The Big Band Theory (Zoho)
Hector Martignon Banda Grande
Released June 3, 2016
DownBeat Four-and-a-Half-Star Review
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kSumULYzTs2PMgkC91OgNpICxrqCmrgek
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/7wlJDlgCvrViv8oQBpHZ5J?si=BokYTf8BQpORFdwPgSNSEg
About:
Should
you be insane enough to want to start a Big Band…. do it in New York! A
difficult stage to climb up to and scream; cold and cruel at times but then
burning hot and loving, the Big Apple gives you all you need and more… the
finest musicians with great attitude, plenty of venues, great audiences, good and
affordable studios. In return, you give back what you try to be best at… your
music.
It was at that veteran of all venerable old Manhattan
venues, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in the Lower East Side, where my flirts with
the Big Band format became a love affair, with all its challenges and
intricacies. Starting off as an experimental workshop, with personnel,
compositions and arrangements varying every week, some suitable for the dance
needs of the crowd and some suitable for a full concert, Hector Martignon’s
Bandagrande slowly but surely came of age.
Any composer dreams to write for a large ensemble, be it a large choir, a
Symphonic Orchestra or its Jazz version, the Big Band which offers similar
resources of color and dynamics, even though smaller in numbers. With close to twenty
individual instruments (and their doubles) the arranger takes over from the
composer and gradually starts creating like a painter, thinking in terms of
color, balances, shade, light and, well… a concept borrowed from music by the visual
arts… composition.
Given such a range of possibilities, it was only
natural to encompass as wide as possible a spectrum of music styles and idioms,
from the Baroque sinfonía concertante, visiting the inquiring language of the
sixties’ and seventies’ Jazz, to the Brazilian eccentricities of a Hermeto
Pascoal, adding, of course, my own honest attempts at composing and arranging.
Because of budgetary and space issues we were forced to divide the recording
into four sessions, each of which left (almost) untouched: 1. rhythm section
plus some soloists, 2. horns, 3. strings and 4. some solo overdubs.
Before it
became one more extension of a “Disneylandic” Times Square and its mass
tourism, there were few neighborhoods as diverse, exciting and gastronomically
enticing as Hell’s Kitchen (West Side Manhattan, between 39th and 57th Streets;
recently re-baptized Clinton Hills for real estate sales purposes). Hell’s
Kitchen Sarabande tries to re-capture the strangely alluring decay of the 90s
in an atemporal albeit magically floating 3/2 Sarabande metric.
Staying within a geographic-biographic context, 99
Macdougal Street gives you a glimpse of the year I survived in the famed
Village street that could be compared with New Orleans’ Bourbon Street, if with
less music and more smells. I wrote the tune when I was playing with Ray Barretto’s New
World Spirit.
Although belonging to the staple Bossa repertoire,
Estate is a masterpiece by the great Bruno Martino, one of the engines behind
the Italian musical Boom of the sixties.
During my studies in Germany, I used to love the “Weihnachtsmarkt”, the
Christmas Markets in the main squares or near most train stations, musically
underscored by the Posaunenchor, small groups of 4-6 trombones playing
Christmas songs and chorales. the inspiration behind Trombone Chorale. My song reminisces the
hectic human rivers boarding and leaving the trains, with the incongruent
Christmas music playing in the background.
Staying in the theme, Erbarme Dich is another
“standard” of European sacred music, this time one of the most haunting Arias
(No. 47) out of the St. Matthew Passion by J.S. Bach. I kept Bach’s original
string orchestration almost intact while adding the full Big Band sonority in
the instrumental sections, alternating with the beautiful Alto rendition by
Brenda Feliciano. The original solo violin melodic counterpoint is masterfully
performed by trumpet virtuoso Joe Burgstaller with plenty of freedom and
acrobatic improvisation, recorded “live” with the Rhythm section.
One of my favorite compositions by one of my favorite Jazz pianists is Interplay, an incredibly elegant though playful Blues that only a Bill Evans could compose.
Nostalgias del Futuro is the first movement of a “Concerto for Harp and Orchestra” I wrote for my fellow Colombian and harp virtuoso Edmar Castañeda. The main body develops in a 18/8 variation of the Venezuelan/Colombian rhythm Joropo (usually in 6/8). Besides Edmar other typical Joropo instruments like the Quatro (a small 4 stringed-guitar) are masterfully performed by Venezuelan maestro Jorge Glem, the capachos (small maracas) by my countryman Samuel Torres (right channel) and Venezuelan Roberto Quintero (left channel) who also plays the recently adopted cajón.
Maestra was the first piece I wrote and performed for this format, with the Bogotá Big Band back in 2010. It gave me an extra motivation to start this project. In this rendition I added Martin Vejarano on the indigenous Gaita (a sort of flute with reeds) the maracón (a huge maraca played simultaneously by the “gaitero”) and the big tambora (an improvising bass drum), to re-create a magically beautiful real-life Cumbia, far removed from the reviled commercial Cumbia of such bad reputation! The tune is dedicated to all the teachers of this world, particularly those in rural areas of third world countries.
In some of our big concerts, a Mozart string quartet opens the program, only to be gradually overpowered by a cacophony delivered by the horn section of the Big Band, marching in from all sides of the hall. Mozart Interrupted / Sorrindo reflects this situation, relinquishing the stage to a composition by Brazilian genius Hermeto Pascoal, Sorrindo (Smiling). I respectfully added a (non-existent) solo section, interluding the solos with a horn “background” made up from other Pascoal classics.
The Fruit Vendor’s Last Dream is dedicated to the fruit vendor who immolated himself on January 4, 2011. He protested against the corruption and abuse of power exercised by the authorities in Tunisia, what eventually gave rise to the “Arab Spring”. Whatever became of that movement in the whole region, that act of self-sacrifice will always be remembered as the triumph of dignity over arbitrariness.
John Benitez’ bass solo is just unbelievable, as is his spontaneous “wow!” which I kept at the end of the piece, in this case also the end of this album. I hope you will enjoy…
Hector Martignon
Track Listing:
1. Hell’s Kitchen Sarabande (Hector Martignon) 05:34
2. 99 MacDougal Street (Hector Martignon) 06:27
3. Estate (Hector Martignon / Bruno Martino) 08:30
4. Trombone Chorale (Hector Martignon) 08:19
5. Erbarme Dich (Johann Sebastian Bach / Hector Martignon) 06:54
6. Interplay (Bill Evans / Hector Martignon) 07:04
7. Nostalgias del Futuro (Hector Martignon) 09:22
8. Maestra (Hector Martignon) 06:04
9. Mozart Interrupted/Sorrindo (Hector Martignon / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart / Hermeto Pascoal) 09:17
10. The Fruit Vendor’s Last Dream (Hector Martignon) 05:39
Personnel:
Hector Martignon: piano, accordion, conductor (solos on 2, 4, 9 and 10)
Saxophones
Enrique Fernández (baritone sax), Chelsea Baratz (1st tenor sax; solos on 3 and 6), Alejandro Aviles (2nd tenor sax, clarinet and flute; solo on 9), David De Jesus (1st alto sax; solo on 2; Jason Arce and Alex Han (2nd alto and soprano sax; solos on 1 and 9)
Trumpets
John Walsh (1st; solos on 5, 8 and 8), Seneca Black (2nd; solos on 5 and 8), Steve Gluzband (3rd), Julie Desbordes and Fabio Morgera (4th) Trombones
Andy Hunter (1st; solo on 1 and 4), Rafi Makiel and Luis Bonilla (2nd), Alvin Walker (3rd; solo on 4), Chris Washburne (bass trombone and tuba; solos on 4 and 3)
String Quartet
Nune Melikian (1st violin), Everhard Paredes (2nd violin), Samuel Marchán (viola), Diego García (cello)
John Benitez: bass (solos on 6 and 10)
Vince Cherico: drums (solos on 6 and 9)
Samuel Torres: congas, maracas (solos on 2, 6, 7 and 9)
Christos Rafalides: vibraphone (solos on 2, 4, 3 and 8)
Guests
Brenda Feliciano: vocals (5)
Joe Bugstaller: solo trumpet (5)
Edmar Castañeda: harp (7)
Roberto Quintero: maracas and cajon (7)
Jorge Glem: quatro (7)
Martín Vejarano: gaita (colombian flute), tambora and maracon (8)
Rhythm Section recorded May 10th, 2010, at Water Music Studios, Hoboken, NJ
Horns Recorded May 11th, 2010, at Kaleidoscope Studios, Union City, NJ
Strings Recorded May 19th, 2010, at Tedesco Studios, Paramus, NJ
Produced by Hector Martignon
Mixed and Mastered at My Kitchen Studios, Harlem, NY
Art Direction and Package Design: Jack Frisch
Executive Producer: Joachim “Jochen” Becker
Review:
Composer/arranger Hector Martignon leads his Banda Grande through mostly original orchestrations on The Big Band Theory. The former Ray Barretto pianist is a harmonically adventurous writer whose multi-leveled pieces on this ambitious collection don’t read as standard salsa. Vocalist Brenda Feliciano sings it straight on Bach’s “Erbarme Dich,” while the ensemble undulates with silken currents of strings and horns. Martignon’s “Trombone Chorale” was inspired by German street brass, and the take on Bill Evans’ “Interplay” is far afield from his Nuyorican roots. But a clave beat will kick in on something like Bruno Martino’s “Estate” and we’re in the middle of a sea of sweaty bodies, dancing at a summer street fair in New York. It would take a concert hall to accommodate the orchestra here, but the audience would most certainly crave a dance floor.
Kirk Silsbee (DownBeat)