Marika Papagika

Marika Papagika (Μαρίκα Παπαγκίκα, September 1, 1890 – August 2, 1943) was a popular Greek singer in the early 20th century and one of the first Greek women singers to be heard on sound recordings.

She was born on the island of Kos and toured the cafés' artistic circuit in the late Ottoman period, including the cities of Athens, Smyrna, Constantinople, Cairo and Alexandria.[citation needed] In late 1913 or early 1914, she recorded for the Gramophone Company (later Victor Records), although none of those recordings have so far been found.

Apparently at the impetus of the Victor recordings company, she had relocated to New York City by 1918, when she recorded a session for them. Early in 1919, she also began recording for Columbia Records. Over the next ten years, she recorded about two hundred performances of café-aman styled songs, including kleftiko demotikο (Greek traditional songs about Klephts), rebetiko, and light classical pieces, many of them overlapping with her chief rival in Greek music sales, in the United States, Koula Antonopoulos (known on her recordings as Kyria Koula or Madame Coula). By the mid-1920s she and her husband Kostas ("Gus"), a cymbalum player, had their own club in New York on 34th St between 7th and 8th Avenues, where Marika was often accompanied by Gus, cellist Markos Sifnios, the violinist Athanasios Makedounas and the Epirot violinist Alexis Zoumbas. Marika was a noted exponent of the Smyrnaic style of the rebetiko tragoudi.

She and her husband apparently lost the nightspot shortly after the great financial crisis of 1929, and her recording career ended in that year as well, except for four sides recorded in 1937. Marika died in New York in 1943.

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