Chico O'Farrill - Carambola (2000)

  • 22 Apr, 07:17
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Artist:
Title: Carambola
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Milestone Records
Genre: Latin Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue)
Total Time: 65:55 min
Total Size: 398 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Carambola (5:19)
02. The Aztec Suite (15:11)
03. Delirio (4:25)
04. Havana Blues (5:28)
05. Vanna's Song (3:22)
06. Crazy City (...But I Love It) (3:56)
07. Waller Exercise (1:48)
08. Rhapsody for Two Islands (3:35)
09. Oye Mi Rumba (2:19)
10. Enamorado (Falling in Love) (4:46)
11. Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite (15:54)


The astounding comeback of Chico O'Farrill at age 79 continued with this terrific collection of mostly Afro-Cuban styled compositions -- some brand-new, some more than half a century old. Originally written for Dizzy Gillespie, the swinging title tune takes on a more complex Afro-Cuban treatment this time, with Michael Mossman capably taking on the trumpet work. "The Aztec Suite," written for Art Farmer, comes together smoothly and cohesively, with even more spectacular work by Mossman -- and "Crazy City (...But I Love It)" is "Gone City" (recorded by Machito in 1949) in a more refined, shipshape, somewhat less frantic performance. The oldest piece, "Oye Mi Rumba" (1945), lures singer Graciela out of retirement for some endearingly authentic atmosphere. Don't overlook newer material like O'Farrill's treatment of "Delirio" -- a beautiful bolero, very sophisticated in harmony -- and "Rhapsody for Two Islands," a flamboyant little piece designed to evoke Cuba and Manhattan with a sudden, broadly-paced solo piano break that explicitly quotes "Rhapsody in Blue." Yet the highlight of the CD is undoubtedly the amazingly successful re-recording of O'Farrill's visionary "Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite," 50 years after the original Machito version was cut. His crisply executing 21st Century orchestra makes the material seem even more emotionally moving than before, although you do miss the impossibly fluid alto of Charlie Parker (guest soloist Mario Rivera makes an honorable stab at Bird's part) and irreplaceably wild Buddy Rich drums from the Machito record. This is a must-hear for Latin jazz lovers. -- Richard S. Ginell