Showing posts with label latin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label latin. Show all posts

24 October, 2011

Astor Piazzolla - Tangazo (2001)

Astor Piazzolla - Tangazo (2001)
Charles Dutoit,  D Binelli, O S Montreal
latin, classical, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Decca
Musicweb:
The Argentine tango began as the music of the dispossessed marginalised class of the poorer port areas of Buenos Aires yet it found acceptance first in England, France and the United States before it received universal recognition in Argentina - and not just by the underclasses but universally as symbol of national pride, national aspiration, and national sorrow.
The bandoneon is a square-built button accordion invented in Germany in the 1840s but eventually taken up in Buenos Aires as the chief instrument of the tango bands. Piazzolla studied traditional classical music with Alberto Ginastera and with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. His distinctive brand of tango - "tango nuevo" – is characterised by chromaticism, dissonance, and elements of jazz so Piazzolla’s compositions for large ensemble, as in this collection, is a fusion of traditional tango, jazz and classical music. Dutoit’s Montreal players and his soloists capture the vivid colour and sensuality of these works perfectly.
The tango melody of Adós Noninio is probably Piazzolla’s best known work and certainly the most frequently performed. It was written, in 1959, in fond memory of his father who died after complications following a street accident. This orchestral arrangement, dating from 1981, begins unsettlingly and somewhat abrasively with rasping percussion before the mood mellows and becomes affectionate and nostalgic. The Milonga del ángel is a soft sensual slow moving tango, very atmospheric suggesting a sultry moonlight night, with gossamer boudoir curtains billowing gently. Oblivion has the oboe murmuring a plaintive song of yearning against luscious mid-range string harmonies with the bandoneon commenting and picking its way through the texture. Danza criolla breaks the spell: it is wild and abandoned, bouncing along joyfully in resplendent colours. Tangazo, without bandoneon, is intense and densely constructed with a slow and ruminative, almost tragic, opening that gives way to high spirited and humorous material dancing away, the rhythms infectious and the orchestration inventive. This joy alternates with slower passionately romantic tango figures.
There are two three-movement works. The Double Concerto for Bandoneon and Guitar adroitly contrasts and blends the two instruments. The Introduction is introspective and slightly melancholy, the Milonga voluptuous and the Tango lively. More impressive and imaginative is the purely orchestral Tres movimentos tanguisticos porteños. It opens on a furtive, almost sinister note then a piano figure announces a seductive challenge with the tango figures passing through a variety of moods: pensive, torrid - even an exotic jungle excursion might be imagined. The Moderato central movement is tenderly nostalgic but moodily seductive too with tempo and rhythm gradually heating. The jungle evocation is recalled, giving way to material that might suggest a sophisticated dinner party with the guests suffering a certain ennui. The Vivace concluding movement is a proud tango employing fugal figures, colourful glissandi, and bouncing rhythms pegged by bold timpani rolls. A work that invites your imagination run riot.
Hedonistic, exotically coloured tango music in vivid orchestral dress played with conviction and enthusiasm. Just the thing to banish dull winter blues.

Tracks
-1. "Adiós Nonino - 8:53
-2. "Milonga del ángel - 7:46
-3. "Double Concerto for bandoneón, guitar - 16:59
-4. "Oblivion - 4:45
-5. "Tres movimientos tanguísticos portenos - 20:43
-6. "Danza criolla - 2:26
-7. "Tangazo - 14:10

Performers
* Daniel Binelli (bandoneon)
* Eduardo Isaac (guitar)
* Louise Pellerin
* Orchestre Symphonique de Montrea,l Conducted by Charles Dutoit
(Recorded Église St-Eustache, Montreal – 18th May 2000)

24 August, 2011

Antonio Carlos Jobim, Gal Costa - Rio Revisited (1987)

Antonio Carlos Jobim, Gal Costa - Rio Revisited (1987)
jazz | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 260MB
Verve
Allmusic:
Recorded at a video taping in the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles as part of the Jazzvisions series, this was Jobim's live act shortly after he resumed touring in the mid-'80s. At the time, Jobim struck an avuncular, almost casually anti-show-business presence seated before a grand piano, presiding over a large ensemble composed of friends and family, singing in his endearingly rough, now-threadbare voice. Some of the performances here are little more than pro-forma run-throughs of standard Jobim oldies but things perk up when Jobim digs into some lesser-known compositions like his "Song of the Jet" and son Paulo's catchy "Samba do Soho." In any case, the material is always superb and the cool-voiced, always in-pitch Brazilian singer Gal Costa turns up on a few numbers.

Tracks
-01. "One Note Samba" - Hendricks, Jobim, Mendonca - 3:07
-02. "Desafinado" - Cavanaugh, Hendricks, Jobim - 3:00
-03. "Agua de Beber" - DeMoraes, Jobim - 3:48
-04. "Dindi" - Jobim - 4:59
-05. "Wave" - Jobim, Jobim - 2:49
-06. "Chega de Saudade" - DeMoraes, Jobim - 3:48
-07. "Two Kites" - Jobim - 4:53
-08. "Samba Do Soho" - Bastos, Jobim - 3:38
-09. "Sabiá" - Gimbel, Jobim - 3:20
-10. "Samba Do Aviao" - DeMoraes, Jobim - 3:23
-11. "Aguas de Marco (Waters of March)" - Jobim, Jobim - 4:08
-12. "Corcovado" - Jobim, Lees - 3:05
Bill Graham's Wiltern Theatre, Los Angeles, CA (1987)

Personnel
* Gal Costa (vocals);
* Antonio Carlos Jobim (vocals, piano);
* Paulo Jobim (vocals, guitar);
* Maúcha Adnet, Paula Morelenbaum, Ana Lontra Jobim, Elizabeth Jobim, Simone Caymmi (vocals);
* Jaques Morelenbaum (cello);
* Danilo Caymmi (flute);
* Paulinho Braga, Paulo Braga (drums).

25 May, 2011

Piazzolla - Tangos Arranged for Saxophone and Orchestra (1999)

Piazzolla - Tangos Arranged for Saxophone and Orchestra (1999)
F. Mondelci: sax; Moscow Camber Orchesta, C Orbelian cond
classical, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Delos Records
NY Times:
The sax is a particularly good instrument for Piazzolla's music: like the tango, it is sexy, steamy and evocative, perfect listening for hot summer nights. Mondelci, playing baritone, tenor and soprano saxophones, brings a rich, jazzy appeal to Piazzolla's hauntingly beautiful melodies; he seems to have a real feel for the music's power and gutsiness, as well as its gentle tenderness.
Amazon:
Federico Mondelci and the strings of the Moscow Chamber Orchestra have collectively caught the tango bug and dedicated an entire program to Piazzolla here. Suddenly strings and saxophone alike have become inflamed with a new and beautiful fever that manifests itself in shivers, secrets, palpitations, flowing silences, triumphs and tears that crackle beneath the music's dark surface, merging in an elegant and intense unity like the balance of reason and passion.
Mondelci has reworked Piazzolla's music with originality and fantasy, clothing it in the same instinctive elegance with which the muted yet penetrating tone of his saxophone recalls the bandoneon's haughty languors. With deft affection, Mondelci's devotion, professionalism, and sheer love of his instrument share the same intuition that tormented and motivated the young Piazzolla: the need to completely rethink -- but always with respect and admiration -- a music that already existed, and to reweave its thematic material according to his own sensibilities and creative imperatives.
Mondelci has succeeded magnificently in blending intimacy and distance, plenitude and emptiness, bombast and lyricism, and he has done so with arranging so intelligent as to be imperceptible.
From the overflowing vessel of melodies written and recorded by Piazzolla for various ensembles and purposes, Mondelci, in this anthology-like sequence, has accomplished a new and sophisticated interweaving of orchestra and soloist, where profane angels, loosed from their urban shackles, are free to sing of their ardent dreams of a most human resurrection.

Tracks
-01. "Libertango (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 4:45
-02. "Adios Nonino (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:39
-03. "Cierra tus ojos escucha (Close your eyes and listen) (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:39
-04. "Revirado (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:47
-05. "Milonga del angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:50
-06. "La Muerte del angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 2:24
-07. "Resurrecction del Angel (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:58
-08. "Violentango (arr. saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 3:21
-09. "Melody in A minor" - Mondelci" - 4:58
-10. "Anos de Soledad (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 4:26
-11. "Meditango (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 6:23
-12. "Oblivion (arr. for saxophone and orchestra)" - Mondelci - 5:53

16 May, 2011

Antonio Carlos Jobim - Wave (1967) (eac-log-cover)

Antonio Carlos Jobim - Wave (1967)
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 190MB
A&M
Allmusic:
When Creed Taylor left Verve/MGM for his own label under the auspices of A&M, he quickly signed Antonio Carlos Jobim and they picked up right where they left off with this stunningly seductive record, possibly Jobim's best. Jobim contributes his sparely rhythmic acoustic guitar, simple melodic piano style, a guest turn at the harpsichord, and even a vocal on "Lamento," while Claus Ogerman lends a romantically brooding hand with the charts. A pair of instant standards are introduced ("Wave," "Triste"), but this album is to be cherished for its absolutely first-rate tunes -- actually miniature tone poems -- that escaped overexposure and thus sound fresh today. The most beautiful sleeper is "Batidinha," where the intuitive Jobim/Ogerman collaboration reaches its peak. One only wishes that this album were longer; 31:45 is not enough.

Tracks
-01. "Wave" – 2:58
-02. "The Red Blouse" – 5:06
-03. "Look to the Sky" – 2:20
-04. "Batidinha" – 3:15
-05. "Triste" – 2:04
-06. "Mojave" – 2:23
-07. "Diálogo" – 2:52
-08. "Lamento" (lyrics by Vinicius de Moraes) – 2:44
-09. "Antigua" – 3:10
-10. "Captain Bacardi" – 4:30
All songs composed by Antonio Carlos Jobim.

Personnel
* piano, guitar, celeste, harpsichord: Antonio Carlos Jobim
* violin: Bernard Eichen, Lewis Eley, Paul Gershman, Louis Haber, Julius Held, Emanuel Green, Leo Kruczek, Harry Lookofsky, Joseph Malignaggi, Irving Spice, Louis Stone, Emanuel Green, Harry Lookofsky, Joseph Malignaggi, Raoul Poliakin, Gene Orloff
* cello: Harvey Shapiro, George Ricci, Charles McCracken, Abe Kessler
* trombone: Urbie Green, Jimmy Cleveland
* flute, piccolo: Raymond Beckenstein, Romeo Penque, Jerome Richardson
* bass: Ron Carter
* french horn: Joseph Singer
* drums: Claudio Slon, Dom Um Romao, Bobby Rosengarden
* arranger/conductor: Claus Ogerman

14 February, 2011

Antonio Carlos Jobim - Tide (1970) (2000rem) (eac-log-cover)

Antonio Carlos Jobim - Tide (1970)
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 420MB
Verve By Request series | rem: 2000
Allmusic:
On Jobim's second A&M album, Eumir Deodato takes over the chart-making tasks, and the difference between him and Claus Ogerman is quite apparent in the remake of "The Girl From Ipanema": the charts are heavier, more dramatic, and structured. Sometimes the arrangements roll back so one can hear, say, the dancing multi-phonic flute of wildman Hermeto Pascoal on "Tema Jazz," and the rhythms often veer away from the familiar ticking of the bossa nova. Jobim is his usual understated self, adding very subtle electric piano to his arsenal of acoustic piano and guitar, but the material sometimes falls short of Jobim's tip-top level (dead giveaway: "Tide" is a clever rewrite on the chord changes of "Wave"). Still, it's beautifully made and very musical at all times.

Tracks
-01. "The Girl from Ipanema" (Vinicius de Moraes, Norman Gimbel, Antonio Carlos Jobim) –4:53
-02. "Carinhoso" (Pedro Berrios, Carlos Braga, João de Barro, Pixinguinha) –2:49
-03. "Tema Jazz" –4:36
-04. "Sue Ann" –3:05
-05. "Remember" –4:04
-06. "Tide" –4:06
-07. "Takatanga" –4:44
-08. "Caribe" –2:44
-09. "Rockanalia" –4:48
-10. "Tema Jazz" –2:58
-11. "Tide" –4:09
-12. "Tema Jazz" –5:49
-13. "Tema Jazz" –8:15
* Tracks 10-13 alternate takes included with 2001 CD reissue.
* All songs written by Antonio Carlos Jobim except where indicated.

* Recorded at the Van Gelder Recording Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey between March 16 and May 22, 1970. Originally released on A&M (3031).

Personnel
Antonio Carlos Jobim (guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, electric piano); Frederick Buldrini, Max Polikoff, David Nadien, Matthew Raimondi, Harry Katzman, Emanuel Green, Harry Lookofsky (violin); Al Brown, Harold Coletta (viola); Charles McCracken , George Ricci (cello); Joe Farrell (flute, bass flute, soprano saxophone); Hubert Laws, Hermeto Pascoal, Romeo Penque (flute); Marvin Stamm, Burt Collins (trumpet); Joseph DeAngelis, Ray Alonge (French horn); Garnett Brown, Urbie Green (trombone); Deodato (piano); Joao Palma (drums); Everaldo Ferreira (congas); Airto Moreira (percussion).

10 February, 2011

Mercedes Sosa (Ariel Ramirez) - Misa Criolla (1999) (eac-log-cover)

Mercedes Sosa - Misa Criolla (1999)
Ariel Ramirez: Misa Criolla; Ramirez-Luna: Navidad Nuestra
latin, traditional, sacred | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 260MB
Decca | 1999
Amazon customers:
Too bad it isn't possible to listen to sample tracks from this CD, because I think anyone who hears the first 30 seconds of this magnificent Misa will want it at once. Today I'm buying it for the fourth time - I give them as gifts to my favorite people. Play it on a stereo with good bass response and be prepared for an extraordinary experience. Mercedes Sosa is always amazing, and this CD is Mercedes Sosa at her very best.
-
I've just listened to this album again and I thought I had to tell the world how great it is. How is it possible that every time I listen to it my heart beats faster and tears roll over my face? There is no way without falling short of words to describe the beauty and heavenly perfection of this opus. Unless you like Britney-like pop, you will instantly fall for this-
the songs
They are all perfect. Ariel Ramirez, who wrote the music, is one of the most talented musicians in the world. Every melody has the power to evoke emotions and feelings almost in a supernatural way. Plus, each song is an example of different styles within argentinean traditional music. Still, the entire opus belts out an incredible integrity that makes you look upon it as a whole.
the voice
Mercedes Sosa: one of (if not the most) powerful voices on Earth. She recorded this album at 65! and still she can pull off outstanding performances with her strong, contralto voice. You have to listen to it at full volume, and you'll get thrills.
the choir
A perfect set of argentinean voices. They can easily handle the subtleties that this exceptional music requires.
the arrangements
Whenever you first listen to this album, you will recognize an outstanding talent. The Misa Criolla was first recorded in the 1970's, and the man who plays the charango in this version is the same old man that did it 30 years ago. Everything was put together so that the result is utterly flawless.

Tracks
-01. "Misa Criolla: Kyrie" Dominio Público, Ramirez - 4:59
-02. "Misa Criolla: Gloria" Dominio Público, Ramirez - 8:21
-03. "Misa Criolla: Credo" Dominio Público, Ramirez - 3:23
-04. "Misa Criolla: Sanctus" Dominio Público, Ramirez - 3:06
-05. "Misa Criolla: Agnus Dei" Dominio Público, Ramirez - 3:19
-06. "Navidad Nuestra: La Anunciación" Luna, Ramirez - 2:08
-07. "Navidad Nuestra: La Peregrinación" Luna, Ramirez - 3:52
-08. "Navidad Nuestra: El Nacimiento" Luna, Ramirez - 3:15
-09. "Navidad Nuestra: Los Pastores" Luna, Ramirez - 3:05
-10. "Navidad Nuestra: Los Reyes Magos" Luna, Ramirez - 2:17
-11. "Navidad Nuestra: La Huida" Luna, Ramirez - 3:54

23 September, 2010

Charlie Byrd - Byrd By The Sea (1974) (eac-log-cover)

Charlie Byrd - Byrd By The Sea (1974)
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 370MB
Fantasy | rel:2000
AMG:
Mild, smooth trio date with Byrd playing light jazz, occasional Afro-Latin, and even a mock classical number, backed by bassist Joe Byrd and drummer Bertell Knox. This sometimes comes close to, but never becomes, mood music. The 2000 reissue approximately doubles the length of the original release with seven previously unissued tracks (none alternate versions) cut at the same live sessions. The extra material is stylistically consistent with the rest of the disc, encompassing pop ("The Way We Were"), classic jazz ("It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)"), Vivaldi's "Concerto in G," and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "Meditation."

Tracks:
01- Wave - (Antonio Carlos Jobim)(5:09)
02- I'm Coming Virginia - (Will Marion Cook, Donald Heywood)(5:20)
03- Killing Me Softly With His Song - (harles Fox, Norman Gimbel)(5:05)
04- Fantasy in B Minor - (Charlie Byrd) (5:52)
05- Salty Dog - (Papa Charlie Jackson, Reverend Charlie Jackson)(5:45)
06- Chiquilin de Bachin - (Astor Piazzolla, Horacio Ferrer)(4:26)
07- Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) - (John Lennon, Paul McCartney)(6:13)
08- Ela Me Deixou - (Benito DiPaula)(5:04)
09- Cherry [*] - (Don Redman)(5:02)
10- The Way We Were [*] - (Marvin Hamlisch, Alan Bergman)(3:12)
11- Concerto in G [*] - (Antonio Vivaldi)(4:43)
12- Love Is in the Air [*] -(Gustavo, Santos, Dos Santos-Gustavo)(3:40)
13- Meditation (Meditaçao) [*] -(Norman Gimbel, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Newton Mendonça)(3:59)
14- This Can't Be Love [*] -(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) (3:14)
15- It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing) - (Irving Mills, Duke Ellington)(3:49)

Recorded: March 1-3, 1974, Hermosa Beach, CA.

Personnel:
Charlie Byrd- guitar
Joe Byrd- acoustic & electric bass
Bertell Knox- drums

21 September, 2010

Ray Barretto - Portraits In Jazz And Clave (1999) (eac-log-cover)

Ray Barretto  & New World Spirit - Portraits In Jazz And Clave (1999)
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 360MB
BMG | rel:2000
AMG:
In this program of mainly Afro-Cubanized jazz standards, conga man Barretto assembled an all-star group of friends to complement his regular working New World Spirit band. The icons include longtime friend Kenny Burrell, whose guitar playing is a key component in the makeup of every selection. Bassist Eddie Gomez, tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano and trombonist Steve Turre join such up-and-coming younger musicians as trumpeter John Bailey, saxophonist Adam Kolker and pianist John DiMartino. Second percussionist Bobby Sanabria is alongside, as is the oustanding trap drummer and longtime Barretto bandmate Vince Cherico. The recording is bookended by Duke Ellington's music. It's front-loaded with "The Mooche," ignited by a simmering bass and left-hand piano ostinato plucked from Horace Silver's "Senor Blues." Conch-shell moans from Turre and punchy congas intro this classic, with Burrell's second melody lead and horns on the first and third. "Cotton Tail" is a good swinger with Latin underpinnings and loads of Burrell (refer to Burrell and Barretto on Burrell's classic Blue Note date Midnight Blue). At the end of the CD is the lesser-known "Oclupaca," taken as a steamy cha-cha. Also included is Billy Strayhorn's Johnny Come Lately," which has clave/mambo rhythms buoying echoed trumpet and tenor lines talking back and forth. The interplay of this counterpoint is stunning, again kicked off by the fuse of Burrell's guitar. There's the fluttery horn intro and dueling tenors on John Coltrane's "Like Sonny," the slight tango-ish "Lamento Borincano" and its heavy dose of Latin Burrell, and the laid-back horns setting up demure-to-forceful piano by DiMartino on Wayne Shorter's "Go." Then there's Thelonious Monk's brisk and brusque "I Mean You," cooked by the unison horns to golden brown perfection with claves, montuno piano and a patented deft bass solo from the brilliant Gomez. A most Afro-Cuban "Cancion del Fuego Fatuo" is quite subtle, Burrell again the focal point with much to say beneath and above the surface. Of the many fine recordings Barretto has produced in the past 30 years as a leader, this ranks right up in the top three, due to the undeniable musicianship of his select guests, the innate ability of his own band, and the meticulous selection of jazz pieces whipped into tangy salsa. It's a winning, highly recommended combination.

Tracks:
01- The Mooche 6:56
02- Cotton Tail 5:31
03- Johnny Come Lately 5:27
04- Cancion del Fuego Fatuo 7:16
05- I Mean You 6:40
06- Go 7:57
07- Like Sonny 4:34
08- Lamento Borincano 7:16
09- Oclupaca 6:06

Personnel:
* Bobby Sanabria* Percussion
* Steve Turre* Trombone, Shells
* Vince Cherico* Drums
* John Di Martino* Piano
* Adam Koker* Sax (Soprano), Sax (Tenor)
* John Bailey* Trumpet
* Kenny Burrell* Guitar
* Adam Kolker* Saxophone
* Ray Barretto* Conga, Producer, Editing, Mastering, Mixing
* Eddie Gomez* Bass
* Joe Lovano* Saxophone, Sax (Tenor)

19 September, 2010

Antonio Carlos Jobim 1993 - Antonio Carlos Jobim and Friends (1993) (eac-log-cover)

Antonio Carlos Jobim 1993 - Antonio Carlos Jobim and Friends (1993)
Live at the Free Jazz Festival in Sao Paulo
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 460MB
Verve | rel: 1996
AMG:
Jobim made his last Brazilian concert appearance -- and the penultimate one of his life -- at this warm, star-studded affair in which American jazz musicians jetted down to the Free Jazz Festival in São Paulo to pay effusive homage. The miracle is how easily the jazzers were able to capture the yearning essence of Jobim's idiom without really compromising their own distinct styles. Thus, Joe Henderson welds his trademark unpredictable flurries into the cool tenor sax bossa nova tradition, Shirley Horn does "Once I Loved" in her own inimitable manner that matches the mood of the song perfectly, Jon Hendricks' scatting fits the samba like a glove. The pianists go somewhat outside the idiom -- Herbie Hancock's modern complexity, Gonzalo Rubalcaba's technical fireworks laced with Afro-Cuban salsa -- but they stay within their orbits around the Jobim sun. The composer himself only appears on the last four tracks -- he sounds weary and ill -- yet he radiates his gentle warmth and spirit throughout the evening.

Tracks:
01- Prelude: Inútil Paisagem/Triste/Esperanca Perdida [medley] (Jobim) - 8:27
02- Ela e Carioca (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 6:21
03- The Boy from Ipanema (DeMoraes, Gimbel, Jobim) - 2:40
04- Once I Loved (O Amor en Paz) (DeMoraes, Gilbert, Jobim) - 5:28
05- O Grande Amor (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 9:26
06- Chega de Saudade (No More Blues) (Cavanaugh, DeMoraes ...) - 5:21
07- Agua de Beber (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 6:02
08- A Felicidade (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 4:55
09- Se Todos Fossem Iguais a Você (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 5:04
10- Luiza (Jobim) - 3:27
11- Wave (Jobim, Jobim) - 4:23
12- Caminhos Cruzados (Mendonca) - 4:28
13- Finale: The Girl from Ipanema (DeMoraes, Jobim) - 7:54

Personnel:

Antonio Carlos Jobim, Shirley Horn (vocals, piano); Gal Costa, Jon Hendricks (vocals); Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone); Herbie Hancock (piano, keyboards); Gonzalo Rubalcaba (piano); Oscar Castro-Neves, Paulo Jobim (guitar); Ron Carter (bass); Harvey Mason (drums); Alex Acuna (percussion).
thx to Musicgate

29 August, 2010

Marc Ribot y Los Cubanos Postizos - Muy Divertido! (2000) (eac-log-cover)

Marc Ribot y Los Cubanos Postizos - Muy Divertido! (Very Entertaining!) (2000)
jazz, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 290MB
Atlantic | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Regrouping his Latin backing band Los Cubanos Postizos, Marc Ribot offers a sequel to his 1998 Arsenio Rodriguez tribute The Prosthetic Cubans in Muy Divertido! ("very entertaining"). While there are once again a few songs penned by Rodriguez, there's also a greater variety of composers represented, including three Ribot originals. Ribot's angular, visceral guitar style adds rock drive and avant-garde edge to these deep Latin grooves, and Anthony Coleman's spacy organ work adds a playfully strange texture to some tracks. Overall, it's a worthy follow-up for anyone who enjoyed the first installment.

Tracks:
01. "Dame un cachito pa' huele" (Arsenio Rodríguez) – 3:15
02. "Las lomas de New Jersey" (Marc Ribot) – 4:37
03. "El gaucho rojo" (Ribot) – 5:55
04. "Obsesión" (Pedro Flores) – 4:20
05. "El divorcio" (Rodriguez) – 3:44
06. "Se formó el bochinche" (Rodriguez) – 4:30
07. "Baile baile baile" (Ribot) – 4:04
08. "No puedo frenar" (Flores) – 4:30
09. "Jaguey" (Rodriguez) – 4:33
10. "Carmela dame la llave" (A.L. Torruellas) – 3:14

Personnel:
* Marc Ribot – guitars, vocals
* Anthony Coleman – keyboards
* Brad Jones – bass
* E.J. Rodriguez – conga, percussion
* Roberto Rodriguez – drums, timbales, timpani, percussion
r c

19 August, 2010

Willie Bobo - Spanish Grease & Uno Dos Tres (1965&66) (eac-log-cover)

Willie Bobo - Spanish Grease & Uno Dos Tres (1965&66)
jazz, latin | 1cd (2lp on cd) | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 430MB
Verve | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Willie Bobo's 1965 LP, Spanish Grease, has been combined with his Uno Dos Tres 1-2-3 LP from 1966 on one CD reissue. One pass through the title cut of Spanish Grease and you know that Carlos Santana was listening. The easy R&B/Latin jazz shuffle on this Bobo original, with its mix of Spanish and English vocals, is an obvious touchstone to cuts like "Evil Ways" on Santana's first two albums. What a shame, then, that the rest of the record is primarily comprised of covers of pop hits of the day like "It's Not Unusual" (a vocal and an instrumental version!) and "Our Day Will Come." The timbales player and his band lay down respectable grooves, but "Spanish Grease" is the only original on the album, and by far the most rewarding number. Similarly, the toughest and most memorable track on Uno Dos Tres 1-2-3 is the one Bobo original, "Fried Neck Bones and Some Home Fries." Its creeping Latin soul groove was, like "Spanish Grease," an obvious inspiration for Carlos Santana. But on most of the rest of the recording, Bobo coasts through interpretations of period hits like "Michelle," "Goin' Out of My Head," and Jay & the Americans' (!) "Come a Little Bit Closer," with some jazz and pop standards as well.

Tracks:
01-Spanish Grease 2:48
02-Hurt So Bad 2:41
03-It's Not Unusual 2:21
04-Our Day Will Come 2:52
05-Haitian Lady 4:07
06-Blues In The Closet 2:14
07-Nessa 4:08
08-Elation 3:50
09-It's Not Unusual (Instrumental) 2:30
10-Shotgun / Blind Man, Blind Man 5:14
11-Boogaloo In Room 802 2:38
12-Come A Little Bit Closer 2:30
13-Goin' Out Of My Head 3:28
14-I Remember Clifford 2:06
15-Rescue Me 3:10
16-Michelle 3:18
17-No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In) 2:46
18-Fried Neck Bones And Some Home Fries 3:03
19-Ol' Man River 3:14
20-One, Two, Three (1-2-3) [Uno, Dos, Tres] 2:40
21-Night Song 2:45
22-The Breeze And I 3:16
rc

31 July, 2010

Astor Piazzolla - Astor Piazzolla en el Teatro Colon (1983) (eac-log-cover)

Astor Piazzolla - Astor Piazzolla en el Teatro Colon (1983)
classical, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | cover | 320MB
La Batuta | rar +5% recovery
piazzolla.org:
Recorded live at Teatro Colon, Buenos Aires, on June 11, 1983. By this time Piazzolla was working with the quintet, however it appears that Piazzolla tried to recompose the Conjunto 9 (although not exactly) for this concert at Teatro Colon with the Philarmonic Orquestra.
This concert has also been released (not all the songs however) as "Concierto de Nacar" by Milan Records. Concerto for Bandoneon and Orquestra is listed as as Concerto for Bandoneon, Piano, Strings, and Percussion, which is equivalent but the piece is better known otherwise.

Tracks:
-01 Fuga y Misterio
-02 Adios Nonino
-03 Concierto para Bandoneon y Orquesta: 1st Movement
-04 Concierto para Bandoneon y Orquesta: 2nd Movement
-05 Concierto para Bandoneon y Orquesta: 3rd Movement
-06 Vardarito
-07 Verano Porteño
-08 Concierto de Nacar (para Nueve Tanguistas y Orquesta Filarmonica)

Musicians:
Piazzolla (Astor) - bandoneon
Calderon (Pedro Ignacio) - director of the Teatro Colon Philarmonic
Suarez Paz (Fernando) - violin
Baralis (Hugo) - violin
Ziegler (Pablo) - piano
Roizner (Enrique) - drums
Bragato (Jose) - violoncello
Console (Hector) - bass
Quarleri (Delmar) - viola
Lopez Ruiz (Oscar) - guitar
r c

24 June, 2010

A Piazzolla & Kronos Q - Concierto para Bandoneon_Tres Tangos & Five Tango Sensations (eac-log-cover)

A Piazzolla & Kronos Q  - Concierto para Bandoneon_Tres Tangos &  Five Tango Sensations (1988)
classical, latin, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 320MB
Landy Star | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Five Tango Sensations
The undisputed lord of nuevo tango, Astor Piazzolla conceived of five tangos, written for himself on bandoneon, and the Kronos Quartet on strings. The neo-classical style of Kronos fits surprisingly well on Piazzolla's new style of tango and provides a wonderful backing for the maestro at work. Though there are only five songs on the album, the title fits well, Five Tango Sensations. Each of the tangos presented is a sensation and conveys the full emotion or scene given in the titles: "Asleep," "Loving," "Anxiety," "Despertar" (waking up), and "Fear." Piazzolla plays his heart out on his trusty bandoneon, and the Kronos players accompany to perfection. If it's the tango that the listener wants, Piazzolla is the man to listen to.
Concierto para Bandoneon_Tres Tangos
This recording with a classical orchestra is Piazzolla's apotheosis. For years he has been turning a dance form into an art music. Here he essentially crosses into the regional conservatory style called national music.

Tracks:
01. Asleep
02. Loving
03. Anxiety
04. Despertar
05. Fear
---
06. Allegro Marcat
07. Moderato
08. Presto
09. Allegro Tranquillo
10. Moderato Misitco
11. Allegretto Molto Marcato
read  the comments

28 May, 2010

Astor Piazzolla & Gary Burton - The New Tango (1986) (eac-flac-cover)

Astor Piazzolla & Gary Burton - The New Tango (1986)
jazz, latin, contemporary | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | 310MB
WEA | rar +5% recovery
AMG:
Recorded at the Montreux Festival of 1986, The New Tango is an album of collaboration between the undisputed leader of the nuevo tango movement, Astor Piazzolla, and American vibe master Gary Burton. All of the pieces on the album were written by Piazzolla over the course of some 40 years of work, along with one special composition, "Vibraphonissimo," written expressly for Burton's usage. Surprisingly enough -- given the virtuosity and coherence that one receives on the album -- there were a mere three rehearsals prior to the recorded performance. As the listener finds out, the vibraphone is perfectly suited to the tango; or at the very least, that Gary Burton is fully capable of the job. As with all of Piazzolla's albums, the chances of disappointment are quite slim, with a special amount of attention given here to details by all musicians involved. Any fan of the nuevo tango or Piazzolla will be pleased as usual. Fans of Gary Burton or jazz vibes may find the album surprisingly good as it shows the versatility of the vibraphonist. As Fernando Gonzalez once said, "this music knows many dialects. And listens. There are no lines drawn and no sides to defend. This is new tango."

Tracks:

1. Milonga Is Coming
2. Vibraphonissimo
3. Little Italy 1930
4. Nuevo Tango
5. Laura's Dream
6. Operation Tango
7. Muerta del Angel

Personnel:
Piazzolla (Astor) - bandoneon
Burton (Gary) - vibes
Ziegler (Pablo) - piano
Suarez Paz (Fernando) - violin
Malvicino (Horacio) - guitar
Console (Hector) - bass
read the comments

12 April, 2010

Astor Piazzolla - Luna (live) (1989) (eac-flac-cover)

Astor Piazzolla - Luna (live) (1989)
classical, latin | 1cd | eac-flac-cue-log-cover | cover | 307MB
EMI | rar +5% recovery
AMG
The last concert recorded by Astor Piazzolla with his New Tango Sextet was going to be released no matter how good it was; such is the nature of the market. Happily, this album has excellent performances and very good recording quality, and would have been a good candidate for a CD if Piazzolla had lived another 70 years. The old master is in fine form on this one, dueling with Gerardo Gandini's piano on "Camorra 3" with almost violent virtuosity. The reflective and turbulent sides of tango music are both explored on this disc, which has pieces from a 30-year period. Though Piazzolla did perform one concert after this one which was released as Bandoneon Sinfonico, the full orchestra at that event puts his music in a different and more formal setting. Those who prefer his music with a small ensemble will find Luna the one to seek out.

Tracks
Hora Cero
Tanguedia
Milonga del Angel
Camorra 3
Preludio y Fuga
Sex-Tet
Luna

Personnel
Astor Piazzolla: bandoneon
Daniel Binelli: bandoneon
Horacio Malvicino: guitar
Gerardo Gandini: piano
Jose Bragato: violoncello
Hector Console: double bass

Live in Amsterdam, June 26, 1989
r c

15 December, 2009

Buena Vista Social Club - Buena Vista Social Club (1997)

Buena Vista Social Club - Buena Vista Social Club (1997)
latin | 1cd | Eac Rip | flac-cue-log-cover | 380MB
WCD | RAR +5% recovery

allmusic:
This album is named after a members-only club that was opened in Havana in pre-Castro times, a period of unbelievable musical activity in Cuba. While bandleader Desi Arnaz became a huge hit in the States, several equally talented musicians never saw success outside their native country, and have had nothing but their music to sustain them during the Castro reign. Ry Cooder went to Cuba to record a musical documentary of these performers. Many of the musicians on this album have been playing for more than a half century, and they sing and play with an obvious love for the material. Cooder could have recorded these songs without paying the musicians a cent; one can imagine them jumping up and grabbing for their instruments at the slightest opportunity, just to play. Most of the songs are a real treasure, traversing a lot of ground in Cuba's musical history. There's the opening tune, "Chan Chan," a composition by 89-year-old Compay Segundo, who was a bandleader in the '50s; the cover of the early-'50s tune "De Camino a la Verada," sung by the 72-year-old composer Ibrahim Ferrer, who interrupted his daily walk through Havana just long enough to record; or the amazing piano playing on "Pablo Nuevo" by 77-year-old Rubén González, who has a unique style that blends jazz, mambo, and a certain amount of playfulness. All of these songs were recorded live -- some of them in the musicians' small apartments -- and the sound is incredibly deep and rich, something that would have been lost in digital recording and overdubbing. Cooder brought just the right amount of reverence to this material, and it shows in his production, playing, and detailed liner notes. If you get one album of Cuban music, this should be the one.

Track listing:
01. "Chan Chan" (Elíades Ochoa) - 4:16
02. "De Camino a la Vereda" (Ibrahim Ferrer) - 5:03
03. "El Cuarto de Tula" (Ry Cooder) - 7:27
04. "Pueblo Nuevo" (Rubén González) - 6:05
05. "Dos Gardenias" (Ibrahim Ferrer) - 3:02
06. "Y Tú Qué Has Hecho?" (Compay Segundo) - 3:13
07. "Veinte Ańos" (Omara Portuondo) - 3:29
08. "El Carretero" (Elíades Ochoa) - 3:28
09. "Candela" (Ibrahim Ferrer) - 5:27
10. "Amor de Loca Juventud" (Compay Segundo) - 3:21
11. "Orgullecida" (Compay Segundo) - 3:18
12. "Murmullo" (Ibrahim Ferrer) - 3:50
13. "Buena Vista Social Club" (Ry Cooder) - 4:50
14. "La Bayamesa" (Manuel Licea) - 2:54

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