Home » Jazz Articles » Bailey's Bundles » The Latin Tinge: Carmen Cuesta, Rebeca Vallejo and Rozina Patkai
The Latin Tinge: Carmen Cuesta, Rebeca Vallejo and Rozina Patkai
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Toda Una Vida...
Tweedy Records
2014
Following her well-received bossa nova offering, Mi Bossa Nova (Tweedy Records, 2010), Madrid singer

Azúcar, Canela
World Music Boutique
2014
Madrid-born vocalist and composer Rebeca Vallejo's Azucar Canela is as infectious as the H1N1 Flu at Midnight Mass. Its virulence is best owed to its pure Flamenco roots and Brazilian inclinations and Vallejo is one bona fide practitioner of these genres. Vallejo considers herself a "world music" type of composer and musician and a "jazz singer with a Flamenco flair." Her music is the essence of kinesis, constantly moving, developing, evolving. Central to Vallejo's art is percussion, both the instrumental kind with drums and the more visceral kind derived from snapping fingers, thumping of chest. Vallejo uses her whole body as an instrument, one that can set the mood for a song. Con Brio is the standard momentum of this music. Vallejo's performance of "No Sabes" ("You Don't Know What Love Is") adds a dimension to the standard that is stratospheric in effect. Like Carmen Cuesta's recording above, Vallejo employs small but well-chosen forces for support, in particular, pianists George Dulin and Emilo Solla, who tamp the humidity down in favor of the dry heat of Vallejo's full-bodied voice.

Voce e Eu
Pannonia Studios
2014
Hungarian vocalist Rozina Patkai has made her bones performing her "new-jazz version of bossa nova in Europe. Her voice possesses the same European cadence as an Edith Piaf, giving her singing, on some songs, a bit of a sepia patina. Six of the ten selections included her are

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994
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