Gillespiana was a work originally written by Lalo for Gillespie's 16-piece orchestra. It was recorded in 1960. As he told me during an interview at his home in Beverly Hills in 2012, he composed the suite as a valentine to Gillespie, an artist he cherished and admired deeply.
And for good reason. In 1952, Lalo was accepted at the Paris Conservatoire on a music scholarship. But Juan Perón's secret police summoned him to find out why he sought to study abroad. At headquarters, during my interview, they easily could have made me disappear," he said during our chat. I could hear the tango playing below to mask the screams of those they were torturing. I told the inspector that my acceptance was an honor for Argentina. He stamped my exit visa and let me go."
In Paris, Lalo played piano in jazz clubs but was nearly deported for playing without a work permit. A diplomat at the Argentine Embassy told me to play at a recital attended by the French Minister of Education. Afterward, the minister gave me a card to see the Minister of Labor, who granted me a work permit."
In 1956, a year after the Perón regime fell, Lalo returned to Buenos Aires as a professional jazz musician—much to his parents' dismay. They feared I wouldn't be able to earn a living," he said. When Dizzy Gillespie performed in Buenos Aires later that year, Lalo attended his concerts and played for him at a reception.
Dizzy asked me to come to the U.S., but I didn't receive my green card until 1958," Lalo said. Once in New York, he had to wait another year for a work permit from the musicians union. During this time, Dizzy asked me to write a piece for him. So over a weekend, I composed a draft of 'Gillespiana,' an orchestral jazz suite."
After Gillespiana was recorded in 1960 and released, Lalo became an overnight sensation among jazz musicians, and Gillespie invited him to join his quintet on a European tour. Included on that tour was a stop at the Falkoner Centret in Copenhagen, where the quintet performed the Gillespiana Suite. JazzWax clip: Here's Panamericana...
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This story appears courtesy of JazzWax by Marc Myers.
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