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Ryan Keberle & Collectiv do Brasil: Choro das Aguas
ByRyan acquiesced, and it has served him well. He was playing in adult big bands at 15, and is on some 25 albums as a side man with a host of bandleaders, including

Maria Schneider
composer / conductor
Darcy James Argue
composer / conductorb.1975

Rufus Reid
bass, acousticb.1944

Miguel Zenon
saxophone, altob.1976

Dave Douglas
trumpetb.1963

David Bowie
vocals1947 - 2016
Keberle has released 18 projects as leader of five ensembles. He has an undergraduate degree from the Manhattan School of Music and was among the first to receive an artist diploma in jazz from Juilliard, staying in New York thereafter to accept a job in jazz studies at Hunter College.
An obsession with 1970s MPB
Big band jazz continues to have an important role in his career, but for many years Keberle has also had an "obsession with música popular brasileira (MPB) of the 1970s" (Brian Pace Report, 2019).On sabbatical from Hunter, Keberle spent time in Brazil and connected with the São Paulo-based rhythm team of pianist
Felipe Silveira
pianoThiago Alves
bass, electric
Paulinho Vicente
drums
Milton Nascimento
guitar and vocalsb.1942

Toninho Horta
guitarReleased in 2023, the Collectiv do Brasil's Considerando (Alternate Side) offered jazz takes on tunes by singer-composer

Edu Lobo
guitar and vocalsFelipe Brisola
bass, acousticRei do Carnaval
The '70s were repressive times for musicians in Brazil, though. 'Doing your thing' could result in surveillance, censorship and exile (or worse) during the military regime (1964-1985), as it did for
Gilberto Gil
guitarb.1942

Caetano Veloso
guitarb.1942
Chico Buarque
guitar and vocalsChoro das Aguas, Collectivo do Brasil's third record with Alternate Side, continues the tribute theme with a release on the occasion of singer-composer

Ivan Lins
piano and vocalsb.1945
Resistance was masked in metaphor, with tunes like "Rei do Carnaval" (lyric by Paulo César Pinheiro) referring simultaneously to the king of carnaval and the fragile nature of political power, whichas the lyric insistsremains in the hands of the people first ("o povo é o rei primeiro"). There are 'no kings' in a democracy, as we might say in the US.
Lins' musical canvas is lush and diverse, with voices grouped in choirs of various sorts along with strings, electric guitar, bass and drums.
Keberle maintains Lins' idea of profusion in his own rendition, enriching the harmonies and applying a different palette: acoustic bass takes the lead first, followed by trombone and piano. Silveira, Brisola and Vicente create a groove that is driving but rarely loud. Keberle's arrangement of "Rei do Carnaval" enhances the tune with the addition of solo sections in shifting textures and feels, delicately set to create beautiful spaces for the band's sensitive and elegant improvisations.
Trombone as lyrical lead
Choro das Aguas is a singular amalgam of arrangements, impressions and lovely original material, where the trombone often takes the role of lead singer. It can be difficult to translate vocal music for instruments, more so when lyrics are in an unfamiliar language and the bite of social commentary is integral to the ethos, as it is in much of his '70s MPB source material. But as Keberle said in liner notes to Considerando, "I've discovered how much I love to play the role of vocalist."And he, like Lins, had a turning point, a moment where he felt compelled to speak out. Following the US presidential election in which Hillary Clinton was defeated in an upset, Keberle released Find the Common: Shine a Light (Greenleaf Music, 2017). His setting of

Bob Dylan
guitar and vocalsb.1941

Camila Meza
vocals
Mike Rodriguez
trumpetb.1979

Jorge Roeder
bass, acoustic
Eric Doob
drumsJá está chegando a hora (Times are a-changin')
Coincidentally, Lins' "Abre Alas"*a lasting favorite from Modo Livrebears a Martins lyric that is strikingly reminiscent of the perennial Dylan piece. Both optimistic and demanding, it addresses an openness ("abertura politica") and eventual redemocratization promised by General Ernesto Geisel, the regime's newly-instated leader in 1974 (but not fully realized until 1985): "Abre alas pra minha bandeira, já está chegando a hora" / Open up for my flag, the time has come. Tellingly, even in New York, in a duo performance with Lins and guitaristLeo Amuedo
guitarKeberle, like Lins, was reluctant to express his political views publicly or artistically at first. And sure enough, Find the Common was praised for it in some circles and criticized in others (e.g., here). In 2025, as the US slides into authoritarianism, there are reasons to look at ways in which our musical predecessors have negotiated comparably tough times.
By focusing on a particular moment in Brazilian popular music situated historically dead center in a grindingly long military dictatorship, Keberle's collaborations with Collectiv do Brasil call our attention to the problem, whether intentionally or not. Lins has threaded the needle, slipping through cracks to create extraordinary works that have alternately responded to changing times and essential ideas of beauty. Keberle might be poised to follow suit.
*****
*The title of Lins' "Abre Alas" makes reference to choro composer Chiquinha Gonzaga's "? Abre Alas (1899), the first published marchinha de carnaval (carnaval march), which remains an indispensable piece of carnaval repertoire. ">
Track Listing
Rei do Carnaval; Noites Sertanejas; Quintessence; Choro das Aguas; Saindo de Mim; Essa Maré; Sai de Baixo; Tens - Long Life; Lua Cirandeira; Simple Sermon.
Personnel
Ryan Keberle
tromboneRyan Keberle's Collectiv do Brasil
band / ensemble / orchestraFelipe Silveira
pianoFelipe Brisola
bass, acousticPaulinho Vicente
drumsAlbum information
Title: Choro das Aguas | Year Released: 2025 | Record Label: Alternate Side Records
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