[Category:Chile]] [[Category:Concepción, Chile]]