
Virtual Birdland (Zoho)
Arturo O’Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
Released April 2021
Grammy Nominee for Best Latin Jazz Album 2022
JAZZ FM 25 Best Jazz Albums of 2021
Arts Fuse 2021 Jazz Critics Poll Top 10 Latin Album
YouTube:
https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mKwsvR5Ir0J7_N9zp0Z7H4-Cooc-aTMuo
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/album/1qouuaGobt64P5Rp54XI70?si=jj-tBaqDRtu1t98H3LabYQ
About:
The images of 2020 were scary, nights of ambulance sirens,
freezer trucks, sleeplessness, a nation’s economy brought to a halt. Jobs lost,
businesses, restaurants, and yoga studios shuttered. With the exception of some
high-tech companies and the well ensconced, everybody suffered.
There were other images. Women and men in scrubs and face shields facing an
onslaught of suffering with quiet strength. Superheroes clothed in checkout
aprons and flight attendant uniforms. People at the lower rungs of the
socioeconomic strata who, just by showing up to work, conferred upon themselves
wealth of character.
Images of violence visited
upon young black lives, millions marching in defiance of that hatred. An
honest discussion of racism and a reckoning of the likes we’ve never seen. We
discovered a moral abyss at the highest levels of governance and the wisdom of
one who urged us to get into “good” trouble. We saw who was who and what was
what and can never unsee the differences. Into this reality we meet a group of
musicians, the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra. One week they’re looking at gainful
employment. The next they’re faced with the reality that the work they’ve
prepared for their whole lives has disappeared.
Free-lance artists have no
regular paycheck, no guarantees of employment. They spend hours in
practice rooms, doing their scales, their pliés, memorizing soliloquies, writing
their stand up, and if they’re very lucky they get to practice their craft.
People devoted to those brief moments on stage bring a measure of joy to us,
essential workers who may not save lives but do make life worth living. At the
beginning of this crisis the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance created an emergency fund
for the freelance community, and the orchestra began a weekly stream to raise
money to help artists. The production schedule involves musicians donating
their time to record individually for hours at a time, then videographers and
sound engineers spending days assembling, mixing, syncing, and editing the
offering that is shown once a week on Facebook and YouTube.
Two realizations emerged. The first was that only two entities are required for
any transaction. Early on in the series we began to see giver and receiver
become one. The chat box revealed people from throughout the planet letting us
know that in the midst of this dark moment there was at least one time a week
that brought them healing. We who labored to give were receiving, knowing our
gift was meaningful to people whom we did not know and would most likely never
meet. It gave us a sense of global purpose and relevance. The giver becomes the
receiver and the gift stays in motion.
The second realization was
that the magic of music comes not from the performance or the setting. It
comes from the camaraderie of the musicians who bring their best every time
they play together, whether in the same room or separated by continents,
transcending the artificiality of the computer screen. It’s not the notes but
the spirit that creates the swing, the vibe, the whatever you call it, and it’s
here in spades. That joy cannot be manufactured, nor contained.
“Gulab Jamón” was commissioned by the Greene Space in New York City. The
piece’s title is a mash up of two of my favorite cuisines, Indian and Spanish.
The inspiration came from thinking about water and how it can exist in many
forms but is essentially the same. We should see humanity as existing in many
forms but being of the same essence. We do not dilute our essence when we
embrace others.
“Pouvoir” means “power” in French and is written by a very powerful artist born
in Morocco, a defender of the sacred Moroccan rhythmic code, Chaabi (a traditional
style of North African dance music associated with weddings and festivals.)
Malika Zarra, trained in New York, currently residing in Paris, is an archetype
of how the music of Mother Africa flows from its sources and travels the globe
enriching everyone it touches.
Beautiful human beings make beautiful music. I’m not talking about high
cheekbones or sculpted abs. I refer to those whose inner joy radiates in who
they are and what they bring. Rafi Malkiel is just such a being. If you know
Rafi, you love Rafi. “Desert”, his composition, is an example of that inner joy
flowing out. The sound of ancient trade routes connecting with a moment in time
where we all need healing.
“Nightfall” by Larry Willis is an example of the compositional prowess of this
brilliant pianist. The effortlessness of his swing and the efficacy of his
tumbao reveal that the roots, path, and future of this music we call jazz are
Afro Latino. Influenced by the middle east and beyond, this music filters
through Spain, ferments in Northern African, crystalizes in Western Africa and
through a cataclysm called the slave trade, makes its way into all of the
Americas.
The next piece is an example of global cooperation, of what could be if artists
ran the world. Ghazi Faisal Al-Mulaifi from Kuwait wrote this beautiful song,
“Ana Mashoof”, and it was originally performed in Abu Dhabi during a concert
called Cuba Meets Khaleeji: The Middle Eastern Roots of Afro Cuban Jazz. In
this iteration, Boom Diwan (Boom Diwan is a band of percussionists) records
from Kuwait, Ghazi from Abu Dhabi, and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra from the
United States and Europe.
Paquito D’Rivera’s “Samba for Carmen” was written for the inimitable Carmen
McRae and arranged by Maestro Chico O’Farrill. Paquito is a chameleon and one
of the most amazing clarinetists of our time. He is equally at home playing a
Mozart concerto, a Guaguanco, or a fast Cherokee. Here, he is featured in a
Brazilian samba and sounds like a born and bred “carioca.”
Letieres Leite is my counterpart. He founded Orkestra
Rumpilezz and created a universe around performing and teaching Afro Brazilian
music. This is not your typical elevator bossa. This is full blown Candomblé,
scored for 5 percussionists, 4 trumpets, 4 trombones, 5 saxes and a tuba.
“Alafia” is his composition and recorded here by a very happy group of
physically, but not socially distant musicians thrilled to be playing such
progressive music.
Composed by Rafael Solano and orchestrated by Chico O’Farrill, “En La
Oscuridad” is a meditation in elegance and soul. I performed this piece under
my father’s direction and marveled at the playing of tenor saxophone giant,
Mario Rivera. To hear Mario’s protégé, Ivan Renta, play with so much reverence
for his mentor, yet be so much his own voice, reminds me that we are part of an
ancestral trail.
Don Angel “Papo” Vazquez is affectionately known as “El Almirante” (The Admiral). He is the creator of bomba jazz and amongst the finest trombonists I know. “Cimarron” was commissioned by The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance and in this setting refers to the wild or untamed runaway. I love this celebration of musical fearlessness.
We close this recording with Tito Puente’s iconic “Para Los Rumberos” arranged by José Madera. A rumbero is someone who is not bound by circumstance. Who
when the picture is at its bleakest and the smart thing to do is cave in to fear, does the opposite and celebrates the challenge with song and dance. Are you a rumbero? When life hands you lemons, do you make lechon asado out of it? Tito took the circumstances of his life and created a universe of joy. If you have that skill then you too, are a rumbero. Closing thoughts
When this thing happened, this pandemic, this time of national and global reckoning, we were blindsided and even though the sky seemed like it was falling, we rose up and were determined to play music and heal others. This recording is proof that we are interconnected globally even if we are not allowed to leave our homes. The musicians on this recording sat in their living rooms, bedrooms, or closets and contributed to the lives of thousands of unseen listeners. No immediate feedback, no discernible applause, no fancy concert halls, no paycheck, just the purest form of art there is, service to others.
Arturo O’Farrill
Virtual
Birdland is a candle in the darkness, which illuminates what is possible when
good people come together to create beauty and meaning in the world. The
year 2020 will forever be known as annus horribilis, one of misfortune and
misgiving, when the people of the world suffered through an pernicious
pandemic.
Arturo O’Farrill is the ultimate “artivist,” a terrific blend of artist and
activist. When the occasion arises, he rises to it. Instead of cursing the
darkness, he creates music and opportunity for all of us to experience. Arturo
is a humanitarian who helped to mobilize resources to support the creative
community. He made sure that those in the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra had a
steady gig, a semblance of normalcy during a time of chaos. While we all
hunkered down in our homes, every week we had the Virtual Birdland show to look
forward to. This project is indeed an homage to its namesake, named after the
iconic Jazz club in midtown Manhattan where Arturo and the Afro Latin Jazz
Orchestra have had a weekly Sunday night residence for many years.
This album is special. It represents many people coming together to create something
larger. We cannot be defeated. We cannot be kept down. Because the human spirit
will always bring us together. And music will always be a force for unity. This
is the seventh album that I’ve been blessed to produce for Arturo. It’s been an
honor for Doug Davis, Paul Avgerinos, and me to help bring maestro Arturo’s
brilliant artistic vision into the world.
Kabir Sehgal
Track Listing:
1. Gulab Jamon (Arturo O’Farrill) 07:11
2. Pouvoir (Malika Zarra) 06:45
3. Desert (Rafi Malkiel) 06:25
4. Nightfall (Larry Willis) 07:40
5. Ana Mashoof (Ghazi Faisal Al-Mulaifi) 08:12
6. Samba for Carmen (Paquito D’Rivera) 05:11
7. Alafia (Letieres Leite) 07:37
8. En la Oscuridad (Rafael Solano Sanchez) 03:48
9. Cimarron (Papo Vazquez) 08:02
10. Para los Rumberos (Tito Puente) 07:20
The Rafi Malkiel composition “Desert” was created with support from Chamber Music America’s New Works: Creation and Presentation Program, funded through the generosity of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
Personnel:
Arturo O’Farrill piano, conductor
Special Guests
Malika Zarra voice (2)
Gili Sharett bassoon (3)
Ghazi Faisal Al-Mulaifi guitar and voice (5)
Boom Diwan:
Sulaiman Mayouf Mejally, Abdulaziz Al-Hamli, Abdulwahab Al-Hamli, Khaled Bunashi, Ghanem Salem percussion (5)
Paquito D’Rivera alto saxophone (6)
Richard Miller guitar (6)
Everton Isidoro cuica, pandeiro, caxixi (6, 7)
Gustavo Di Dalva atabaque (7)
Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
Saxophones
Alejandro Aviles alto, flute (1, 5),
soprano (4, 5)
Adison Evans alto, all tracks except 3, 7,
flute (5, 6);
Roman Filiu alto (3)
Ivan Renta tenor, soprano (9)
Jasper Dutz tenor, all tracks except 6, 7, 10, clarinet (2, 3, 5)
Jeremy Powell tenor (6, 7)
Livio Almeida tenor (10)
Larry Bustamante baritone,
bass clarinet (2, 3, 5)
Trumpets
Seneca Black (1, 3, 7, 9)
Bryan Davis
Adam O’Farrill
Walter Cano (2, 9, 10), flugelhorn (4)
Rachel Therrien all except 9, flugelhorn (5)
Kai Sandoval (6, 8)
Trombones
Rafi Malkiel euphonium (3)
Mariel Bildsten all tracks except 6
Abdulrahmen Amer all tracks except 8
Xito Lovell (6)
Ben Barnett (8)
Earl Mcintyre all except 6, 8,
bass trombone, tuba (3, 7)
James Rogers bass trombone (6, 8, 9)
Rhythm Section
Arturo O’Farrill piano
Bam Bam Rodriguez upright bass,
electric bass (1, 2, 5, 6); karkabas (3)
Vince Cherico drums
Keisel Jimenez conga drums
Carly Maldonado bongo drums, bell,
guiro; cajon (2), doumbek (3, 4); timbales (10)
Recorded online between April through October 2020, around the world from New York, New Jersey, California, Puerto Rico, Quebec, Brazil, Peru, Spain, Switzerland, France, UK, Abu Dhabi and Kuwait
Produced by: Kabir Sehgal, Doug Davis and Paul Avgerinos.
Post production and engineering by: Amin Farid Abdal in Kuwait. Mixed and mastering by: Peter Karl
Photography: Nurit Sharett (Rafi Malkiel), Melanie Futorian
CD cover design by: Beatriz Salvatierr
Art direction and package design by: Jack Frisch
Executive produced by: Kabir Sehgal, Fred Miller, Joachim “Jochen” Becker, and The Afro Latin Jazz Alliance
Review:
Whenever an obstacle presents itself—even one as devastating
and disruptive as a global pandemic—it’s a sure bet that musicians will find a
way around it, a way to keep making music even in the most grievous
circumstances. Jazz musicians have been especially creative during the Covid-19
scourge, using social media, the internet and any other means at their disposal
to share their music with the world. True, the paychecks aren’t as large or as regular as once they were, but
love and dedication can make up for a lot of shortcomings—the sort of love and
dedication that produces recordings such as Virtual Birdland, wherein
the members of pianist Arturo O’Farrill ‘s Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
were able to come together solely in spirit, assembling instead in groups of
one in living rooms, bedrooms, and even closets to help make the dream of
creating bright and pleasing music a reality.
What has emerged from their diligence is an album whose earnestness and
elation are palpable, and whose group dynamic is seamless, a testament to the
superior musicianship of O’Farrill and his colleagues. It’s an album that also
touches a lot of bases, from Cuba to Morocco and beyond, embracing Brazilian
and even Kuwaiti themes while employing Afro-Cuban rhythms, the samba, rhumba,
bomba jazz and American swing to press home its point. Those emphatic rhythms,
in fact, keep the enterprise safely afloat when its lyricism and consonance are
less than persuasive, which is sometimes the case. Even when braving such
adverse conditions, it’s notable that the group intensity never slackens.
To enhance its assets, the
orchestra welcomes a number of talented guests, one of whom, Paquito D’Rivera,
wrote the exhilarating “Samba for Carmen,” on which his alto
saxophone takes pride of place, as a tribute to the late great vocalist, Carmen
McRae. That’s an unequivocal highlight, as is Letieres Leite’s powerful
Afro-Brazilian bossa, “Alafia,” which follows. Tenor
saxophonist Ivan Renta is showcased on the enchanting ballad,
“En la Oscuridad,” which precedes Papo Vasquez’ colorful
“Cimarron” and the sultry finale, Tito Puente’s well-traveled
“Para Los Rumberos.” O’Farrill’s assertive “Gulab Jamon”
opens the session, followed by Morroco-born Malika Zarra’s North
Africa-inspired “Pouvoir,” Rafi Malkiel’s undulating
“Desert,” American pianist Larry Willis’ stylistically prismatic
“Nightfall” and Ghazi Faisal Al-Mulaifi’s gentle Middle Eastern
anthem, “Ana Mashoof” (on which he sings and plays guitar).
The orchestra is steady throughout, as are the soloists, who include (besides
those already noted) trumpeters Adam O’Farrill, Rachel Therrien, Seneca
Black and Bryan Davis; trombonists Mariel Bildsten, Rafi
Malkiel and Abdulrahman Amer; soprano saxophonist Alejandro
Aviles, baritone Larry Bustamante (featured on “Alafia”),
tenor Jasper Dutz, drummer Vince Cherico, conguero Keisel
Jiminez Leyva and percussionist Carly Maldonado. Even though
this Birdland is virtual, not up close and personal, the spirit is no less
ardent, and it shows.
Jack Bowers (All About Jazz)