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232

Article: Album Review

Kat Parra: Dos Amantes

Read "Dos Amantes" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


It was called Al-Andalus from about 711 AD until it succumbed to the rule of the Portuguese in 1492 AD. But in between that period the Iberian Peninsula that includes Andalusia, Granada, and Castile--modern Spain--was ruled by several Moslem Dynasties of Moorish (North African) origin. They created a legendary culture of inclusion allowing several faiths to ...

277

Article: Album Review

Mark Lambert: Under My Skin

Read "Under My Skin" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Revisiting classic standards is always somewhat risqué--a challenge, to say the least. Where does the balance between the familiar and the overlooked lie when it comes to repertoire? And how much further can the envelope be pushed without the music being absolutely boorish and unrecognizable? Mark Lambert answers both these questions in spectacular fashion in his ...

493

Article: Extended Analysis

Nilson Matta's Brazilian Voyage: Copacabana

Read "Nilson Matta's Brazilian Voyage: Copacabana" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


How it is possible that bassist Nilson Matta is allowed to fly so low under the proverbial radar, with recognition coming mainly from his peers, is one of those mysteries that artists have to learn to live with. Meanwhile, Matta has been complementing the music of luminaries from singers Jo&#227o Gilberto, Johnny Alf and Chico Buarque ...

180

Article: Album Review

Roberto Magris and The Europlane Orchestra: Current Views

Read "Current Views" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Redefining his relationship with contemporary music. Roberto Magris' Current Views finds the artist in a renewed setting with his Europlane Orchestra, but this time the ensemble is slightly smaller--featuring at any given time, anything from a septet to an octet. The album title suggests new perspectives on Magris' philosophy with regard to the use of sound ...

362

Article: Album Review

Dominic Mancuso: Comfortably Mine

Read "Comfortably Mine" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Dominic Mancuso is one of the most distinctive voices in music. He is a paramount storyteller; a premier Sicilian griot of these times. He wails with the best. He cries the blues from the depths of his soul--bringing great measures of duende to the music. Mancuso can swoop, flutter, and rush in to every nook and ...

186

Article: Album Review

Orrin Evans: Faith in Action

Read "Faith in Action" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


On Faith in Action, his reverent homage to an old boss, saxophonist Bobby Watson, Orrin Evans plays with his heart on his sleeve, gliding right down to his bare fingertips. Here is a pianist who channels masters from Thelonious Monk to Bud Powell and Bill Evans. However, through it all Evans is his own man, a ...

302

Article: Album Review

Ralph Bowen: Due Reverence

Read "Due Reverence" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Due Reverence is a gem of an album from beginning to end. All five compositions by its protagonist, tenor saxophonist Ralph Bowen, deserve high praise for outstanding invention and impeccable execution. These are erudite compositions, delving not just into musical characters, but more than anything else, empathizing with them, emoting with them by taking turns on ...

254

Article: Album Review

Prana Trio: The Singing Image of Fire

Read "The Singing Image of Fire" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


One of the great fallacies of modern education is that it chooses to ignore much of the past--especially when it comes to cultures alien to the one that is subscribed to. This cultural insularity has prevented the enjoyment of some centuries-old art that is particularly poignant in today's turbulent and finite times. Fortunately ...

336

Article: Album Review

Roberto Fonseca: Akokan

Read "Akokan" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


In his follow-up to 2007's Zamazu (Enja/Justin Time), Cuban piano master, Roberto Fonseca deepens his journey into his quasi-mystical musical search. Like the mythical Gilgamesh, the pianist has embarked on a seemingly endless journey, a leap of faith into the musical unknown, to find the tonal center of pain and joy, heartache and ecstasy--and yes, in ...

640

Article: Interview

Roberto Fonseca: A Life in the Spirit

Read "Roberto Fonseca: A Life in the Spirit" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Recognition for the considerable talent of Cuban pianist, Roberto Fonseca has spread far and wide, and if there was another dimension to enter, it would be the one that qualifies an artist to greatness. However, Fonseca fights shy of any attention that distracts from his music. A deeply spiritual person, who just happens to express himself ...


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