| |
| |
| |
| :. |
Editorial |
|
| |
|
|
| |
There are just a few hours left before the beginning of
the great jam at Varadero Jam Session, in the most famous
beach resort city of America. Devoted and young talented
musicians will join their virtuosity in this meeting with the
best Cuban jazz. If you want to know details about the event,
Soycubano recommends you to visit the website www.jazz.soycubano.com
and invites you to enjoy interesting articles about jazz in
this second edition dedicated to such particular genre |
|
| |
|
|
| :. |
Jazz in Cuba
(II part)
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
| |
In 1963 took place at Payret
Theater the First Jazz Festival celebrated in Cuba with the
performance of all the groups of that moment, including the
jazz band of the trumpeter Leonardo Timor, the only big band
active after Armando Romeu left Cabaret Tropicana in 1961.
In 1966 it was organized the Young Orchestra of Modern
Music, under the conduction of pianist Adolfo Pichardo, and a
year later the National Council of Culture decides to create a
new jazz band with the conduction of veteran Armando Romeu. By
that time different groups of Jazz
and latin jazz flourished, as the ones of Chucho
Valdés and Samuell Téllez.
Around that time it was created, under the conduction of
composer and guitarist Leo
Brouwer, the Grupo
de Experimentación Sonora del ICAIC, which was
characterized by the fusion of diverse music as Afro-Cuban,
Afro-Brazilian, jazz rock, Asian and European for concert.
Then the forties came and marked the beginning of the Cuban
jazz potentialities with the integration of Irakere, in 1973,
the first Cuban group that won a Grammy award. The super band
conducted by Jesús “Chucho” Valdés was born from the Cuban
Orchestra of Modern Music and the works realized by the great
pianist with groups of different formats. Almost from the
beginning Irakere was a school to many young jazz men.
Among the most relevant jazz men
of this period it can be mentioned Emiliano Salvador,
Ronzalito Rubalcaba, Ramón Valle and Ernán
López-Nussa among others great talented musicians. In the
case of jazz women we have María Caridad Valdés, Lilia
Expósito (Bellita) and Lucía
Huergo among others.
In 1979, the singer and multi-instruments player Bobby
Carcassés organized a group of concerts in Casa de la
Cultura of Plaza in Havana City, which would be the prelude of
the event, first nationally and then internationally, that is
nowadays the Jazz Plaza Festival, and that had his first
edition in 1980. Among the visitors to this event is good to
highlight the presence of Dizzy Gillespie and the British
saxophonist Ronnie Scout, who was also the co-organizer of the
festival in 1993.
As a conclusion, I agree with the
researcher José Dos Santos about the permanence of the jazz in
our country … Most of the Cuban musicians from the new
generations, with classic academic education and spontaneous
commitment with what is popular, are at the same time admirers
or cultivators of jazz. That is why nobody should be surprised
at knowing that the bands which accompany the main Cuban
soneros nowadays, the so-called salseros, have very capable
musicians for improvisation and friends of the descarga when
there is a possibility…
Article by journalist Ubilde Gómez |
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| :. |
Topics |
|
| |
|
|
| |
On the piano, Chucho Valdés (II part)
In 1965, when important changes
begin to take place within the Cuban music, Chucho gets
enrolled in the creation of his first musical group: Chucho
Valdés y su combo with Amado Borcelá, (Guapachá) as
signer.
At that moment his potentialities, not only as musician but
also as renovator, were already evident. But the experience
lasts short time, because Guapachá dies suddenly and Chucho
goes back to the bookrest of an orchestra, this time the Cuban
Orchestra of Modern Music, a whole constellation of stars,
conducted by Armando Romeu.
But the Jazz,
always the jazz, will be in his life as a constant that
develops parallel; thus we get to 1969 where his name
surpasses the Cuban frames
Experimentation should continue and Chucho bets to the
fusion of Afro-Cuban elements with jazz, so it will begin
Irakere’s era, or what is the same his legend.
Irakere,
besides it is his personal dream, is the turning point of his
musical carrier. Ever since he will mark the new tendencies
within the Cuban and universal music and will finish the
period of the latin jazz that Mario Bauzá began in the forties
in the United States, that was defined by Chano Pozo next to
Dizzie Gillespie when he made the genre to return to his
African roots.
The truth is that Irakere is Chucho
Valdés and Chucho Valdés is Irakere; they are part of the
same human and musical body. Through that education passed all
the best talented musicians generated in Cuba during the
seventies, eighties and nineties.
But Chucho should go beyond the jazz and the experiments,
therefore he returns to piano as unique and universal element
and one day in the loneliness of the concert room he played
again Rashmaninov and Beethoven, but with his own style, in
Chucho’s way as someone said once.
Listening to Chucho is to cross from one side to another
the five continents, it is also venturing to challenge
tendencies and schools, but above all things it is to get
inside Cuba and those exuberant mastery that is hidden behind
the man that once dreamed to be a great basket player the day
his hands failed. |
|
| |
|
|
 |
| |
|
|
| |
Barreto, an excellent
percussionist
From one day to
another, orally and by e-mail, Giraldo
Piloto called to pay a tribute to Gullermo Barreto at La
Zorra y el Cuevo Club. A great group of jazz men and jazz
women attended. Logically: Barreto (1929-1991) left an
indelible trace in the Cuban music, not
only as an excellent percussionist but also for his strong
personality.
We must remember his interpretations in the orchestras of
Martínez Brothers, Obdulio Morales and the very famous one
from Tropicana Cabaret conducted by Master Armando Romeu, his
participation in Instrumental Quintet of Modern Music with Frank
Emilio Flynn and Tata Güines, and his mythical recordings
of descarga during the fifties.
Actually the homage was a great descarga with the group of
Orlando Sánchez and the double bass player Jorge Reyes as main
line, and the contribution by musicians of different
generations with special accent on the percussion line headed
by Piloto himself and with important improvisations by Panga,
Mauricio and Mandy among others.
However there were four moments out of this event worthy to
be highlighted: the piano duel between Rolando Luna and Emilio
Morales, the melodic finess by Javier
Zalba in the flute; the extraordinary version in scat of
Son de la loma by Bobby
Carcassés, the vocal improvisation by Josefina Barreto,
Guillermo’s sister, who made many people to remember the time
of enjoying jazz without prejudices and freshness in the
Havana city neighborhood of Santa Amalia. The veteran drummer
would have really enjoyed that feast of honesty and
conviction!
Article by Pedro de la Hoz, taken from
Cubarte.
| |
| |
| :. |
Briefs |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Are you looking for Cuban jazz? Soycubano offers you the
possibility of getting albums of Cuban jazz at incredible
prices, check it by yourself. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
| |
| |
More jazz
music |
| |
|
| |
Enjoy the best Cuban music in our Discuba Shop. The
broadest catalogue of Cuban music |
| |
|
| |
|
|
| |
SoyCubano.com © Copyright
2003. All rigths reserved. Text, graphics, and HTML code are
protected and may not be copied, reprinted, published, or otherwise
distributed by any means without explicit permission. Contact: info@soycubano.com
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
If you do not wish
further newletters from us, please send us email to: newsletter-unsubscribe@listas.soycubano.com |
|
| |
If you wish further
newletters from us, please send us email to: newsletter-subscribe@listas.soycubano.com |
|
| |
|
|
| | |