Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Part 2: We are Proud


The bus ride from Lima to Arequipa, Peru's second largest city, took 14 hours. I sat on the second level of the double decker bus, in the front row. The way the windshield continued to the top of the bus and connected to the side window created a completely open view that was both terrifying and amazing, the sun rose over jagged rock, specked with gigantic cacti sloping into the pacific ocean, we drove along narrow winding highway, teetering over the edge of sand covered cliffs, crossing the yellow line to pass a truck and ducking back just in time to miss an oncoming bus on its way to Chincha, the door separating the bus driver from the passengers is opened and you can see the people standing in the isle, into the desolate desert , to the "White City" at the foothills of El Misti Volcano. The man sitting next to me worked for a gold company. He used to work in the mines near Arequipa. He told me how the gold was processed from rock to dust to solid brick. He told me that he played guitar and how the sound of the guitar would carry down in the mine. It was his favorite place to play. We watched a promotional video. A short video about Peru, its people, places, and culture, and its Pride. When it was done my new friend turned to me and said, "Somos Orgullosos." We are proud.

Living in Peru you don't need a video to tell you how proud Peruvians are, but an experience like this puts Peruvian pride into perspective, and its only too fitting that this happened on the way to Arequipa a city and region that views itself as its own sovereign nation and has tried in the past to secede. Here pride is rooted in the past, in the time before Spanish colonization. There is no better example of this than music. When the Spanish conquered the Incas and colonized Peru they banned all music and tried to destroy all native instruments, forcing indigenous peoples to give up all aspects of their culture. Today much of the music in Peru is an ode to times past, and this ode is not in the lyrics, it is in the instruments themselves. It is in the flutes and pan pipes that the Incas played years ago along the Inca trail and are the basis for Andean pop today. Not only are they a reminder of the past but they are also an up yours to their Spanish conquerers. Even in the coastal, afro-Peruvian music, which has a much heavier guitar influence than the music of the Andes the use of the cajon, an instrument native to Peru, is a stand against occupation.

Zapateo is based on Spanish dance styles but it is the Peruvian influences that makes it so unique. Here is the last part of the Zapateo-off. This part is free style.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Part 1: The Floating Islands of Lake Titicaca



Centuries ago, before Francisco Pizarro defeated the Inca's and claimed Peru as a Spanish colony, the people of Desaguadero, a town split down the middle by the Peru-Bolivia border, were chased from their land by the Incas. Some of the citizens of Desaguadero fled deep into the Bolivian Jungle. The others into Lake Titicaca where they discovered floating reed beds. Having no where else to go the refugees inhabited these small islands, chopping down the reeds and tethering the islands into the ground and to each other so they would not float away. Today there are over twenty of islands that are still inhabited, and while some aspects of life on the islands have not changed throughout history, reeds are eaten and dried to make boats, beds, and houses, tourism to some of the islands that began in the 1940's and commerce brought in by family who work in Puno has changed a few things, don't be surprised if while on a tour of the islands you see solar panels and a tv.


More Zapateo. This is the first clip of two from a Zapateo-off. The first part is the more formal style where the dancers have to perform a dance with a tie-in. This clip is great. Two zapateo world champions go head-to-head.



*one more thing Saponegro Records now has a myspace page. Check it out






Monday, May 28, 2007

I'm back





I am finally back from my three week trip around Peru that took me to Arequipa and the Colca Canyon, Puno and Lake Titicaca, and down the Manu River into the rainforest.

The Manu Biosphere Reserve is one of the most biologically diverse places on earth. Home to over 1,000 species of birds, 300 species of trees, and many other lifeforms including jaguars, and the endnagered giant otter.


I thought that I would continue posting the Zapateo videos that I had up before my trip. These two videos are a more frestyle form of Zapateo. In the first video I posted Huevito started and ended the dance with the same tie-in. There is no tie-in in this style and the dancers are also free to use their hands



Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Zapateo

Today I am posting the first of many Zapateo videos I have from world Zapateo champion, Freddy "Huevito" Lobaton's master class at the Lima Jazz Festival. Zapateo is afro-peruvian tap dancing. This video shows a more formal style of Zapateo. Notice how Huevito starts and ends the dance the same way.


Friday, April 20, 2007

Well, it's been a quiet week in Lima. I've been recovering from last week's Jazz Festival and my amazing trip to Cusco and Machu Picchu the week before, and catching up on my World Basketball and Mexican League Baseball. I am posting two more videos from the Ndugu Chancler Afro-Peru Jazz Project. Both of these videos are from the same concert as the one I posted yesterday. The first video is just an amazing solo by Ndugu (watch Gabriel Alegria's reaction when he steps in). The first half of the second video is a Zapateo solo by Huevito Lobaton (I will be writing about Zapateo much more next week when I post videos from Huevito's master class at the festival) starting at about 1:35 Ndugu comes in for another great solo. These videos are the same quality as yesterday's. Sorry. But, still watch them to hear these guys play. I am trying to get more complete video of the concerts and they will be posted as soon as I do.



Thursday, April 19, 2007

Lima Jazz Festival


Last week was the Lima Jazz Festival, a week long festival, with master classes during the day and concerts at night. Artists participating in the festival included Joe Magnerelli, whose work on "Time was Time" with the Ray Barretto "New Sextet was nominated for a grammy, John Thomas, who has played trumpet for Count Basie, Chick Corea, and for the Academy Award Winning film Ray, Jazz Vocalist, Kathleen Grace, who was a finalist in the 2007 International Songwriting Competition for her song "Songbird." The Festival also featured a brazilian jazz trio, a Colombian jazz group, and many more. The highlight of the festival was the Ndugu Chancler Jazz Peru Project, where three time grammy nominated drummer, producer, composer, and clinician, Ndugu Chancler, who has performed and recorded with Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, George Duke, Patrice Rushen, Hubert Laws, The Crusaders, Frank Sinatra, Weather Report, Lionel Richie, Kenny Rogers, Thelonious Monk, John Lee Hooker, and was the drummer for the Michael Jackson "thriller" album, teamed up with the Gabriel Alegria Sextet, and the Seattle Women's Jazz Orchestra, to perform the songs from the Gabreil Alegria's, Saponegro Album, Nuevo Mundo. It was really a great show to see. I am posting video footage of a partial clip of the Ndugu Chancler Jazz Project performance at Satchmo's on Ave. La Paz in miraflores. The camera is a little shaky but its great audio.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Perfect day on the Pacific


El Mar-Gabriel Alegria, Nuveo Mundo

Listen to Gabriel Alegria's El Mar and you're there. On a surfboard in the Pacific Ccean, staring out into the endless horizon. Listen to this song and the waves wash around you. Behind you 500ft up a cliff the 9million people of Lima worry about life, while you watch cormorants dip their small shiny black heads into the water and pop right back up all the while slowly sinking as their feathers soak up the salty water. A pelican smacks the water with reckless abandon, resurfacing with a fish wriggling in its giant gullet. Flocks of seagulls fly, lazily, overhead. The trumpet of Gabriel Alegria and the tenor sax of Laurandrea Leguia start this perfect day. Waves crawl up on the beach. The ground, covered in smooth round stones, lightly vibrates as pebbles rub against each other on the waters' retreat. Hugo Alcazar's cymbol lightly rings. Freddy "Huevito"Lobaton climbs up the cajon, and you sit on your board, wading through the bass and the guitar, Joseha Oetz and "Jocho" Velazquez. The red sun slowly sets on the Pacific, El Mar.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Escucha Jazz


Ave. La Paz, Miraflores


Every day I walk down my street lined with jewelry and antique stores and I see Escucha Jazz , a commandment, spray painted in black letters across a faded yellow piece of cement seperating a silver shop, which both buys and sells silver, from a narrow five story apartment building, and I can't help but smile. Escucha Jazz, Listen to Jazz.

Footprints & Vivencias- Ernesto Hermoza & Manuel Carranza, Vivencias 2003

While Gabriel Alegria was on tour I was focusing only on his music, but now that the tour is over I would like to introduce you to some other Saponegro Artists. Ernesto Hermoza is an incredible flamenco guitarist who plays afro-peruvian jazz. He recorded Vivencias with Flautist and long-time friend Manuel Carranza. Footprints and Vivencias are incredible examples of Ernestos use of both Spanish and Afro-peruvian styles in jazz. In His adaptation of Wayne Shorter's Footprints, Ernesto plays bulerias, a Spanish style incorporated in both his guitar playing and the use of clapping throughout the song. The best example of this style starts at 00:43 where Ernesto has an incredible solo that lasts until 2:15. The cajon, which was became common in Spanish music after Paco de Lucia's visit to Peru in 1985, adds a taste of Afro-Peruvianess to the song. (I mention the cajon all the time on this blog but I have never fully explained it. The cajon is a hollow wooden box with a hole in it. It was developed in coastal peru by the Slaves working in the Spanish Colony. The slaves would sit on top of the crates they filled with the fruit and cotton they picked, and drum. This music was not only a way of survival and story telling. It was also a clear sign of protest. The Spanish banned music in heavily African and Indigenous populated areas, but still the cajon is part of peru today.) Vivencias, the albums title track, features Ernesto and Manuel playing both the Spanish bulerias style and the Peruvian style marinera limena, while Marco Oliveros plays the Udu.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007


For John Coltrane-Gabriel Alegria, Un Rezo
Piano De Patio-Gabriel Alegria, Nuevo Mundo


The Gabriel Alegria Sextet finished up their US tour over the weekend with a final performance at the REDCAT (Roy and Edna Disney/Calarts Theater) in LA, setting a redcat record for records sold in the process. This tour was a huge success, recieving terriffic feedback at every stop.

"Peruvian trumpeter Gabriel Alegría’s fine Nuevo Mundo mixes straight-ahead jazz and subtle Afro-Peruvian polyrhythms (think classic Miles and Susanna Baca’s criollo sounds). .. a fascinating glimpse into how jazz is fusing with regional music around the world."
-Brick Whal, LA Weekly

"Smoldering jazz is kicked up with the intoxicating polyrhythms of coastal Peru as trumpeter and composer Gabriel Alegría continues to chart a fresh new idiom. Combining his own distinctive approach to jazz trumpet with the rich heritage of Afro-Peruvian music, Alegría is joined by saxophonist Laurandrea Leguía, guitarist Jocho Velazquez, bassist Joscha Oetz, drummer Hugo Alcázar and percussionist Freddy “Huevito” Lobatón—who plays traditional Afro-Peruvian instruments such as cajón (box drum) and quijada (jawbone) and adds spectacular passages of zapateo criollo tap dancing. This performance, the group's only West Coast appearance in 2007, features music from Alegría's latest recording, Nuevo Mundo."
-Redcat Theater


"Alegria combines his personal approach to American jazz with a passionate interest and careful study of the music of black coastal Peru. He has contributed a unique concept by incorporating and exploring the common African roots found in both styles."
-

-Keith I. Marszalek NOLA.com



"So this is what jazz fusion from Peru sounds like... ...and I'm very impressed. Tonight I saw Gabriel Alegria Afro-Peruvian Sextet perform at the REDCAT theater in LA. I don't know diddly nor squat about jazz, and everything I know about Peru I learned from nature documentaries on public television and a few local new age Andean and/or Incan musical groups that perform in Montrose and Burbank at the arts festivals, so this was a very welcome eye- and ear-opener. :-) http://www.gabrielalegria.com/ has all sorts of niftiness, including information about two summer tours in July and August where, rather than the musicians touring the US to come to you, you go to Peru to tour with the musicians, seeing all sorts of local stuff and incredible sights, good food and wonderful music, putting the band's own music in broader and more in-depth context. It looks like fabulous fun and if I had a spare ten days off work and a couple thousand dollars, it sounds like it would be an amazing time. I bought two CDs at the show, but you can preview/listen (and download/buy for $1) songs here. The entire sextet looked like they were having a great time, and I particularly enjoyed the saxophist... *consults program* ...Laurandrea Leguia and the astonishing percussionist Freddy "Huevito" Lobaton. The whole group was just delightful."



Thursday, March 8, 2007


Saponegro Records is in the process of completing a new album from it's newest artist Claudio Arbañil. Originally from Argentina, Claudio has traveled all over the world playing his guitar. His music style incorporates Argentinian as well as Peruvian styles with jazz. In the next few days Saponegro will be posting Todos Estos Años (all these years), an album made in 2001, on the website and Claudio is currently recording an album in the Saponegro studios that should be done within the month. I have sat in on some of the recording and the album should be great.

I am posting two videos today. One, is behind the scenes footage of the Gabriel Alegria Tour that Gabriel sent to me from Hampton, Virginia. The second, also from the tour, is one of Huevito's cajita solos. The cajita is a great, unique sounding instrument, and Huevito is a master.



Monday, February 26, 2007

Don Porfirio's

Peña Don Porfirio Calle Manuel Segura 115 Barranco, Lima, Peru

On Friday night I went to Peña Don Porfirio. Originally, peñas were held in the household and were a time for for family and friends to be together and enjoy traditional Afro-Peruvian or Criollo music. Don Porfirio's is one of the best, most authentic peñas in Lima, that is open to the public. It is a great place to go and really enjoy true Afro-Peruvian music.

Zapateo dancing is one of the styles of dancing associated with criollo music. With both Peruvian and African influences this style of tap dancing is really incredible to watch. In Peru there are yearly zapateo festivals and contests. Freddy "Huevito" Lobaton is a world zapateo champion.

Huevito's Zapateo at Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas during Gabriel Alegria Tour

Friday, February 23, 2007



I got this video from Gabriel Alegria yesterday. This video chronicles the Gabriel Alegria Sextet on days 4,5,and 6 of their tour. A behind the scenes look at life on the road including clips from master classes and personal anecdotes about teacher,poet, musician, and pioneer for Peruvian women's rights and the rights of the black and indigenous people of Peru, Victoria Santa Cruz. There is great footage of Huevito playing the cajita. The song that you hear some of at the end of the video is El Sur. All of Gabriel's CD can be downloaded at Saponegro Records.

Monday, February 19, 2007


Going through the city of Lima you will see ads all over the place, on walls, in the streets, on signs, and even on mountains. Not only do these mountains accentuate the vastness of this sprawling, seemingly endless city, but they also serve as terrific man made billboards. In this case as an advertisement for a political candidate in the November elections.







This video is a February 11, 2007 performance of the Gabriel Alegria Sextet in Rockville, Maryland. Starting at 1:25 there is an incredible cajon solo by Freddy "Huevito" Lobaton that lasts almost one minute. In the solo Huevito uses many techniques and at 2:30 you can see how he slides his foot up and down the cajon to change its pitch. From the solo the sextet breaks into a jazz song with a very typical Afro-Peruvian Festejo beat. At 3:58 Laurnadrea Leguia has an amazing sax solo. The last song of the show 5:50 is really the essence of Afro-Peruvian jazz. I will be posting more videos from the tour as they come in.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Finally Some Music!

I have found a solution for those who, like me, are unfortunate enough to be alone on Valentines Day, a day, or more like a day and the week leading up to that day, where you are constantly forced to ask the question "What about me?" Rather than binging on those heart shaped candies that have "be mine" inscribed on them and taste suspiciously like the piece of chalk you were dared to eat in the second grade, come to Peru and celebrate friendship day. Celebrated alongside Valentines Day, Friendship Day gives everyone a chance to celebrate, to be part of the fun. So, Happy Valentines and Friendship Day to everyone.

Now to the music. I couldn't be happier in Peru right now. I've celebrated friendship day, I'm hearing incredible music, and I am missing a brutal winter at home in the US. It's summer in Peru right now and I thought I'd give everyone a chance to warm up a little bit. Listen to these two songs and you're in Lima relaxing, sipping on an Inca Kola or pisco sour on a warm summer day.
Summertime and El Norte by Gabriel Alegria from the CD Nuevo Mundo

Friday, February 9, 2007

Russel Ferrante's Nuevo Mundo Solo




Here is pianist Russell Ferrante's solo on Hijas del Sol, a song on Gabriel Alegria's CD Nuevo Mundo. Bobby Shew is the man sitting in the background. This video was made during a recording session at Stagg St. Studios in LA. To download all of Hijas Del Sol go to Saponegro.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Interview not Aired until tomorrow

I just wanted to notify everyone that Gabriel Alegria's Univision interview will not be aired until tomorrow Friday at 6:30 pm est I changed the date on my previous posts but I wanted to make sure nobody misses this interview. Sorry for the confusion I didn't realize that univision airs their interviews a day after they are recorded.

New Saponegro Artist


First of all I want to remind everyone that Friday at 6:30pm est Gabriel Alegria will be on Univision. It will be something you won't want to miss.

I met Ernesto Hermoza, Saponegros Newest artist, today, and I got a chance to hear his CD. It's really cool! Ernesto is an incredible Spanish style guitarist who plays jazz songs, and incorporates Afro-Peruvian percussive beats from the cajon, cajita, and quijada. It is incredible to hear the blend of these three distinct musical styles come together and form something totally unique. Ernesto signed yesterday and he should start recording soon, so keep your eyes open for any update.

I have posted a video on youtube.com of yellowjacket's pianist Russell Ferrante's solo on Gabriel Alegria's Nuevo Mundo CD. The video was made during a recording session LA's famous Stagg St. Studios. Both Gabriel and Bobby Shew are in the background of the video and the solo is amazing. Click here to go to youtube to see the video.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Saponegro does Univision!


Gabriel Alegria will perform with his sextet live on Univision, Friday February 9, in New York City at 6:30pm est. Univision is the world's largest spanish speaking television network. Experience the magic of Afro-peruvian jazz first hand and get a free preview of Gabriel's upcoming tour and newely released cd. You won't want to miss it! Your first chance to actually see afro-peruvian music! ( Don't worry I am in the process of collecting media files to post on the blog.) A taste of Peru with pecussionist and world zapateo (afro-peruvian tap dancing) champion Freddy "huevito" Lobaton, Joscha Oetz (bass), Laurandrea Leguia (sax), Hugo Alcazar (arguably Peru's finest percussionist), and Gabriel. A taste you will never forget.

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Creatividad Peruana

Inca Kola is the world's only national drink that sells more than coca-cola. It is perfect alongside a Peruvian ceviche or chifa, Peru's delicious take on Chinese food. Embracing ancient cultural heritage in a glass bottle, this golden, bubble gum flavored beverage is, much like Peru's music, an emblem of creativity. Creativity bouncing off the afro-peruvian percussion of the cajon, a hollow wooden box, and the quijada, the jawbone of an ass. Afro-Peruvian music and Inca Kola, What a good Idea!

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Grammy Nominated Musician Bobby Shew Introduces Saponegro's feature Artist Gabriel Alegria and his new album Nuevo Mundo


Here is an excerpt of Bobby Shew's interview. The whole thing can be found at Saponegro Records.

"Gabriel and his group are opening new doors musically for us all. The combination of these native rhythms with American jazz and latin traditions will in time prove to have been an important step forward in crossing cultural lines and mixing them in a very cohesive way. We
Americans are once again blessed by yet another South American musical gift!
I'm honored and thrilled to have been a part of its production. Let's all spread the word to our fellow musicians and, It needs to get heard!"


Bobby Shew
Grammy Nominated Jazz Trumpet Artist

Friday, January 26, 2007

Gabriel Alegria Nuevo Mundo USA Tour 2007 Full Schedule

February 9 Zimmerli Art Museum Highland Park, NJ
February 10 Millersville University Millersville, PA
February 11 Montgomery College Theater Arts Rockville, MD
February 12 Silas Wood Center Huntington Station, NY
February 13 Stimson Middle School Huntington Station, NY
February 14 Walt Whitman High School Huntington Station, NY
February 15 Garfield High School Woodbridge, Va
February 16 Georgetown University Washington, DC
February 17 Hampton University Hampton, VA
February 19 Amarillo College Amarillo, TX
February 20 Rockwall School of Music Dallas, TX
February 21 Diaz Music Institute Houston, TX
February 22 Stephen F. Austin State University Nacogdoches, TX
February 23 McNeese State University Lake Charles, LA
February 24 McNeese State University Lake Charles, LA
February 26 Lake Charles Schools Lake Charles, LA
February 27 Lake Charles Schools Lake Charles, LA
February 28 Snug Harbor New Orleans,LA
March 1 Snug Harbor New Orlean, LA
March 2 Northern Illinois University DeKalb, IL
March 3 Northern Illinois University DeKalb, IL
March 6 USC/Calabasas HS Los Angeles, CA
March 7 Walt Disney Concert Hall-Red Cat Los Angeles, CA

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Saponegro Records' sponsors Gabriel Alegria Nuevo Mundo USA Tour

Afro-Peruvian Jazz musician Gabriel Alegria's 2007 tour kicks off on February 9th at the Zimmerli Art Museum in Highland Park, NJ.
Check out Gabriel's website at www.gabrielalegria.com