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Resenas : 15 años locos por la música (...
Events : 2012 S.R.F. Las Vegas
Resenas : Vacilón Santiaguero (Circle 9 ...
Grupos : Pupy y los que S... : Discography - 1995- F...
Reportes : From The St... : Cubadisco 2...
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Reportes : From The St... : Jazz Plaza ...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : Irakere 50th Annivers...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : Irakere
Resenas : Joey Altruda Presents: El Gran ...
Timbapedia : 09. Interviews -... : Carlos del Pino ...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : 2023 Monterey Jazz Fe...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : 2023 Monterey Jazz Fe...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : 2023 Monterey Jazz Fe...
Fotos : Tom Ehrlich : 2023 Monterey Jazz Fe...

Fotos Del Día [hide]

cuban music, musica cubana
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Cuba based rap duo, Zona Franka, blends traditional rhythms with the grit and swagger of hip-hop and rap vocal phrasings. Their clever shout choruses create instant tropical dance classics using their unique self-titled "changui con flow" style.

Sin Clave No Hay Na

thursday, 25 july 2024, 12:04 am

CHUCHITO VALDES DOES THE GREEN MILL

Piano Said To Be In Good Condition

One of the most intense Jazz/Latin Jazz  pianists playing today, Chuchito Valdes, youngest member (so far) of the Bebo Valdes/Chucho Valdes/Chuchito Valdes dynasty,  was a nominee for a Latin Grammy for Best Latin Jazz Album this year and just  played two very exciting performances at The Green Mill  in Chicago Illinois on November 9th and 10th,  2011.  Chuchito's performance style is so powerful that there have been a  few jokes in the musicians' community about the safety of pianos whenever he comes.    Click here to read our review and view the photos.

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thursday, 25 july 2024, 12:04 am

In Honor of Frank "Machito" Grillo

February 16, 19?? - April 19, 1984

(Machito is in the center on maracas)

Francisco Raúl Gutiérrez  "Machito" Grillo was born on February 16, 19-something - the most commonly used years are 1908 followed by 1912, 1909 and occasionally 1915. Accounts also differ as to whether he was born in Havana or in Tampa of Cuban parents. A few things are certain:

1. For decades from the 1940s to the 1980s, he had one of the most important Afro-Cuban Jazz orchestras in the United States.  It was his brother-in-law and musical director, Mario Bauza, that introduced Dizzy Gillespie to Chano Pozo.  He also used Jazz musicians like Charlie Parker, Brew Moore and Howard McGhee to lay the foundations of a style that became known as Cubop. 
2. The powerful section work in his band inspired other big band leaders such as Stan Kenton to borrow elements of his music in their own work. 
3.  He made numerous recordings, and his 1975 album Oro, Incienso y Mirra with Dizzy Gillespie was nominated for a GRAMMY  and remains one of the acknowledged classics of AfroCuban Jazz recorded in the United States.   .  

In modern times, his son, Mario Grillo, carries on with a current version of the band.  You can learn more at their website, http://www.machitoorchestranyc.com/
The 75th Anniversary of the original orchestra will be coming up next year.   We salute this giant of the music on the one hundred and something-eth anniversary of his birth. 

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thursday, 25 july 2024, 12:04 am

TIMBALIVE: DEFINITELY BETTER THAN MEMOREX

First Midwestern US Appearance by Powerhouse Band

There is nothing quite like Timba live,  and Timbalive is quite an experience too.   When they performed in  Chicago, their first appearance in the area,  they played  like they had something to prove, and they were able to do just that.  There are reasons why this group is able  to perform with the likes of Mayito Rivera and Manolin, and we heard those reasons here.    
Click here to continue reading our concert review and view the photos from the performance. 

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thursday, 25 july 2024, 12:04 am

The Chicago International Salsa Congress - A Timbero's Perspective

Part I: Like Piñeiro Said, "Echale Salsita..."

Article and all photos by Bill Tilford -- All Rights Reserved

PRELUDIO As I type this, I can already hear the screams of some of my most hard-line Timbero friends and colleagues that I have committed the supreme blasphemy by writing an extended article here about a Salsa Congress, so please allow me to begin by addressing those dear friends. For quite some time now, I have been wandering about looking for insights into whether there are ways to effectively tackle the biggest challenge facing Timba music in the United States:  we as a community have basically failed to attract the levels of mass paying (that word "paying" is important) audiences that the music truly deserves, and at the very time when it is politically easier than it has ever been for bands to tour the United States from Cuba, the economic realities of the position of Timba music in the marketplace have slowed what could  be a flood of amazing bands touring the country to a relative trickle touring  primarily the East and West coasts.  Even in those places, the audience numbers have frequently failed to live up to initial expectations. What's more, many of the US-based bands that play Timba have either fallen upon hard times, adapted by playing more fusion and/or Salsa and/or survived by touring extensively out of the United States. There are a prosperous few, but they are exceptions that prove the rule. This problem is truly odd because much of the Salsa audience is already halfway home - many of the songs they listen to were written and originally performed in Cuba, and most of the most important roots of Salsa come from Cuban music..... click here to read the full article >>>

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