Andy González, Bassist Extraordinaire and Latin Music Champion, Dies at 69.

Andy González, for the past half-century, one of the premier bass players in Latin music, died in the Bronx, New York, Thursday. According to his sister, Eileen González-Altomari, quoted by The New York Times, the causes were pneumonia and complications of diabetes. He was 69.

González had long made his mark as a key member of The Fort Apache Band, a group he founded with his late brother, trumpeter and conguero Jerry Gonzalez; and also Conjunto Libre, a stellar dance-music band led by timbalero Manny Oquendo but which González helped found and direct.

“The Fort Apache Band is the most important ensemble in the history of Latin Jazz,” said multi-Grammy winning pianist, composer and bandleader Arturo O’Farrill, founder and director of the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra. “They could stop a groove and turn around on a dime. They could go from an Art Blakey swing to a guaguancó on a dime, and it was as authentic as if you had two different bands. Nobody in the history of this music had as much respect for both traditions as these guys.”

And yet, Gonzalez’s influence is broader and more profound than that.

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Pianist Chucho Valdés Facebook Live Mini-Concert, Tomorrow Tuesday

Chucho Valdés performing “Caridad Amaro,” a tribute to his beloved, and very influential, grandmother, at the Victoires du Jazz Festival 2010. 

Cuban pianist, composer, and bandleader Chucho Valdés will offer a solo mini-concert from his home in South Florida tomorrow, Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. EST.
It will be his fourth free online concert.

“Some people have asked me why I do this because, after all, I’m not getting paid. And I tell them that what happens in these concerts is for me more valuable than money,” said Valdés in a phone conversation earlier this afternoon. “The comments I get, the beautiful responses, the gratitude, it’s all so stimulating. No money can buy that.”

Click on the image below to access the performance.

The repertoire on these performances is never pre-planned.
“Sometimes when I’m at the piano I remember something I like or something I haven’t played in a while and then, I talk about it,” he explained. “I prefer doing it this way: it’s organic, free.”

As for the experience of inviting the world to his home to hear him play, “it’s different,” he said. “It’s not the first time I do something like this and still, it’s an incredible feeling. I just got a call from Clarín [a newspaper in Argentina] and I reminded them that in 2003 I played two concerts at Teatro Colón [in Buenos Aires]. One was a solo piano concert, the other with a symphony orchestra, and in total, 5,000 people were there. Great. But the first online concert [on March 17] was seen by 250,000 people. It’s a global concert, and you get the feeling that you are reaching out well beyond your regular audience.”

Besides, “I enjoy a lot playing at home,” he said. “And here I’m playing for myself, doing what I want to do, but at the same time, I’m sharing it with so many people who are, like me, locked-in in their homes. Maybe this will bring them some calm, some reassurance.”
“This virus doesn’t differentiate. It doesn’t matter if you are rich or poor, white or black, and it doesn’t care about where you are. It’s time to realize we are all one people and we need to come together.”

 

 

Cuban Pianist Roberto Fonseca Performs on Livestreaming Music Festival From Havana Saturday

Cuban pianist Roberto Fonseca performs in the weekend-long online festival “Tunturuntu pa ‘tu casa,” from Havana, Cuba, in an Instagram Live concert tomorrow Saturday, 5:30 to 6 p.m. EST time.

This weekend’s performances represent the second installment of the event, the first live streaming music festival from Cuba. The previous edition took place on March 18 to 22 and featured artists such as Cimafunk, Daymé Arocena, and Alain Pérez. This weekend´s announced performers include Dayramir González, Zule Guerra, Haila María Mompié, Luna Manzanares and Suylén Milanés. Only today´s schedule was available at Tunturuntu´s site.

The event was organized by Tunturuntu, a cultural platform, in collaboration with Fonoma, a phone recharge service. Each artist offers his or her performance on their personal platform.

Having an online festival from Cuba is a testament to the Cubans’ ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit, especially when considering the troubled history and high cost of accessing the web from the island. In fact, in a story on Fonoma’s blog, writer Jose Raul notes that “the high cost of internet in Cuba, it’s an obstacle for the festival’s impact on the island, but is important that the message gets to everyone: stay at home, connect with your family, your friends and with music.”

Sound advice — in Cuba and wherever you are reading this. Stay safe.