Social Distancing (Saponegro Records)

Gabriel Alegria Afro-Peruvian Sextet

Released January 2021

New York City Record Best Latin Releases of 2021

YouTube:

https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lh8oJtpP6-vJj2KmIEHf3_OZRclaaLKL4

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About:

The confluence of a worldwide pandemic, a whole lot of masks, 120 determined fans, and a poem-gone-viral have produced the bold and brilliant album Social Distancing, on which the Gabriel Alegría Afro-Peruvian Sextet powerfully connects with planet Earth’s new reality. From relentless percussive chaos to sublime harmonies of healing, every moment of this recording delivers the listener from the confusion of the 2020 pandemic into an undeniably safe place: A new home called Afro-Peruvian jazz music. The band dug deep into their longstanding relationship with their fan base for this project. On the cover of Social Distancing are hand drawings of more than 120 fans who sent in their pictures as part of the design process. The faces of the pandemic are thus vividly captured in an album that is a rollercoaster of musical emotions. The actual pictures create a kaleidoscopic image on the CD itself. “When the pandemic hit, I had two choices,” Alegría says. “Stop everything and lay off the band… or figure out a way to keep going.” So the trumpeter, composer, and bandleader searched inwardly into his own experience for an answer—and remembered that his band has already weathered divorce, drug rehab, natural disasters, and much more. “I wasn’t going to let this stop us,” he says. By moving his entire operation online and investing heavily in the latest technology, including a series of state-of-the art online concert experiences ticketed the world over, Alegría guided Social Distancing to fruition. Social Distancing is a testament-in-sound that documents the story of the 2020 pandemic. Its infectious rhythm makes the listener feel that concept as well as think it—on a par with the great concept albums of the 20th century (think Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band) and more recent 21st-century conceptual efforts in the jazz world such as Ted Nash’s Presidential Suite: Eight Variations on Freedom. The long and profound musical relationships between band members are palpable in every bar of Social Distancing. Saxophonist Laura Andrea Leguía (15 years with the band), master percussionist Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón (also a 15-year veteran), bassist Mario Cuba (7 years), drummer Hugo Alcázar (15 years), and acoustic guitarist Yuri Juárez (13 years) navigate the waters of Afro-Peruvian jazz music seamlessly and organically. The Afro-Peruvian jazz language is intrinsically theirs, and the resulting musical dialogue occurs at the highest level. “This band is like a family, and we communicate that way. But we really wanted this album to build community and create communication among all people,” says Alegría, “and so we’ve been in contact with the fan base every step of the way.” Social Distancing comes with another surprising element. It was during a late-night call from Lima to New York that bassist and composer Mario Cuba asked Gabriel to add a spoken-word piece over the music. Specifically, Mario had found an untitled poem identified as “And the People Stayed Home,” written by a mostly unknown author named Kitty O’Meara. Unknown, that is, until her poem about the pandemic went viral and was picked up by everyone from Deepak Chopra to Oprah magazine. An intensive search was launched to track her down, and ultimately Ms. O’Meara ended up collaborating directly with the band by recording the poem herself. “Kitty’s contribution to this album has touched us all. Her poem is simple prose, yet it magically embodies what we all want to feel, and that is a rare thing,” muses Alegría. The album starts and ends with Mario Cuba’s “And the People Stayed Home…” and Kitty O’meara’s reading of the poem first in English, then in Spanish frames the entire experience that is Social Distancing: the hope that something good will come out of this collective reality of together and apart. Social Distancing includes a powerful and uplifting Alegría original called “Mirando al Shingo,” a nod to his grandfather Ciro, one of the best-known novelists in Latin America. “I never met the guy,” laughs Alegría. “But growing up as ‘Ciro Alegría’s grandson’ in Peru means you hear a lot of stories. ‘Mirando al Shingo’ is a quirky story of how my grandfather was not cut out to work the family hacienda and was found skipping work and staring off into the ether.” “Shingo” represents life before the pandemic and a soothing guitar lullaby ends this piece, only to be met by a striking and very dissonant piano chord that announces the pandemic. “Covid-19,” with piano work by Russell Ferrante (a longtime collaborator of the band and keyboardist with the seminal fusion band The Yellowjackets), is constructed out of a 12-tone row—a 20th-century atonal compositional technique called serialism that Alegria describes as “cold, atonal, and impersonal. It really portrays the angular and deadly power of this virus.” Next comes “The Mask,” featuring a deafening crescendo that brings to mind the ending of Lennon-McCartney’s “A Day in the Life,” followed by a fascinating and very deliberate spoken-word interpretation of the Peruvian Son de los Diablos by Maestro Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón. His deep, gravelly voice hauntingly conveys the darkness of the intention, whether or not the listener understands Spanish. “George & Breonna” is an improvisational masterpiece. According to Alegría, “it musically portrays exchanges at fever pitch, almost like fights.” The horns trade phrases that are as irregular as they are conversational, with interruptions, angular pitches, and ever-increasing intensity. Conceptually reminiscent of Miles Davis and his tribute to Jack Johnson, the tune revolves around only two chord changes and is named after two people whom Alegría honors as victims of racial hate and what he considers to be “the worst side of all mankind.” Nevertheless, Alegría still calls himself an “eternal optimist.” And the drama of the story unfolding in this recording shows a sign of that optimism in “The New Normal,” a righteous almost festive backbeat-laden blues piece set over a Peruvian panalivio groove. It includes an air of New Orleans marching bands as well, and somehow it all makes perfect sense. Laura Andrea Leguía reaches a level of unquestioned maturity on Social Distancing as both a composer and saxophonist. Her two works, “Pavlova” and “Any Day Now,” are luxurious gems that use the Peruvian lando groove to create lush soundscapes that incorporate the band’s signature achievement—the creation of an unique and recognizable Afro-Peruvian style of jazz that has effectively changed the future of Latin Jazz forever. The impeccable recording quality of Social Distancing also stands out. It’s a recording destined to be an audiophile favorite. Peruvian engineer Julio Ortega made a bold decision: to mix a percussion instrument—the Peruvian cajón—at the same level as the traditional trumpet-saxophone melodic frontline familiar to jazz audiences. “We really decided to mix this record as Peruvians,” says Alegría. “Maybe it was the strangely liberating effect of quarantine, but at the end of the day Julio and I ignored the stereotypes of the jazz sound [only horns in front] and put the cajón right up there.” The recording was mastered by multi-grammy winner Alan Silverman. The sound of this recording is a tribute to the African Diaspora and a beacon of hope during these unprecedented times. And the listening experience is made more powerful by knowing that we are hearing a natural, synchronous, and liberating conversation between American Jazz and Black Music from Coastal Peru. “Afro-Peruvian jazz music is a fusion that is more organic and spiritual than it is cerebral and technical,” adds Alegría. “It is really anti-racial.” Gabriel Alegría was born in Lima, Peru in 1970 and raised there until age 9. He grew up a bicultural child, spending equal amounts of time in Peru and the United States. His grandmother was named Rosalia, and her nickname was “La Negra.” But as Gabriel light-heartedly explains, “with a very pale-skinned Argentinian mother I ended up looking like a white boy from Ohio!” In a more serious reflection, he adds that “sometimes it’s hard for folks in North America to understand that Afro-Peruvian is a social and cultural construct where we come from, not necessarily based on the color of your skin.” While growing up, Alegria was introduced to classical music by his father and rock music by his uncle. Yellow Submarine and Peter and the Wolf were some of his earliest musical memories. And it was in Ohio, of all places, that he first heard the word “jazz.” “Friends at school and the band directors hipped me to the idea of jazz,” he recalls. While Alegría’s influences and life experiences have taken him around the world to play in and conduct symphony orchestras, jazz bands, and choirs, it is with the Afro-Peruvian Sextet that he has found his absolute comfort zone and spiritual fortitude. As a true ambassador, Alegría has also invited non-Peruvian-born artists into the world of Afro-Peruvian Jazz Music: Ron Carter, Maria Schneider, Arturo O’Farrill, Ingrid Jensen, Bobby Shew, the late Bill Watrous, Ari Hoenig, and Tierney Sutton, to name a few, have all participated in Alegría’s Afro-Peruvian jazz music projects and recordings over the years. The band leader explains that since the band’s inception, “home for us has meant keeping one foot in the United States and one foot in Peru. But truth be told, home for me is wherever the band is playing together.” The Afro-Peruvian Sextet’s discography started with Nuevo Mundo (2008), a recording that remained on the Jazz Week charts for over 35 weeks. The band’s sophomore release, Pucusana (2010), included Leguía’s now-classic valse-lando “Puerto Pimentel.” It was followed by Ciudad de Los Reyes (2013), the live Afro-Peruvian Jazz Secrets (2014), and the band’s 10th-anniversary recording 10 (2015), which with its mix of classic Afro-Peruvian tunes and jazz standards was highlighted by a bicultural masterpiece combining “El Condor Pasa” and Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” into one breathtaking arrangement. The controversial album Diablo en Brooklyn (2017) cemented the band’s position in the marketplace, despite an unexpected reaction from one swath of the American audience. “Some people in more rural parts of the United States wrongly interpreted our ‘Diablo’ reference to mean we were worshipping the devil,” says Alegría. “And that fire was fueled because the album cover featured a devil mask, which people in the U.S. did not understand was part of a very Catholic and cultural tradition in Peru dating back to Colonial times. We even received some hate mail for the recording’s alleged blasphemy.” The sour taste left in Alegría’s mouth led to yet another bold move: To repurpose some of the music from Diablo and include it in Social Distancing. Remixing, remastering, and renaming tracks was part of something Alegria considered to be a “social experiment” and the process of recovery of his music. “I am very curious to see how these tracks go over in a completely different context, with different names and without the diablo imagery,” he says. Alegría’s well-documented crusade to share his passion and love for Afro-Peruvian jazz music with the world seems to have taken on new life during the Covid “pause.” A robust Member’s Area is now a prime feature of the Afro-Peruvian Sextet’s new website, which is full of exclusive content, educational materials, and even videos featuring other related artists. All of this launched during—and largely because of—the 2020 pandemic. “It is very humbling to know that every day there are people everywhere waking up with us, enjoying their days with us, and truly invested in us,” says Alegría. “That alone is enough to get me through the next 15 years.” As someone who has been through thick and thin and maintained a working band for the past 15 years, Gabriel Alegría, of all people, should know. 

Track Listing:

1: Opening: And the People Stayed Home (Mario Cuba) 5:36

2: Mirando el Shingo (Gabriel Alegría) 5:51

3 Covid 19 (Gabriel Alegría) 4:56

4. The Mask (Gabriel Alegría) 5:10

5. George and Breonna (Gabriel Alegría) 5:35

6. The New Normal (Gabriel Alegría) 4:26

7: Any Day Now (Laura Andrea Leguía) 6:43

8: Amaranta (Laura Andrea Leguía) 7:57

9: Octavio y Natalia (Gabriel Alegría) 6:00

10: Reprise: Y la gente se quedó en casa (Mario Cuba) 5:36

Personnel:

Gabriel Alegría: trumpet, flugelhorn, guapeo and vocals

Laura Andrea Leguía: soprano and tenor saxophones, guapeo and vocals

Yuri Juárez: guitar and vocals

Mario Cuba: basses

Hugo Alcázar: drums, guapeo, vocals and cajita

Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón: cajón, quijada, cajita, campana, guapeo and vocals

Russell Ferrante: piano and keyboards

Jocho Velásquez: guitar

Kitty O’Meara: poetry and recitation

Review:

“Social distancing” became the buzz-words of our world for more than a year and a half between 2020 and 2021. Everyone suffered in body and soul – or, to be a little more specific: spiritually, psychologically, emotionally and financially. No one was spared from the sinister brutality of the COVID 19 virus that blanketed the planet. Personal stories continue to be compelling – especially from those who lost loved ones. But while the health departments of governments worldwide kept grim statistics of those affected and anecdotal events have been repeated by medical professionals, the artist – largely silenced because she/he was deprived of an audience to speak – and sing and dance to – has delved into the effects of this deadly pandemic on the mind and the soul, and the cultural of humanity.

Far from using an epithet that has become almost trite throughout this pandemic, the use of it by the Gabriel Alegría Afro-Peruvian Sextet is metaphoric. This leaps out at you even before you listen to the music because the names of George [Floyd] and Breonna [Taylor], and Octavio [Juárez] and Natalia [Alegría] are inked in red, in the set list. The former two are famous for becoming martyrs and dubious figureheads to the cause of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, their names inextricably linked with the newborn children of Yuri Juárez and Gabriel Alegría and their respective partners – forever linked by birth to the deaths of Mr Floyd and Miss Taylor, and the growing list of black lives snuffed out as the babies’ lives were just beginning – testaments to a human pandemic that has been going unnoticed for centuries, despite the slavery being abolished hundreds of years ago.

Social Distancing, then is a tale of two pandemics – one that has gripped our consciousness for a year and a half and another that continues to elude the most astute conscience. Many artists – particularly musicians and poets – have expressed their anger and angst about being deprived of their livelihoods and that too in many relevant ways. But few in ways that are in a powerfully poignant manner as the musicians of the Gabriel Alegría Afro-Peruvian Sextet – in composition as well as in performance. The toll on mental anguish and hope is powerfully stated at the very outset of this repertoire with a solemn, dirge – Mario Cuba’s “Opening: And the People Stayed Home”. A mournful flugelhorn and hissing cymbal announces the song before the guitar chimes in and then the rest of the band; then, rising in the mournful, funerary rhythm of the song and a change from minor to a major [and augmented] chord[s] accompanied by strings, and containing the lilting uplifting message with the introduction of the poet Kitty O’Meara reciting her magnificent poem: “And the people stayed home/and read books, and listened, and rested, and exercised, and made art/…And the people healed/And the earth healed…”

Lest we forget, this is an Afro-Peruvian ensemble – one of the most innovative ones around – and as such the festejo is never very far away. Gabriel Alegría is a master of the form, as we experience from “Mirando el Shingo”. Much of the picante verve and sashaying swing of the festejo has to do with the inimitable Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón, a human dynamo who propels the music of this band with his cheeky vocalastics and mastery of the quijada, the bouncing rhythms of [both of] which drive the incessant beat of this music. It is a lively segue into the principal work “Social Distancing”, a suite which connects the proverbial dots between both pandemics. Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón is masterful in the dark tone of his vocals – matched by the visceral energy of saxophonist Laura Andrea Leguía and the moaning and wailing of Mr Alegría’s horn. The second movement “The Mask” holds up a mirror to the sinister theme of “George & Breonna”. With a slurring rhythm and with Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón’s diabolical laughter [and vocals], and the chants of the others, setting an ink-black tone of the work as its definitive themes and imagery unfolds. The suite ends with “The New Normal”, in which the grey and foreboding shadowy minor blues that is also – of necessity – heralded in notes of hope.

This is in turn a natural segue into “Any Day Now” and “Amaranta” – two exquisite compositions by the superb woodwinds player and [it also turns out] composer Laura Andrea Leguía. The latter piece is one of the most eloquent pieces of music on this recording – a work enameled as if with a veneer of fine and precious metal. “Octavio y Natalia” – as mentioned earlier is the bookend for “George & Breonna”, a beautiful work but not without its emotion ensconced in liquid tones played as if caressing the two children who are glorified by the song. The album closes with Kitty O’Meara reprising the performance of her iconic poem – this time in Spanish, a language – which given its cadenced melodic and the rhythmic intonation of its accented syllables adds many layers of moodiness to both the theme of the recording and the brilliant performance by all of the artists. What sets this album – and by inference the players on it – apart from others in their tribe is their ability to enunciate, what Mr Alegría calls, using the Quechua word pachamama, which translates to Mother Earth. Connecting it all is his glassy trumpet playing and the vibrant vocal high-jinx of Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón, together with the uplifting Peruvian festejo and landó rhythms. It is this which makes Social Distancing one of the finest, most hauntingly beautiful works to emerge in this annus horribilis – 2020-2021.

Raul Da Gama (Jazz Latin Network)