Artist's albums
Tragoudistes Tou Rebetikou (Vol. 2)
1997 · album
Tragoudistes Tou Rebetikou (Vol. 3)
1997 · album
Tragoudistes Tou Rebetikou (Vol. 4)
1997 · album
Tragoudistes Tou Rebetikou (Vol. 1 / Remastered)
1994 · album
Aftoviografia
1982 · album
Se Dimotika Tragoudia
1977 · album
Propolemika Smyrneika No. 3
2014 · album
Mantili Kalamatiano (Greek Folk Songs 1934-1956)
2012 · album
I Mortisa Tis Kokkinias (Recordings: 1931-1936)
2012 · album
Kanarini Mou Glyko (Recordings: 1930-1947)
2012 · album
Duo Chrisses Fones - Two Golden Voices
2011 · album
I Rempetisses Tragoudoun - Roza Eskenazi
2007 · album
Propolemika Dimotika, No. 25
1940 · album
Roza Eskenazi
1940 · album
Roza Eskenazi: No. 4
1940 · album
Ta Propolemika Dimotika, No. 18
1940 · album
H Megali Tou Rempetikou Sxoli, No. 5
1950 · album
Ta Propolemika Smirneika, No. 3
1950 · album
Ta Propolemika Smirneika, No. 4
1950 · album
Ta Propolemika Dimotika, No. 19
1930 · album
Ta Propolemika Smurneika, No. 2
1930 · album
Similar artists
Kostas Roukounas
Artist
Stellakis Perpiniadis
Artist
Stavros Xarhakos
Artist
Anestis Delias
Artist
Vassilis Tsitsanis
Artist
Stella Haskil
Artist
Poly Panou
Artist
Adonis Dalgas
Artist
Giannis Papaioannou
Artist
Athinaiki Kompania
Artist
Giorgos Katsaros
Artist
Sotiria Bellou
Artist
Rita Abatzi
Artist
Marika Ninou
Artist
Dimitris Efstathiou
Artist
Takis Binis
Artist
Stratos Pagioumtzis
Artist
Biography
Arguably the most famous of all Greek singers, Róza Eskenázi was born in Istanbul at the turn of the 20th century. A Sephardic Jew whose music drew great inspiration from the era's Turkish vocalists, she moved with her family to Thrace as a child, and in 1922 relocated to Athens, where she began singing in cafés for tips. Discovered by the renowned composer and recording executive Panayotis Tundas, Eskenázi began expanding her repertoire at his encouragement to include popular songs from the Greek mainland; over time her reputation began to grow, and by the 1930s she was among the nation's most popular performers, particularly among the Greek diaspora. Her fame rested on successful performances of rembetika songs including "Young Butcher," "Little Mary" and "Among the Beauties of Athens," and by the 1940s she was even recording regularly in the United States. Eskenázi died in 1981. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi