Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Raúl Molina: Live at Ecuador Jazz Festival
Raúl Molina: Live at Ecuador Jazz Festival
ByThe complex syncopation of "Matria" is based on the bomba music played in the Chota Valley of the country, home to many Afro-Ecuadorians. Vocalist
Taraneh Mousavi
vocalsCamila Cortina
pianoOther songs have creative instrumentation referring to indigenous music, which adds variety to traditional jazz instrumentation. The track "Karu Llakata" starts off centered around Cortina's piano but then shifts to the kena, a traditional flute played across the Andes. "Monos and Gallinas" features the albazo, a musical form with roots in indigenous Ecuadorian culture. Of all the songs on the record, "Monos and Gallinas" shows how live performances can bring out unique arrangements. Molina adapts a rhythm traditionally played on guitar to the piano for the live version of "Monos and Gallinas," but the studio version on his album Matria (Self Produced, 2023), he uses the traditional guitar style. The relaxed groove of the song quickly dissipates into a fiery saxophone solo by
Luis Sigüenza
fluteMolina uses a similar arranging trick of a relaxed starting leading to a fiery middle section across Live at Ecuador Jazz Festival. "Matria" starts slow before the band builds off Cortina's piano solo after a vocal crescendo from Mousavi. Matria is a feminine version of patria, the Spanish word for homeland. Molina gives his bandmates many moments to shine in front of the crowd in Quito. "MA+" is an especially poignant free jazz showcase for the talents of his band. Like "Matria," Molina looks toward the feminine for inspiration, asking each musician to play their interpretation of "the mother."
Other groups have used an approach like Molina's to take elements of traditional folk music into the modern art form of jazz. Groups like Cleveland's Alla Boara take old Alan Lomax recordings from Italy and alter them to fit a contemporary American context. Other Ecuadorian musicians have also taken their country's traditions in a new spin. Standards of Ecuadorian music like "Antonio Mocho" have been interpreted countless times, with singers often changing the lyrics to reflect changing social norms. DJs like Nicola Cruz use indigenous instruments like pan flutes to create modern electronic dance music that sounds perfect in New York City clubs covered in strobe lights. Work like Molina's and these other artists' help keep traditional music alive by showing that sometimes the best way for a musician to innovate is by looking to the past. ">
Track Listing
Monos Y Gallinas; MA+; Karu Llakta; Laura; Trànsito; Matria
Personnel
Raúl Molina
drumsCamila Cortina
pianoTaraneh Mousavi
vocalsCiara Moser
bassRoberto Cachimuel
woodwindsRumi?ahui Cachimuel
woodwindsLuis Sigüenza
fluteAlbum information
Title: Live at Ecuador Jazz Festival | Year Released: 2024 | Record Label: Self Produced
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