Albums Reviews-‘Familia: Tribute to Bebo & Chico,’ ‘Songs We Like,’ and ‘Puerto de Buenos Aires 1933’

Albums Reviews-‘Familia: Tribute to Bebo & Chico,’ ‘Songs We Like,’ and ‘Puerto de Buenos Aires 1933’
(Hazellrigg Brothers)
Barry Bassis
10/28/2017
Updated:
10/28/2017
Recent releases highlight jazz artists’ deep familial connections. Some celebrate their forebears and some present family members performing together.

Valdés and O’Farrill

On the double-CD set, “Familia: Tribute to Bebo & Chico” (on Motema), Arturo O’Farrill and Chucho Valdés pay tribute to their late fathers Arturo “Chico” O’Farrill (1921–2001) and Bebo Valdés (1918–2013). They represent two of the leading dynasties of Afro-Cuban jazz.
(Motema)
(Motema)

Chico and Bebo worked together at the Tropicana Club in Cuba (where Chico was the arranger for the house orchestra and Bebo was the pianist). Both men went into exile after the revolution, going separate ways (Chico came to the United States while Bebo moved to Sweden) but continuing as composers, arrangers, and bandleaders. Their pieces and arrangements were played by top American jazz artists, from Dizzy Gillespie to Count Basie and both men had late career resurgences, capped by Grammy wins and nominations and an appearance together in the 2000 documentary film “Calle 54.”

On the set, Chucho and Arturo even bring in their own talented children: pianist Leyanis Valdés, drummer Jessie Valdés, trumpeter Adam O’Farrill and drummer Zack O’Farrill.

The biggest surprise is a stunning guest spot by sitarist Anoushka Shankar, daughter of Ravi Shankar, on “Raja Ram.” This fits in with the family theme and the musical cross-pollination is successful.

The set contains one CD featuring the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra and the other the Third Generation Ensemble. The songs are a mix of classics by Bebo (“Ecuación” and “Con Poco Coco”) and Chico (“Pura Emoción” and “Pianitis”), plus originals by their sons and grandsons.

The Hazelrigg Brothers

Jazz is filled with many sibling acts, from the Anderson Twins to the Jensen Sisters and the Three Cohens. You can add to the list the Hazelrigg Brothers, who have just released their first album, “Songs We Like.” George plays piano and Geoff is a bassist and they are joined on the CD by drummer John O’Reilly Jr.

While their makeup suggests a traditional piano trio, their work sounds utterly fresh. First, instead of playing songs from what is known as the Great American songbook (pieces from the 1920’s to the 1950’s), they choose mostly later pieces that are new to the jazz canon. They also perform two classical pieces, a soulful version of Bela Bartok’s “Evening in the Country” and an energetic rendition of the baroque “Passacaglia” by Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer.

As with other important jazz artists, the Hazelriggs re-conceive each of the songs. Thus, pieces by Ian Anderson, Jimmy Page/Robert Plant and Walter Becker/Donald Fagen and others fit nicely into a jazz groove.

While the originals weren’t necessarily songs that meant anything special to me, these performances completely win me over. The CD, recorded in the brothers’ home studio, is also exquisitely engineered.

Guillermo Nojechowicz

The new album by Buenos Aires-born drummer/composer Guillermo Nojechowicz is a tribute of a different sort. “Puerto de Buenos Aires 1933” (on Zoho) is a musical recreation of his grandmother’s escape from Poland at the time of the rise of the Nazis and her safe arrival with Guillermo’s father in Argentina, where the family remained.
(Zoho)
(Zoho)

Nojechowicz had studied film scoring at Berklee College of Music and the album resembles a jazz movie score. The music is played by the El Eco ensemble featuring Argentinean bassist Fernando Huergo, Brazilian pianist Helio Alves, Italian saxophonist Marco Pignataro and New York Voices co-founder Kim Nazarian. Guest trumpeter Brian Lynch adds excitement to “Puerto de Buenos Aires,” “The Possibility of Change” and “Friday Night Mambo.” Italian accordionist Roberto Cassan brings a tango feeling to “Para Los Ninos” and “Europe 1932,” which transcends his own family’s situation to suggest the larger tragedy throughout the continent at the time.

Nazarian’s vocals are outstanding and Nojechowicz even sings on a couple of tracks. The only non-original piece is Hermeto Pascoal’s “Bebe” The album ends on a happy note with “Friday Night Mambo.”

“Puerto de Buenos Aires 1933” is an ambitious and powerful work.

Barry Bassis has been a music, theater, and travel writer for over a decade for various publications, including Epoch Times.
Barry has been a music, theater, and travel writer for over a decade for various publications, including Epoch Times. He is a voting member of the Drama Desk and the Outer Critics Circle, two organizations of theater critics that give awards at the end of each season. He has also been a member of NATJA (North American Travel Journalists Association)
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