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Afro-Cuban Jazz Moods

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (153 ratings)
Afro-Cuban Jazz Moods album cover
01
Oro, Incienso y Mirra
15:43
02
Calidoscopico
5:07
$0.99
03
Pensativo
5:21
$0.99
04
Exuberante
5:52
$0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 32:03

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eMusic Review 0

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Larry Blumenfeld

eMusic Contributor

10.14.09
Dizzy goes International
2006 | Label: Pablo

Back when I edited a jazz magazine, I'd find regular annoyance with writers who thought Latin jazz was a tiny sidebar to American jazz. Jazz is many stories, a central one being the African Diaspora. The music of Latin America, South America and the Caribbean are cousins to American music (and they contain some rhythmic secrets we've forgotten, I'd say). Cuba in particular has a special musical relationship with the United States and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie was one among jazz's ranks who honored that truth with depth and style. Though Dizzy made his Big Cuban Bang decades earlier, this 1975 session finds him with the famed band of Frank "Machito" Grillo, featuring the great Cuban trumpeter Mario Bauzá. Composer/arranger Chico O'Farrill's "Oro, Incienso y Mirra" is as modern a fusion of cross-cultural ideas as you'll hear today.

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My Favorite Latter day Gillespie

jeffersonh

For me, this music jumps out of the speakers with abandon and never lets up. Intense.

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Cool music.

ecaroom

But. Emusic is charging more per track, plus they are now charging MULTIPLE "credits" per download...I get charged 12 "credits" for a 4 song album by dizzy gillespie. Three tracks were five minutes, the fourth track was 15 minutes. Goodbye Emusic. You were once a good deal. I am cancelling tonight.

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I love this music

buberfan

This music is bursting with exuberant JOY and LIFE. So much vitality, so many ideas. The first (and longest) track takes a bit more getting into, but it is well worth the effort.

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Blazing Hot Fire

Atlaight!

This is Blazing Hot Fire.

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Typical sound of the Seventies?

rene.leemans

This is very fine recording in 1975 with a lot of moods and sometimes I recognize parts of 'tunes' which were used in typical seventies police tv-series or movies like 'Starsky and Hutch', 'Baretta' or 'Dirty Harry' (Dirty Harry is Clint Eastwood who used jazz music in several of his movies where he was an actor or director). If you listen carefully to the horn-session in combination of percussion, you know what I mean...

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Dizzy Cubop

vmrdv2k

For Dizzy fans I suppose this is essential. For Jazz, Latin/Jazz fans it's worth investigating, or at the very least the lead off, epic track,"Oro, Incienco Y Mirra (Gold, Incense & Myrr)." It hearkens back to a time in Afro-Cuban music when epic, suites were works of art.

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I love Emusic...

Geewiz

Im only 25yr but being able to have acess to these pieces without digging in a thrift store is great sometimes. I mean dont get me wrong I love digging but you know what I mean. =)

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An Exciting Album

nurfhead

Machito's constantly fluctuating Cuban rhythms mixed with Gillespie's deft and forceful trumpet create a dynamic that absolutely smokes. Treat yourself to this great album.

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They Say All Music Guide

Here we have a summit meeting late in the careers of the pioneering titans of Afro-Cuban jazz — Dizzy Gillespie fronting the Machito orchestra on trumpet, with Mario Bauza as music director, alto saxophonist/clarinetist, and organizing force, and Chico O’Farrill contributing the compositions and arrangements. This could have been just a nostalgic retro gathering 25 years after the fact, but instead, these guys put forth an ambitious effort to push the boundaries of the idiom. The centerpiece is a 15-minute trumpet concerto for Dizzy called “Oro, Incienso Y Mirra,” where O’Farrill melts dissonant clusters, electric piano comping, and synthesizer decorations together with hot Afro-Cuban rhythms into a coherent, multi-sectioned tour de force. Dizzy, who apparently had never been in the same room with synthesizers before, is magnificent as he peels off one patented bebop run after another over Machito’s band and in the gaps between. There is also an equally sophisticated suite of O’Farrill pieces grouped under the title “Three Afro-Cuban Jazz Moods,” which mixes rock elements into the rhythms. Parts of “Pensativo” sound as if O’Farrill had been carefully listening to Santana, the teacher learning from the student, as it were. It adds up to a paltry 32 minutes of music, yet one can forgive the short weight, this being all there is of a historic recording session. – Richard S. Ginell

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