The Esthetics of Too Much at Global Cuba Fest

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Pianist Rolando Luna with Felipe Lamoglia, sax, Jose Armando Gola, bass, and Jonathan Joseph, drums, at Miami-Dade Auditorium, Saturday, part of Global Cuba Fest 2024 Photo Fernando Gonzalez ©

The performances by Cuban pianists Ernan López Nussa and Rolando Luna and their groups at Miami Dade Auditorium on Saturday were an at times impressive but ultimately unsatisfying bookend to this year’s Global Cuba Fest, which opened with a concert by pianist Omar Sosa the previous weekend.

López Nussa, who is in his mid-60s, has blended formal classical training, a passion for jazz, and Cuban music into an original and organic style. His distinguished career includes being part of landmark fusion groups such as Afrocuba and Cuarto Espacio and also accompanying singer-songwriter Silvio Rodríguez. Since then, he has had a notable solo career. Luna, in his mid-40s, came relatively late to the piano, having studied guitar before “discovering” the instrument. He made up for lost time in a hurry. He mixed formal piano schooling and a bandstand education that included substantial stints with singer Omara Portuondo,  the Buena Vista Social Club, and salsa star Isaac Delgado. Just for good measure, in 2007, Luna won the jazz competition at the Montreux Jazz Festival.

Both are capable of lightning-fast single-note runs, turn-on-a-dime rhythmic and harmonic developments, and slyly quote “The Star Spangled Banner” and “El Manisero” on the fly or use George Shearing, Maria Teresa Vera, Debussy, The Bee Gees, or, in the case of López Nussa, Bach, and Chopin, as the take-off point for their variations (López Nussa called them his musical “interventions”). Along the way, they colored every picture and filled every space.
But that you can do all that doesn’t mean you should do all that.
It might dazzle some people at first, but the approach inevitably brings diminishing returns — which is what happened on Saturday.

The difference between a good player and an exceptional artist is often measured not by what they play but by what they choose not to play.
The right silence at the right time can speak volumes — and so can its absence.

The Pianist Vanishes. The tragic fate of Tenorio Jr.

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Tenorio Jr. at the piano. Photo credit: Javier Mariscal. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Brazilian pianist Francisco Cerqueira Tenorio Jr., better known as Tenorio Jr., was at the beginning of a promising career when he vanished after playing the final concert of poet Vinicius de Moraes’s tour in Buenos Aires in March 1976. He was 34 years old.

They Shot the Piano Player, the new animated film directed by Spanish Academy winner Fernando Trueba and visual artist and graphic designer Javier Mariscal premiering at the Coral Gables Art Cinema in Miami on March 1st, is a music lover’s search for a response to the obvious question and more.

Trueba, a dedicated music fan whose previous animated feature film collaboration with Mariscal, “Chico y Rita,” was also about music and musicians, chose animation to tell the story because he “wanted Tenorio Jr. to feel alive.”

“That Rio where Tenorio came of age musically, those clubs, don’t exist anymore. I wanted that vitality and people to understand the context in which he moved,” said Trueba, speaking in Spanish from his home in Madrid. “And for me, that I love Brazilian music, it was an opportunity to explore the Brazil of the late 50s, early 60s, which was perhaps the country’s highest point.”

They Shot the Piano Player follows music journalist Jeff Harris, voiced by actor and pianist Jeff Goldblum. While researching to write a book about bossa nova, Harris, Trueba’s alter ego, hears an album featuring Tenorio Jr. He is deeply impressed but can’t find any recording by him after 1975, and becomes obsessed with his fate.

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Omar Sosa: Many Music Languages, One World

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Photo © by David Sproule, courtesy of Otá Records

The Global Cuba Fest is an annual event by two Miami-based non-profit arts presenters, Fundarte and the Miami Light Project, and celebrates the Cuban diaspora’s rhythms, music, and culture. Cuban pianist and composer Omar Sosa, the headliner at the opening night at the Miami Beach Bandshell on Saturday, March 2, embodies the spirit and ambition of the event. (Two other exceptional Cuban pianists, Ernán López Nussa and Rolando Luna, headline the second night of Global Cuba Fest on Saturday, March 9 )

For Sosa, who will appear with his new Quarteto Americanos, his identity as a Cuban of African descent remains a starting point for exploring a pan-African culture without borders.

His career spans 30 years, has been documented in 35 releases thus far, and his work has been recognized with four GRAMMYs and three Latin GRAMMYs nominations. He continues collaborating with an impressive list of North American, African, Arabic, European, Indian, and Latin musicians, treating post-bop jazz and cha-cha-chá, hip hop, rhythms of the Moroccan Gnawa tradition, or ritual music of the Orisha religion as different expressions of shared African roots. By connecting seemingly disparate sources and exploring old traditions with a contemporary approach, he often suggests conversations among long-lost relatives.

The results then are not just surprising but illuminating.

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