Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra: Cuba: ...
Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra: Cuba: The Conversation Continues
ByRevolution and musical genres share the characteristic of having an embryonic state. While the United States and Russia bore witness to the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall and the symbolic end of the Cold War, part of that war refused to end. An economically strapped Soviet Union withdrew support for the island nation of Cuba and the ideologically muddled US would not forgive the offenses of Fidel Castro despite years of supporting his ruthless predecessor. The onetime vacation paradise of Las Vegas mobsters, US politicians and corporate predators became a poor, weather-beaten relic with the exception of its art community. When Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika took hold in the Soviet Union, the halo effectif not the economic benefitwas felt in Cuba. Cautious optimism led to a slow shift back toward the in-country evolution of Cuban music after years of talent migrating to more culturally forward thinking countries.
Like the music of the US, Cuban music has its primary origins in West Africa and the colonizing counties of Europe, chiefly Spain but also France. The creole elements were well entrenched when the country's music began to have more impact on salsa, tango and Afro beat styles. But jazz is where the Cuban sensibility has most greatly enhanced another genre through folk forms and earlier cultures and unique regional rhythms. There seems to have been an innate sense within the country that spoke to a cultural emergence that would be defined by the oppression and struggles of the past and a new order to come. Wisely, the purveyors of the movement would not shy away from the stability of nostalgia nor reject the rectitude that demanded some groping for a way forward.
Pianist and composer, Arturo O'Farrill was born in Mexico City, the son of famed Cuban composer/trumpeter Arturo

Chico O'Farrill
composer / conductor1921 - 2001

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Tito Puente
drums1923 - 2000

Dafnis Prieto
drumsb.1974

Michele Rosewoman
pianob.1953

Zack O'Farrill
drums
The energy and buoyancy of political events led to Cuba: The Conversation Continues; a commemorative celebration this historical transition. The two-disc set opens with Prieto's "The Triumphant Journey," a swirl of horns and percussion that wraps up with powerful brass and reeds. Commissioned by the Apollo Theater and written by O'Farrill, the twenty-one minute "The Afro Latin Jazz Suite" consists of four movements and strong performances from

Rudresh Mahanthappa
saxophone, altob.1971

Jim Seeley
flugelhornGuest pianist


Gregg August
bass
DJ Logic
turntable
Adam O'Farrill
trumpetb.1994
Adam O'Farrill returns with a blistering solo on "Just One Moment." The Cuban alto saxophonist Michel Herrera composed the piece and is featured as a soloist as well. The relatively short song manages to tumble through myriad brass and reed passages. Two more vocal numbers follow; "El Bombón" with lyrics written and sung by Guantánamo resident "Cotó" Juan de la Cruz Antomarchi and an

Earl McIntyre
trombone, bass
Renee Manning
vocalsb.1955
Even without the current US/Cuban political events Cuba: The Conversation Continues would have been an epic production. O'Farrell surrounds himself and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra with performers and composers who speak to a potentially global perspective as well as new audiences for the music of the Caribbean region. The album is a sprawling, adventurous collection that crosses genres and political borders, respecting tradition while forcing boundaries. This is O'Farrill's most ambitious work andespecially for those involved in the projecta once in a lifetime experience. ">
Track Listing
(Disc 1) The Triumphant Journey; The Afro Latin Jazz Suite: Movement I: Mother Africa, Movement II: All of the Americas, Movement III: Adagio, Movement IV: What Now?; Guajira Simple; Alabanza; Blues Guaguancó. (Disc 2) Vaca Frita; Just One Moment; El Bombón; Second Line Soca; There’s a Statue of José Martí in Central Park.
Personnel
Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestraThe Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra: Arturo O’Farrill: piano and musical director; Gregg August: bass; Vince Cherico: drums; Carlos Maldonado: bongos; Tony Rosa: congas; David DeJesus: alto sax; Ivan Renta: tenor sax; Seneca Black: trumpet; Jim Seeley: trumpet; John Bailey: trumpet; Jonathan Powell: trumpet; Tokunori Kajiwara: trombone; Rafi Malkiel: trombone, euphonium; Frank Cohen: trombone; Earl McIntyre: bass trombone; Peter Brainin: tenor sax; Alejandro Aviles: alto sax, clarinet, flute; Jason Marshall: baritone sax; Rey David Alejandre: trombone; Vince Cherico: drums; Adel Gonzalez Gomez: congas, percussion. Additional personnel: Jesus Ricardo Anduz: trumpet (1-8); Carlos “Hueso” Arci: guiro (1-8); Alexis Bosch: piano (1-6, 1-8); Bobby Carcasses: vocals (1-8); “Coto” Juan de la Cruz Antomarchi: tres, vocals (2-3); DJ Logic: turntables (2-1); Antonio Duverger: bongos, marimbula (2-3); Maria Gomez Matos: guiro (2-3); Michel Herrera: alto sax (2-2); Rudresh Mahanthappa: alto sax (1-2, 3, 4, 5, 2-5); Yasek Manzano: trumpet (1-7); Antonio Martinez Campos: bata (1-7); Renee Manning; vocals (2-4); Adam O’Farrill: trumpet (2-1, 2); Zach O’Farrill: drums (2-1), conductor (2-5), Roberto Quintero: maracas (1-3); Michele Rosewoman: piano (1-7).
Album information
Title: Cuba: The Conversation Continues | Year Released: 2015 | Record Label: Motema Music
Tags
Comments
About Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra Concerts

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY

The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
BirdlandNew York, NY
Support All About Jazz
