sábado, 10 de febrero de 2024

Latin Grammy-winning drummer and bandleader Willy Rodriguez Unveils Debut Album Seeing Sounds on March 29, 2024

 Latin Grammy-winning drummer and bandleader Willy Rodriguez Unveils Debut Album Seeing Sounds on March 29, 2024


Drummer-composer Willy Rodriguez proudly announces the release of his debut album Seeing Sounds, releasing March 29, 2024. Joining the Puerto Rico-born, New York based musician on his expansive debut is trumpeter Jason Palmer, saxophonist Hery Paz, pianist Leo Genovese, bassists John Hébert and Kenneth Jimenez, and special guest artist, saxophonist Dave Liebman, and sound designer Tehn Vega. 

Avant-garde philosophies provide precarious but often brilliant edges to how open or free improvisation function in Jazz. Complex, chaotic, and often dissonant, this sub-genre challenges traditional structures, and when transcendent, incorporates an advanced and unconventional level of mastery. Avant-garde artists travel to curious destinations using peculiar forms specifically designed for their mercurial adventures. In the process, audience engagement requires a nuanced understanding of tone, touch, voice and the fluid organic structures that creatively bind them all together. In this regard, drummer Willy Rodriguez has spent his entire professional career preparing to explore these unique types of musical relationships.


Born in Puerto Rico, the son of a timbalero, Rodríguez’s rhythmic journey also began on the timbales, developing hand skills by playing in Latin rock bands that made up his crash course on Puerto Rico’s remarkably diverse Afro-Caribbean musical culture. High school brought an introduction to the drums as formal training blossomed into an invitation to a coveted summer program at the Berklee College of Music in San Juan, Puerto Rico. By the time he left the island to attend Berklee, Rodríguez had already dabbled in pop, rock, metal and Latin Jazz. Humbled by Boston’s deep Jazz drum culture, Rodríguez dove head first into his studies absorbing the influences of legends like Elvin Jones, Tony Williams, Roy Haynes, Jack DeJohnette and Terri Lyne Carrington. Rodríguez eventually settled in New York City, where he currently resides. Over the course of his twenty-year career, including his decade in New York, Rodriguez has worked with an expansive list of jazz heavyweights including George Garzone, Melissa Aldana, John Ellis, and more. 


Concurrently, Rodriguez’s musical palette continued to flourish. In 2019, he recorded with Chilean superstar Mon Laferte, and earned a Latin Grammy for his contributions to her highly regarded album Norma. In 2022, Rodriguez stepped into the legendary drum chair of progressive rock band The Mars Volta for their much-anticipated, eponymous reunion album, following in the footsteps of great drummers Jon Theodore, Deantoni Parks, and Thomas Pridgen. Expanding his range and exploring new musical avenues, Rodriguez continued to hear the call of an odd opportunity - various invitations to explore free improvisation. Perhaps the most important voice aiding this momentum was Dave Liebman, the storied multi-instrumentalist whose career spans decades of innovation within and outside of traditional contemporary Jazz.

Rodriguez’s initial hesitation finally gave way as Liebman and others eventually persuaded him to dive into the deep end of their pool. Always striving to compliment his surroundings, Rodriguez quickly discovered a new scope of expression that would challenge his ability to listen while accentuating the diverse skill set he’d manicured throughout his burgeoning career. Suddenly freedom and adventure reigned supreme. “That sense of connection,” as Rodriguez recalls it, “continually searching for something. I became addicted to that and now it always shows up when I play.” And his search continues with Seeing Sounds, featuring many of his long-time collaborators. 


Two of the oldest key collaborators include Jason Palmer, with whom Rodriguez has performed with since his earliest days in Boston, cutting his teeth at the famous Wally’s Jazz Club. Palmer had a steady gig at the establishment, and Rodriguez would often run the jam sessions preceding Jason’s hit, leading to a long-standing musical connection that perseveres to this day, and is in full bloom on Seeing Sounds. Leo Genovese is another long-time musical partner dating back to 2009. Also a musical polymath, Genovese and Rodriguez have shared many musical settings together, from sets at Smalls Jazz Club to The Mars Volta.


MORE ABOUT SEEING SOUNDS:

The dawn of Seeing Sounds, which features the striking imagery of Puerto Rican painter Angel Borroto as its cover, rises with Rodriguez’s musical perfect storm “Beyond the Struggle”. Inspired by John Coltrane’s “Psalm”, the composition explores the “growth and wisdom one gains from failure,” as Genovese, Jimenez, and Rodriguez provide a salient backdrop for Cuban saxophonist Hery Paz to probe all parts of the song. Eventually clouds clears as sonic enlightenment serenades the tune towards its peaceful resolution. Informed by numbers charting the course of the complex meters used within the composition, “Roy’s Masterplan” unfolds as Rodriguez’s angular nod to the ingenious influence of a former Berklee colleague, featuring fascinating interplay between Palmer and Paz. Rounding the corner into straight ahead Jazz is the swinging “Where There’s A Will, There’s A Way”, Palmer’s ode to Rodriguez and their fifteen years of playing together.

“Guani”, named after the long beaked hummingbird found in various parts of the Caribbean, lumbers above a 3/4 waltz pattern but with a 4/4 feel, as the band improvises on five phrases drawn out by composer Paz. Here “each musician gets to be a drummer in the band,” Rodriguez describes, as the group collectively paints a colorful picture of the bird anointed by Taino Indians as their animal teacher in the spirit world. The rarely recorded “Fixed Goal” manifests the kind of odd tension you’d expect from a Ornette Coleman composition, as the tune swings with angular chord progressions, neatly placed Monk quotes by Paz, and stair stepping sequences that finds the band in full form.

Living up to its name, “Waltz Dilemma” dances between time signatures with Jimenez’s bass anchoring Rodriguez radiant drum work behind Genovese’s sparkling phrasing. After a rigorous climb through the melody, everyone agrees to disagree harmonically as Paz muscles the tune back to 3/4 before the impasse is eventually resolved. Depicting a kaleidoscope of emotions, “The Infinity of Your Love” is Rodriguez’s exposé on the varied nature of affection. Pensively circling each other while flowing in and out of harmony, Liebman and Palmer finally punctuate the song's end as if to say, “Sorry Dorothy, love’s not a Hallmark card anymore.”

Making matters even more delightfully bizarre is “The Red-tailed Hawk is Going to Eat Your Babies”, featuring field recordings by music producer Tehn Vega. Here Rodriguez shines anthropomorphizing the aviary chaos that routinely played out in backyard mango trees during his time in Puerto Rico. “Un Pequeño Desahogo (A Little Relief)” takes the form of a temperamental amuse-bouche, cleansing our pallets while showcasing the remarkable amount of polyphonic information Rodriguez can squeeze into a sub three minute song.

Splashing cymbals announce “Self Love”, the muscular but also sensitive display of Rodriguez’s technical creativity when allowed to play by, and just for, himself. Celebrating the spirit and deep influential impact that drummers Ralph Peterson Jr. and Bob Gulloti have had on Rodriguez the album concludes with “Praise”, a rollicking composition by Genovese reminiscent of the compelling styles and the elite musical traditions these master drummers sustained throughout their careers.

Listening deeply allows for the gentle displacement of artifice, ego and traditional expectations. It creates the space required to appreciate music for what it is, as opposed to anything we might want, or need it to be. As with anyone who’s ever struggled with meditation, emptying one’s mind like this can be exhilarating, surprisingly peaceful and thoroughly educational. Seeing Sounds is a deep listening bonanza, a special album using the inquisitive nature of free improvisation as an artful form of musical inquiry. Surrounded by close friends doubling as agile musical agents, Seeing Sounds finds Rodriguez introducing his impressive range of talents while challenging us to listen deeply, with heightened awareness, to this remarkably impressive achievement.


Beyond the Struggle 

Roy’s Masterplan

Where’s There’s a Will There’s a Way

Guani (feat. Dave Liebman)

Fixed Goal

Waltz Dilemma

The Infinity Of Your Love (feat. Dave Liebman)

The Red-tailed Hawk is going to Eat Your Babies (feat. Tehn Vega)

Un Pequeño Desahogo

Self Love

Praise (in memory of Ralph Peterson & Bob Gulloti)

Liner notes by Michael Ambrosino, who writes about music, and culture, producing and hosting a variety of Jazz programs on 33third.org.


Photos by Leslie Farinacci

--

Lydia Liebman


Founder, President

c: (570) 730 - 5297

A Bellas Artes de Santurce “In Front of the Piano” con la excelencia musical de cuatro pianistas puertorriqueños

 A Bellas Artes de Santurce  “In Front of the Piano” con la excelencia musical de cuatro pianistas puertorriqueños

 


Cuatro pianistas puertorriqueños y, sobre todo, grandes amigos harán despliegue de su talento durante el evento “In Front of the Piano”, a efectuarse el próximo 9 de marzo en el Centro de Bellas Artes de Santurce.

Cada uno con su concepto de interpretación muy personal  deleitará al público  con un repertorio de obras clásicas, populares y de jazz, en formato de solista y dúos, teniendo al piano como protagonista y llevándolo a otro nivel en una noche llena de sorpresas musicales. 

Agradecidos del arte en general, José Negroni, Harry Aponte, Víctor Meléndez y Ángel David Mattos contarán  sus historias y experiencias  en sus respectivas carreras como pianistas solistas, acompañantes - a nivel local e internacional- y educadores.  

Los músicos realizarán el junte por primera vez por iniciativa del maestro Negroni, quien añoraba tener esta colaboración entre sus amigos, inspirado en el álbum “In Front of the Piano (Frente al Piano)” de solos y dúos,  que se ubicó en  la selecta lista de las 20 producciones más sobresalientes de 2023 de la Fundación Nacional para la Cultura Popular.  

José Negroni, también productor creativo del evento, destacó, “me encuentro complacido por esta nueva aventura junto a grandes cómplices y músicos de excelencia a quienes respeto por sus ejecutorias… ‘In Front of the Piano’ ha sido una producción que me ha dejado satisfacciones, por lo que me compromete más ya que el nuevo proyecto del concierto en Bellas Artes de Santurce está inspirado en la misma”.

La audiencia se deleitará al escuchar canciones como “Fantasía sobre el tema del manisero”, “Libertango” (de Astor Piazzolla),  “Asturias” (Isaac Albéniz) y “No me toques” (Juan Morel Campos), entre otras,  en un concepto que busca presentar el piano en múltiples expresiones artísticas, tanto  en la música popular, clásica y jazz. Esta fusión demostrará que no importa en qué época se escriba, la música es arte y transmite diversas emociones que han cautivado al público a través de la historia.

 


Breves reseñas ilustrarán  el espectáculo para revalidar por qué  el piano es el rey de los instrumentos orquestales, siendo  capaz de provocar y expresar todo tipo de  sentimientos.  Cada artista, por su parte, aportará una representación del instrumento logrando una experiencia entretenida y a la vez con valor cultural y educativo. 

Luego de su estreno en Puerto Rico, “In Front of the Piano” impactará la ciudad de Miami, Florida (Estados Unidos), entre otros lugares. 

Los boletos se encuentran disponibles en  Ticket Center  (tcpr.com) y en el Centro de Bellas Artes de Santurce (787 620-4444).

lunes, 5 de febrero de 2024

Internationally Acclaimed Saxophonist/Composer Miguel Zenón Wins 2024 Grammy® Award for Best Latin Jazz Album

 

Internationally Acclaimed Saxophonist/Composer Miguel Zenón Wins 2024 Grammy® Award for Best Latin Jazz Album
For El Arte Del Bolero Vol. 2featuring pianist Luis Perdomo 

Internationally acclaimed saxophonist/composer Miguel Zenón has won a Grammy® Award in the category of “Best Latin Jazz Album” for El Arte Del Bolero Vol. 2, featuring pianist Luis Perdomo.
“I’m incredibly happy and honored with this Grammy win,” says Zenón. “We’ve been making albums for a very long time, so it’s extremely rewarding to receive this recognition. This will certainly be an incentive to keep moving forward and creating more music.”
The title references the beauty of the Latin-American Songbook and the Bolero in particular. The album expands on the initial concept of El Arte Del Bolero Vol. 1 while maintaining the intent of playing songs the artists know and love. The process of choosing the repertoire began with the question, “Tu sabes que canción es bien buena?” (“You know which song is really good?”). Discussions about which versions to study, which keys to use, and which arrangements were the most inspirational followed.
Melding their jazz sensibilities with the original spirit of the music, Zenón and Perdomo deliver alluring, forward-thinking performances while keeping the songs center stage. “The Latin-American Songbook is so vast and varied that it naturally lends itself to limitless explorations,” says Zenón in the liner notes. “We purposely looked beyond the Caribbean (exploring composers from México, Venezuela and Panamá, for example) because we wanted to emphasize the point that these songs deserved to be explored and recognized for what they are, beyond labels, categories and regionalisms. Just beautiful music that is a joy to perform and listen to.”
The album was named the top Latin Jazz recording of 2023 in the Jazz Critics Poll and earned critical acclaim:
"I thought this was a beautiful, beautiful record. I kept putting it on and not wanting to take it off." – Stephen Thompson, NPR New Music Friday
"In an extraordinary follow-up to El Arte del Bolero, Vol. 1, these timeless tunes are slowed down, blended with unusual elements, played out of time, deconstructed and reconstructed as Zenón and Perdomo extract nuances from the originals that we hardly imagined could exist.” – Catalina Maria Johnson, DownBeat
“The recording’s final number ‘Silencio,’ contains a spiky first section and then moves on to a more lyrical episode before returning to the initial theme…. It is the liveliest entry in the lineup, the one that best shows off the impressive chops of both instrumentalists. In the more raucous nightclubs, excited jazz fans used to yell “talk to me” at soloists. Listening to El Arte del Bolero, Volume Two, I feel that these two masters, while recalling their various ancestries, are talking to me.” – Michael Ullman, ArtsFuse
“Zenón and Perdomo bestow each of these melodies with a careful and loving touch, as if burnishing an heirloom gemstone” – Nate Chinen, WRTI
“Miguel Zenon and Luis Perdomo practice the art of the duo at a stratospheric level. No melody resists them and everything in their interpretation seems natural; we are talking about the alchemy which links the two musicians and allows them to perform masterful improvisations on well-known themes but totally renewed in this Cd. Indispensable.“ – Yves Dorison, Culture Jazz
“Top 5 of 2023…Sublime.” – Wilbert Sostre, 90 Grados https://90grados.com/musica/jazz-boricua-2023/


About Miguel Zenón
Grammy® winner and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow, Zenón is one of a select group of musicians who have masterfully balanced and blended the often-contradictory poles of innovation and tradition. Widely considered one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists of his generation, Zenón has also developed a unique voice as a composer and as a conceptualist, concentrating his efforts on perfecting a fine mix between Jazz and his many influences. Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Zenón has recorded and toured with a wide variety of musicians including Charlie Haden, Fred Hersch, David Sánchez, Danilo Pérez, Kenny Werner, Bobby Hutcherson and The SFJAZZ Collective. Zenón has given hundreds of lectures and master classes at institutions all over the world and is a faculty member in the Music & Theater Arts Department at MIT, as well as the current Visiting Scholar for the Harmony and Jazz Composition Department at Berklee College of Music.
 
About Luis Perdomo
Originally from Venezuela, Grammy® winning pianist, composer, arranger and educator Luis Perdomo moved to NYC in the early 90s and has since established himself as one of the most in-demand musicians on the scene. He has recorded and/or performed with Ravi Coltrane, David Sanchez, Jerry Gonzalez and the Fort Apache Band, Tom Harrell, John Patitucci, Ray Barretto, Brian Lynch, Robin Eubanks, Dave Douglas, David Weiss and The Cookers, David Gilmore, Ralph Irizarry & Timbalaye, Henry Threadgill and Steve Turre. He has collaborated with Miguel Zenón for 20 years. Perdomo has performed at festivals and venues in over 50 countries and has released nine recordings as a leader. He has also appeared on over 200 recordings as a sideman including, most recently, two Grammy nominated albums: Ravi Coltrane’s Spirit Fiction and Miguel Zenón’s Sonero. In 2002 he earned the 2nd Grand Prix at the 3rd Martial Solal Jazz Piano Competition in Paris.
 
El Arte Del Bolero Vol. 2 is available on all digital platforms including Miguel’s Bandcamp page.
 
www.miguelzenon.com
https://luisperdomojazz.com

domingo, 4 de febrero de 2024

Puerto Rico Jazz Jam 2024. Dos noches del más alto nivel musical.

 

Puerto Rico Jazz Jam 2024. Dos noches del más alto nivel musical.

Por Wilbert Sostre Maldonado 

Originalmente publicado en 90 Grados 90grados.com

La edición del Puerto Rico Jazz Jam 2024 fue una de las mejores en sus 14 años.

La norma en estos festivales suele ser que uno o más de los actos resulta no estar a la altura con las otras propuestas del evento. En esta ocasión, cada una de las presentaciones mantuvieron un alto nivel de energía y excelencia musical.

 

Viernes 26 de enero

Sounds of Percussion


La primera noche de festival comenzó con una explosión musical a cargo de Sounds of Percussion, junte de los Maestros de la percusión; Francisco Alcalá en la batería, Zayra Pola en el timbal, Kachiro Thompson en las tumbadoras y Richie Carrasco en el bongó, acompañados por Richard Trinidad en el piano y Robert López en el bajo.


Alcalá, Pola, Thompson y Carrasco, asombraron al público con su técnica y virtuosismo en enérgicas descargas en los temas; "Mambo Terrífico ", "Ti Mon Bo", "Bernie's Tune", "Four Beat Mambo", "Capullito de Alheli". Mucho afinque demostrado por un grupo de músicos que se presentan juntos por primera vez.

Furito Ríos Standard Bomba Quintet


El segundo acto de la noche fue el Furito Ríos Standard Bomba Quintet con los jóvenes Josué González en el piano, Joaquín del Río en el bajo, Yitzack Cruz en el Barril de Bomba, el Maestro Héctor Matos en la batería y José Furito Ríos en el saxofón.

Furito ha sido por años uno de los mejores saxofonistas y uno de los músicos más respetados en la escena del jazz Boricua, y quien también ha sido productor de festivales y eventos de jazz en Puerto Rico.

Furito presentó su fusión de jazz con bomba puertorriqueña en los temas, "Blues del Cielo", "Vieja Colonia", Talita Cumi" y "Freedom Jazz Dance". Furito viene trabajando con este concepto de Bomba con Jazz en sus grabaciones Standard Bomba I y II.

Raúl Ríos, hijo de Furito, fue el invitado especial, uniéndose al grupo y mostrando sus dotes de cantante y compositor en el tema "Bolero Jazz", fusión de jazz, bolero y rap. Raúl también demuestra su gran técnica en la trompeta en temas como, "Freddie Freeloader" de Miles Davis y "Freedom Jazz Dance".

El tono y sensibilidad del saxofón de Furito se destacan en el estándar de Jazz "You don't know what love is" y el bolero de Sylvia Rexach "Mi Versión".

Héctor Calderón se une como bailador de Bomba en "Freedom Jazz Dance" para concluir una excelente primera noche de jazz.

 

Sábado 27 de enero

Henry Cole on Drums


En un festival dominado por el jazz latino, la propuesta musical de Henry Cole fue la más cercana al swing del jazz tradicional norteamericano. Sin embargo, esto no significa una reducción en intensidad y disfrute de la audiencia. Las virtuosas improvisaciones de Cole y compañía merecieron múltiples ovaciones de parte del público presente.

Los asistentes a la segunda noche del Puerto Rico Jazz Jam tuvieron la oportunidad de presenciar a tres de los músicos más respetados y con más proyección internacional en el jazz actual. Ricky Rodríguez, con varias grabaciones como líder y uno de los bajistas más cotizados, Luis Perdomo, pianista, quien también ha grabado como líder y con algunos de los mejores jazzistas en años recientes, y por supuesto, Henry Cole en la batería, líder de interesantes proyectos musicales e igualmente muy solicitado en el jazz local e internacional.

Rodríguez, Perdomo y Cole llenaron la sala René Marquéz con mucho swing en magistrales interpretaciones de los temas "Tetragon" de Joe Henderson, "Dance with the Elephants" de Miriam Sullivan (bajista y compañera de Luis Perdomo), "The Next Destination" de Ricky Rodríguez, "Lagnau" de Luis Perdomo y "Lirio Blanco" de Roberto Cole.

Para concluir la presentación, sube al escenario Tanicha López, una de las mejores y más versátiles cantoras jóvenes en la actualidad, para una majestuosa interpretación de la composición de Silvio Rodríguez "El Reparador de Sueños".

 

Humberto Ramírez Tributo a La Lupe "The Queen of Latin Soul"


La última noche de festival concluyó con una fiesta musical en honor a la legendaria Guadalupe Victoria Yoly Raymond, conocida como La Lupe.

Una gran orquesta con algunos de los mejores músicos de Puerto Rico, dirigidos magistralmente por el trompetista Humberto Ramírez y con la potente y hermosa voz de Michelle Brava, llevaron al público por un viaje musical a través de algunos de los éxitos de La Lupe.

Un escogido de temas balanceado entre los bailables, "Yo soy como soy" (Chivirico Dávila), "Yo no lloro más " (Myrta Silva), y "Mi Socio" (Chivirico Dávila), y los famosos boleros "Si vuelves tú ", "Carcajada Final", "Puro Teatro", "La Tirana"  y "Que te pedí" de Catalino Tite Curet Alonso, fueron interpretados con sabor y sentimiento por Michelle Brava, respaldada por Humberto Ramires y su Big Band.

Todos los músicos en la orquesta tuvieron de la oportunidad de destacarse con magníficas improvisaciones durante la noche. En la sección de vientos; trompetas, Julito Alvarado, Fernando Marcano y Pedro Ruiz, trombones, Reynaldo Jorge, Hommy Ramos y Kristhian Hernández, saxofones, Frankie Pérez y Rubén Rios (Alto), Norberto Ortiz y Luis Rodríguez (Tenor) y Zuleyka Martínez (Barítono). En la sección rítmica; Junior Irizarry en el bajo, Charlie Sierra en el timbal, William Kachiro Thompson en las tumbadoras, Richie Carrasco en el bongó y Ángel David Mattos en el piano. En los coros Jennifer Calderón y Alejandro Villegas.

Las dos noches de banquete musical culminaron con los temas "Fever" y "Oriente"

Fotos por Wilbert Sostre Maldonado

viernes, 26 de enero de 2024

Gabriel Vicéns releases his fourth studio album Mural, a recording devoted to his chamber works

 New York City-based, Puerto Rican-born composer, guitarist, and visual artist Gabriel Vicéns releases his fourth studio album Mural, a recording devoted to his chamber works.


Vicéns continues his musical journey by releasing a record of contemporary classical music including pieces for piano trio, wind quintet, Pierrot ensemble and more; featuring some of today's finest performers of the New York City classical scene.


The immersive and mood-inducing music on this record spans a four-year period of creativity and is the first recording to feature concert works by this wonderful artist. Mural explores modern and contemporary trends such as 12-tone serialism, experimentalism, and minimalism and, at the same time, depicts Vicéns' individuality as a composer with a distinctive voice that has been constantly expanding throughout the years of his career.


"I see the music of this album as both a continuation of all my previous works and something completely different. Though we could classify this repertoire in a different genre and following different traditions, practices, and influences to my previous records, for me it is all connected. My goals are the same when composing any piece of music, which is to create something interesting, beautiful and profound that works as a whole and evokes some kind of emotional, mental, and/or physical response in the listener," says Vicéns, a Doctoral graduate from Stony Brook University.


Mural is released on the celebrated Milan-based record label, Stradivarius, which specializes in publishing some of today’s best recordings of early music and contemporary classical music. The album comprises seven pieces for different types of ensembles recorded at the renowned Bunker Studio in New York City.


The first track of the album and title piece, Mural (2021) for clarinet, violin, and piano is performed by clarinetist Raissa Fahlman, violinist Joenne Dumitrascu, and pianist Corinne Penner. Followed by Sueños Ligados (2020) for piano trio, featuring violinist Adrianne Munden-Dixon, cellist Rocío Díaz de Cossío, and pianist Mayumi Tsuchida. The third track of the album, El Matorral (2022) for Pierrot ensemble is performed by Roberta Michel on flute, Raissa Fahlman on clarinet, Joenne Dumitrascu on violin, Wick Simmons on cello, Corinne Penner on piano, John Ling on vibraphone, and conducted by David Bloom.


The recording continues with Una Superficie Sin Rostro (2020) for solo piano, featuring Corinne Penner. Adrianne Munden-Dixon returns with Mayumi Tsuchida on the fifth track of the album, Carnal (2019) for violin and piano. The ensemble Nu Quintet appears on the sixth track, Ficción (2021) for woodwind quintet. The album concludes with La Esfera (2021) for cello and piano performed by cellist Julia Henderson and pianist Mikael Darmanie.


Vicéns is interested in how his approach to music and painting correlate with each other, in particular, his attentiveness to the two-dimensional flatness of the canvas and how that translates into music. “I create musical compositions with melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre, and register, and every instrument and part of the composition is equally important to me. Everything needs to work together. The same principle applies to my paintings, but with color, form, line, and texture instead of musical elements. I see my paintings as an extension of my music and vice versa. The conceptual processes are incredibly alike,” says Vicéns.


The compositions included in Mural are characterized by their embracement of dissonance, pointillistic textures, large intervallic leaps, gestural complexity, prolonged silences, great dynamic contrasts, and quiet sustained tones. On many occasions it’s possible to encounter a ritualistic and mysterious aspect in his music that is distinguished by the way he uses repetition over melodic fragments and harmonic patterns. The influences of Webern and Feldman are perceivable in Vicéns’ works. Commenting on the evocative repertoire brought together in this album, Tim Rutherford-Johnson remarks in the CD’s liner notes, “... although his music is often quite flat in its surface relations, in its unfolding over time it admits cracks into that surface, and slow transitions from one color to another.”


The title of this recording came from Vicéns’ passion for Roman and Egyptian mural paintings. "I'm fascinated by how Roman and Egyptian frescoes have decayed slowly for centuries and how the cracks and layers of colors have become part of the current stage of the work, creating a complex and atmospheric character. “Music is a reflection of life; it comes from our experiences. We go through cycles and evolve as the years pass. Over time, we get our cracks and layers of colors, just like the frescoes, and from those experiences, we get the energy and the inspiration to write music that communicates something abstractly. Mural is what I have to say at this point of my life; my future cracks and layers will slowly tell what’s next."


The seven works offered in Mural display Vicéns' unique vision and maturity as a composer and conveys a pivotal point that stylistically breaks his career free from the confines of a single genre description. The addition of this album to his discography expresses his immense creativity and wide range of skills, displaying how he shapeshifts magnificently across various musical terrains. Finally, the record reveals an idiosyncratic approach that captures his innovative ideas with brilliance and excitement.


The album includes a photo-illustrated, 28-page booklet with liner notes by Tim Rutherford-Johnson.



Gabriel Vicéns - Mural

Stradivarius - Catalog Number STR 37292

Recorded August, 2022

Release date March 29th, 2024

www.gabrielvicens.com

www.stradivarius.it


Listen and Pre-Order

https://gabrielvicens.bandcamp.com/album/mural








miércoles, 24 de enero de 2024

Humberto Ramírez presenta este fin de semana Puerto Rico Jazz jam 2024

Humberto Ramírez presenta este fin de semana Puerto Rico Jazz jam 2024

(24 de enero de 2024, San Juan, Puerto Rico) - El trompetista, compositor, arreglista y director musical Humberto Ramírez presenta la décimo cuarta edición del Puerto Rico Jazz Jam.

El Puerto Rico Jazz Jam 2024 se efectuará este viernes 26 y sábado 27 de enero a las 8 p.m. respectivamente en la Sala René Marqués del Centro de Bellas Artes Luis A. Ferré en Santurce.

 


La apertura del festival recaerá en el concepto musical “Sounds Of Percussion” que reúne a cuatro excelentes percusionistas puertorriqueños: la timbalera Zayra Pola, el conguero William Kachiro Thompson, el baterista Francisco Alcalá y el bongosero Richie Carrasco. Este junte es inspirado en dos discos de Tito Puente, a saber: “Top Percussion” y “Puente in Percussion”.  Además, por primera vez el veterano saxofonista José Furito Ríos pisará el escenario del Puerto Rico Jazz Jam con su Standard Bomba Quintet.


La noche de sábado iniciará la jornada musical el baterista Henry Cole que se presentará en formato de cuarteto junto al destacado pianista venezolano Luis Perdomo, el bajista Ricky Rodríguez y la cantante Tanicha López.


Y en el cierre del festival, Humberto Ramírez rendirá tributo a la indiscutible leyenda de la música tropical: La Lupe. La cantante Michelle Brava tendrá a su cargo la interpretación de un repertorio finamente escogido para recordar a La Yiyiyi. “Que Te Pedí”, “Puro Teatro” y “La Tirana” son algunas de esas canciones.

Los boletos para el Puerto Rico Jazz Jam 2024 están a la venta en Ticketcenter (787.792.5000; www.tcpr.com) y en la boletería de Bellas Artes.


Sobre La Lupe

Guadalupe Victoria Yoli Raymond, mejor conocida como La Lupe, nació en Santiago de Cuba en el 1936. Su fama fue impresionante y se la atribuyen a su sonoridad, su voz peculiar y su proyección escénica, que algunos consideraban parte de una magia y otro una mezcla de locura con un talento incomparable.

Recibió el título The Queen of Latin Soul siendo una artista que exploró desde el bolero hasta los ritmos latinos tradicionales en los que se destacó con muchísimo éxito. La Yiyiyi, como le decían, era irreverente, distinta.

Su vínculo musical con Puerto Rico, donde vivió, es indiscutible. Grabó temas de Don Tite Curet Alonso como Puro Teatro que inmortalizó. Con la Orquesta de Tito Puente arrasó con Que Te Pedí.

viernes, 19 de enero de 2024

Brenda Hopkins Miranda Vivir El Concierto en la Universidad Inter Metro

Brenda Hopkins Miranda Vivir El Concierto en la Universidad Inter Metro 

La Universidad Inter Metro te invita al primer concierto de la pianista puertorriqueña Brenda Hopkins Miranda tras haber recibido el diagnóstico de cáncer del seno que la mantuvo fuera de los escenarios desde principios del 2023. En este concierto, el 4 de febrero, la pianista y compositora interpretará por primera vez los temas de su nuevo álbum titulado “VIVIR”.


Este evento representa una muestra de agradecimiento a todas las personas que le acompañaron durante su proceso de sanación y una ofrenda de amor y esperanza a todas las personas que han pasado o están pasando por situaciones similares y sus familiares. Ven a celebrar la vida y separa hoy tu boleto libre de costo o a cambio de un donativo.

Entrada General - Para control de capacidad, sugerimos hacer un donativo para el fondo de becas para estudiantes de música y enfermería o reservación gratuita por cada asistente al evento. Donativos de $50.00 p/p o más recibirán un CD del álbum “VIVIR”.

miércoles, 17 de enero de 2024

Out March 29 – Dan Weiss, Miguel Zenón and Matt Mitchell in Even Odds

Out March 29 – Dan Weiss, Miguel Zenón and Matt Mitchell in Even Odds

Drummer/composer Dan Weiss experiments with diverse approaches to composition and improvisation on his
daring new trio album Even Odds
 
Due out March 29, 2024 via Cygnus Recordings, the album challenges saxophonist Miguel Zenón and pianist Matt Mitchell with Weiss’ inventive drum grooves and heady compositions
 
Undeniably virtuosic and progressive, Weiss works in unconventional ways.” 
– Filipe Freitas, JazzTrail
 
“[Weiss is] best known as a virtuosic, in-demand jazz drummer… and an ambitious, imaginative bandleader.” – Hank Shteamer, The New York Times



Whether it’s strategizing a game of rock, paper, scissors, engaging in a friendly game of poker, or taking the musical risks that have made him one of the most lauded drummers in modern jazz, Dan Weiss relishes a game of chance. On his latest album, Even Odds (out March 29, 2024 via Cygnus Recordings), Weiss debuts a brand-new trio with an unorthodox recording process. For this captivating session, Weiss enlists alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón and pianist Matt Mitchell, both longtime collaborators, to navigate his intricate compositions and to engage with the drummer in novel ways. 

Even Odds features two distinct approaches to the delicate balance of composition and improvisation, both offering their own unique challenges to the trio. Six of the pieces are “traditional” compositions – traditional in the sense of providing written material that the trio played and improvised upon together, less so in their reflection of Weiss’ singular blend of influences, which draws on rhythmic concepts from jazz, Indian classical music, contemporary classical, West African music and extreme metal and a cinematically influenced sense of emotion and atmosphere.

The remaining pieces were crafted as game-like provocations, gauntlets thrown down from Weiss to his bandmates. They began life as brief drum exercises or grooves that Weiss recorded solo. He then presented these fragments to Zenón and Mitchell and asked them to improvise over them. These knotty miniatures, many of them clocking in under a minute or two, force the players to think in focused, densely packed bursts to realize fully formed statements as they traverse these rhythmic dares.

“I love games,” Weiss explains. “I'll make bets with people over the silliest things. On Even Odds, there was always a chance that these tunes could go a lot of different ways. I’d never recorded that way before, so it felt like a bit of a gamble.” The title of Even Odds reflects that gamesmanship, but it also suggests the dichotomies that so enliven the album – the odd-numbered trio of masters making coequal contributions to a group sound; meeting on an even playing field even as they contend with material designed to throw them off-kilter. 

Weiss assured that challenge would be answered in thrilling fashion by inviting two of the most gifted, virtuosic and adventurous voices in modern music. Miguel Zenón is a multiple Grammy nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow widely considered one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists and composers of his generation. Hailed by the New York Times as “a pianist of burrowing focus and an indispensable fixture of the contemporary vanguard,” Matt Mitchell is a pianist, composer, and electronic musician interested in the intersections of various strains of acoustic, electric, composed, and improvised new music. He has played extensively in the ensembles of many major figures in improvised music, including Tim Berne, Dave Douglas, John Hollenbeck, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Linda May Han Oh, Jonathan Finlayson, Mario Pavone, and Darius Jones.

“Matt and Miguel had free reign to do whatever they wanted,” Weiss explains. “It was true improvisation, with the only form being what the drums were playing. It was challenging, but of course they're incredible musicians and they did amazing and very contrasting things – some were dense and busy, some were atmospheric and minimalist, some were loud and aggressive, some were really tender.”

“The collaboration involved in making [this record] represented for me a feeling of great trust from Dan,” says Mitchell. “His singular dedication to a creative path encompassing both extreme discipline and unfettered expression and openness is a continual personal impetus for my own work, and I believe it has a particularly unique realization with this record.”

                     © Stephanie Ahn-Weiss

“The three of us have been playing in this trio format for the past few years, so the recording felt pretty free and organic,” Zenón adds. 

As a demonstration of the process, compare “Recover the Mindset” with “M and M,” the poker-inspired “Too Many Outs” with “Runner Runner,” or “Bribes and Ultimatums” with “Royal Beatings” – the former in each case is Weiss’ unadorned drum track, the latter a reprisal with Zenón’s and Mitchell’s darting inventions parrying with the original. The pairing of “Horizontal Lifestyle” and “Vertical Lifestyle” reverses the process; “Vertical” features the full trio, while “Horizontal” strips away Weiss’ rhythmic foundation to spotlight the intricate sax-piano duo that it inspired. The mesmerizing “Conversing with Stillness” takes a similar approach, beginning with the full trio and then excising Weiss’ drums midway to leave behind a gossamer, free-floating ballad.

These concise experiments are interspersed with the half-dozen new compositions that Weiss penned for the album. They include the agitated, insistent opener, “It Is What It Is,” where the sustained nervous tension seems to contrast with the laissez-faire tone of acceptance suggested by the title. It’s followed by the mournful tribute “The Children of Uvalde,” which was written in the immediate aftermath of the 2022 school shooting, when this latest round of horror was still raw.

“Sometimes I don't really know how to respond to these events except to go write a tune to express the pain,” Weiss says. “That one came out of me pretty quickly. Hearing the news of a school shooting has always been horrific, but now that I have a kid it really hits home. I can't imagine what those parents go through or how they bounce back.”

The tender “Fathers and Daughters” illustrates the more joyous aspects of parenthood. “Five to Nine,” like the improvised “Nineteen to the Dozen,” is a play on the complex meter of the respective tunes. And both “Nusrat” and “Ititrefen,” along with the improvised “Bu,” continue Weiss’ longstanding habit of paying homage to his inspirations.

“Nusrat” is named for the iconic Pakistani Qawwali singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and transplants a Qawwali tabla rhythm onto the drum set. “Max Roach” and “Bu,” the nickname of Art Blakey, both build on rhythmic ideas gleaned from those legendary drummers. “Bu” isolates a Blakey pattern and reimagines it in the tradition of a tabla composition, while “Max Roach” elaborates on Roach’s famed contribution to Charlie Parker’s “Klactoveedsedstene.” “Ititrefen” is “Nefertiti” spelled backwards, and was written with Wayne Shorter’s brilliant composition in mind.

The game of rock, paper, scissors depicted on the cover of Even Odds is a perfect encapsulation of this trio’s inventive music: equal parts bold and assertive, keen and incisive, and expansive and encompassing; three ideas expressed at once, at times overlapping, at times in conflict; and constantly, gleefully unpredictable.


Dan Weiss

Dan Weiss has been hailed as one of the top five drummers in jazz by The New York Times. His innovative drumming and forward-thinking compositions have been pushing musical limits for decades. Weiss's intense study of jazz, classical Indian, contemporary classical, West African, and metal sets a musical platform that creates a sound that transcends conventional style or genre. Weiss has studied tabla under Samir Chatterjee for 25 years. His trio with Jacob Sacks and Thomas Morgan has released four albums (Now Yes When, Timshel, Utica Box and Dedication) and he also leads a unique 16-piece large ensemble featuring some of NYC’s most gifted musicians. His band Starebaby (with Matt Mitchell, Craig Taborn, Ben Monder and Trevor Dunn) blends metallic jazz, prog and post rock, melding deep sophistication with visceral impact. As a sideman, Weiss has played/toured with Lee Konitz, Chris Potter, Sylvie Courvoisier, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Linda May Han Oh, John Zorn, and others.

 
Dan Weiss – Even Odds

Cygnus Recordings – CR104 – Recorded Sept. 19-20, 2023

Release date March 29, 2024