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Jazz With an Accent

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5 Concerts in Miami this season.

13 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by Fernando González in Jazz, On Music

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1. Marc Ribot. Sept. 25, at Miami-Dade County Auditorium.

Guitarist Marc Ribot has done studio work for and collaborated with artists as disparate as Tom Waits, Wilson Pickett, McCoy Tyner and Andrés Calamaro. On his own work, playing electric or acoustic guitar, Ribot has shown not only a remarkable stylistic range — from rock and noise to jazz and Afro-Cuban music — but also the intelligence and technique to make musical exploration accessible (A populist avant-gardist?).

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Etienne Charles: Jazz as serious fun

28 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by Fernando González in Jazz, On Music

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For all its struggles at the marketplace at home, real and perceived,  jazz has become a global language. And perhaps there is no greater sign of its success than the fact that for musicians around the world, imitation of American musicians and styles has given way to finding their own voice and reinventing jazz by bringing to it their own traditions.

The result has been invigorating for jazz — aesthetically and practically. These musicians are not only broadening the vocabulary of jazz but also bringing a fresh way of relating to audiences.

It’s only fitting then that the third edition of the international Miami Nice Jazz Festival opens Saturday with concerts by Trinidadian trumpeter Etienne Charles and Cuban pianist Roberto Fonseca. (http://www.miaminicejazzfestival.com/)

As players and composers, they have both created distinctly personal styles by drawing from the jazz tradition, but also, brilliantly, from their own musical roots.

Reached in Paris, France, where he was performing, Charles, 31, says that over the years, his definition of jazz has changed “quite significantly, and probably will continue to change.”

“[Saxophonist] Wayne Shorter’s definition was ‘I dare you;’ for others jazz is ‘the sound of surprise, or ‘the art of the moment,” says Charles. “For me it’s a combination of all those things but really, it’s a language. It’s a language that brings people together, a language that can be spoken in many different ways and has developed many dialects.”

His most recent recording, Creole Soul, offers both original music and unexpected versions of songs such as Bob Marley’s “Turn Your Lights Down Low,” Thelonious Monk’s “Green Chimneys” and calypso/soca composer Winsford  ‘Joker’ Devine’s “Memories.” Throughout, Charles draws freely from blues and rocksteady, bebop and kongo, from northern Haiti, or belé, a music from Martinique. Bringing those styles to jazz “shines a different light on both musics, “ he says.

“Jazz is creole music. It combines the experience of the New World. There’s a reason why this music was created here,” he continues. “It’s a celebration of freedom. It’s the African-American experience and, furthermore, the African experience in the New World. It’s little bit of this, a little bit of that. It’s not one thing. It’s many things. ”

For Cuban pianist Roberto Fonseca, making such connections came naturally.

Early in his career, he toured with the Buena Vista Social Club collective and was the pianist and arranger for singer Ibrahim Ferrer. “That experience helped me a lot,” he says. “One thing is to learn the music, but to live it like I lived it with those guys is something very different.”

It’s a deep knowledge of tradition that seems to have freed Fonseca to experiment.

His latest release, Yo (I) is a sophisticated blend of jazz harmonies and improvisation;  rhythms, voices and instruments from various African sources and electronic.

“Since I started composing , I was always interested in mixing [jazz with] African roots music,” says Fonseca, 38, speaking from San Francisco where he was performing. In previous recordings, Fonseca has included clear, direct references to the ritual music of Afro-Cuban Santeria religion. “You could always feel that influence in my music, but never was as present as it is in this album. We wanted to break from what we felt was a completed cycle — and nothing better for that than start from ground zero, in this case, Africa.”

His music has a broad, Pan-African approach evident in pieces such as “Gnawa Stop,” blending Afro-Cuban and North-African music;  “Bibisa,” which draws from mande music from Mali; “Quien Soy Yo,” which starts like a turbo-charged danzón, before setting up a dense weave of African and Cuban elements, or the powerful “Chabani,” which includes Arabic singing over dense Moroccan and Afro-Cuban grooves and dissonant, Cecil Taylor-inspired clusters .

And on his way to meet the world, Fonseca found home.

“Sometimes, in searching for your own style you get farther away from who you really are. Sometimes your own style is right there, where you were born.”

But just as important, these musicians are not only bringing to jazz new elements drawn from their indigenous styles but a refreshing attitude. Somewhere along the line, jazz lost touch with the dance floor and having a good time became not only an unnecessary frill but something to be wary of. Despite a tradition built on figures such as Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie and Duke Ellington, creative, ambitious  jazz somehow became at odds with also providing a fun night out — and it has paid a steep price for it.

Both Charles and Fonseca approach their writing and performance with their audience in mind.

Never mind smart marketing, for Charles, “That’s the way we play music [back home].”

“I grew up playing in a steel band,” says Charles, who played alongside his father, a deejay and steel pan player, in the Phase II Pan Groove Orchestra. “For me, music has always been about making people move. For us it’s a great compliment when people start dancing. They become part of the music, they start to improvise with us. For me, it’s about people dancing, having a good time — without us sacrificing the quality of the music for it.”

Even as he comes from a different tradition, Fonseca concurs.

“It used to be that jazz was dance music, and that has been lost,” he says. “Part of the blame is on us, the musicians. We somehow forgot that music is for interacting, is to be shared with the audience.  It’s beautiful to see people at a jazz concert dancing and enjoying themselves. That’s’ important to me. I want the people listening to feel what I feel, to hear the heartbeat of the music and get up and move.”

The Miami Herald, October 2014

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New Jazz Frontiers / Jazz @ Lincoln Center

12 Friday Sep 2014

Posted by Fernando González in Home, Jazz, On Music

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programa_playbill

Jazz at Lincoln Center
The Appel Room
Frederick P. Rose Hall

New Jazz Frontiers

ORLANDO “MARACA” VALLE, Flute
EDMAR CASTANEDA, Harp
EDWARD SIMON, Piano
LUQUES CURTIS, Bass
DANIEL FREEDMAN, Drums, Percussion

Notes on the Program
Fernando González

“Jazz is dead” is one of the evergreens in jazz literature. Yet for all the challenges, real and perceived facing jazz in the cultural marketplace, the real story for the past few decades has been the triumph of jazz.

Once a novelty (and a U.S. diplomatic tool) around the globe, jazz has become a lingua franca. Ambassadors such as Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman, Duke Ellington, and Dave Brubeck took jazz in seemingly every direction, defying language barriers and Cold War borders, fostering generations of fans and musicians.

This not only opened new markets for jazz (and fostered goodwill towards the United States), but also, in time, produced a few exceptional contributors. However, as with basketball (another U.S. cultural product that has gone global), foreigners are no longer a curiosity, but are becoming key players – and like in basketball, they are changing the game.
It might seem paradoxical, but there is no greater sign of the success of jazz than that while musicians around the world are still studying and celebrating the jazz canon and its creators, many are also already looking past them. For some, emulation and imitation have given way to a search for their own vocabulary, bringing the tools and spirit of jazz to their own musical traditions.

“Music is always a product of the times, and this is one positive aspect of globalization. Jazz is a sort of Esperanto for musicians around the world,’’ said once Cuban reedman Paquito D’Rivera, a champion of this process in both jazz and Latin jazz. “It has always been that and it’s become more so as time passes.”

This is at the essence of this evening’s Jazz at Lincoln Center program New Jazz Frontiers.
The concert features an exceptional group comprising harpist Edmar Castañeda (Colombia), flutist Orlando “Maraca” Valle (Cuba), pianist Edward Simon (Venezuela), bassist Luques Curtis, and drummer/percussionist Daniel Freedman (both from the United States), and the point is made not only by the different traditions – both received and learned– present on stage, but also the fact that these musicians have not played together as a group before tonight.

Jazz is their common language.
“A lot of the young cats playing jazz these days are coming from different countries. They are
not just from New York or Chicago,” says Curtis, who was born in Hartford, CT and came of age as a jazz musician playing both straightahead jazz and Latin music. “And I think they just naturally bring their own music and it all melts into jazz.”
Perhaps because, after all, jazz was born as a Made-in-America global blend, there is an openness, a generosity, and a plasticity in jazz that not only accepts the world but embraces it.
“I think what interests most musicians about jazz is the level of sophistication in the improvisation,” says Simon, who immersed himself in the U.S. jazz scene before developing his own, rich fusion of jazz and Venezuelan and European classical music.
“You have improvisation in Latin America and around the world—but jazz has developed [it] to a really high level. To discover that we can combine that very sophisticated way of improvising with the music of our native countries is exhilarating.
“Then, conceptually, there’s a certain attitude that you have to have to play jazz. Breaking the rules and stretching boundaries has allowed this music to thrive and evolve—and it’s what makes jazz so exciting for both the listener and the player. And finally, what really makes jazz unique and so beautiful is the interaction between the musicians playing it. It’s something that happens at such a high level—and there is nothing like it in any other music.”

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