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Miguel Zenon: Jibaro
Jibaro consists of ten original compositions by the young Puerto Rican alto saxophonist Miguel Zenón. The session's inspiration comes from the music of jibarosPuerto Rican peasantsbut there's nothing simplistic about the material Zenón has penned for his quartet, which includes pianist Luis Perdomo, bassist Hans Glawischnig, and drummer Antonio Sánchez.
The forms of Zenón's compositions tend to be complex, and it's not apparent at first listen how they link directly to the original music. The style of Jibaro, in other words, is contemporary, mainstream jazz first, and not folk music given a jazz dressing. Zenón has acknowledged that sometimes he writes music that's "too difficult to play," and the complexity can go both ways: at times it yields memorable passages and at others it gets in the way of giving the listener something to latch onto.
Listeners with stamina will be paid off by the final two tracks, the ballad "Mariandá" and the title track, both excellent compositions with strong statements from Zenón and pianist Perdomo. As a player, Zenón often favors short, punctuated statements rather than long, lyrical lines, though he's certainly versatile. Perdomo peppers the arrangements with Latin piano vamps, but that's not the predominant flavor here.
Zenón is excellent on his instrument, shows a lot of promise as a composer, and his music on Jibaro is at its best when it's not afraid to be common.
The forms of Zenón's compositions tend to be complex, and it's not apparent at first listen how they link directly to the original music. The style of Jibaro, in other words, is contemporary, mainstream jazz first, and not folk music given a jazz dressing. Zenón has acknowledged that sometimes he writes music that's "too difficult to play," and the complexity can go both ways: at times it yields memorable passages and at others it gets in the way of giving the listener something to latch onto.
Listeners with stamina will be paid off by the final two tracks, the ballad "Mariandá" and the title track, both excellent compositions with strong statements from Zenón and pianist Perdomo. As a player, Zenón often favors short, punctuated statements rather than long, lyrical lines, though he's certainly versatile. Perdomo peppers the arrangements with Latin piano vamps, but that's not the predominant flavor here.
Zenón is excellent on his instrument, shows a lot of promise as a composer, and his music on Jibaro is at its best when it's not afraid to be common.
Track Listing
Seis Cinco; Fajarde; Punto Cubano; Aguinaldo; Chorreao; Enramada; Villar; Llanera; Mariand; J.
Personnel
Album information
Title: Jibaro | Year Released: 2005 | Record Label: Marsalis Music
Comments
About Miguel Zenon
Instrument: Saxophone, alto
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