Showing posts with label Diana Arias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diana Arias. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2021

Joaquin Muro (feat. Camila Nebbia) - Contracara (November 26, 2021 ears & eyes Records)

NEW: 2nd album from trumpter/improviser Joaquin Muro in free setting feat. Camila Nebbia + more - ears & eyes Records - Nov. 26th

After releasing his first album as a leader, Joaquin Muro quickly returns with his second work: Contracara. It is presented as a B-side of his first album, Oxímoron. Recorded in the same session as the latter, the album has its roots in the free improvisation meetings Joaquin had with his friend and colleague Camila Nebbia (with a musical bond that goes back many years, having shared important projects such as the Juan Izkierdo Grupo and Richard Nant's La Big Nant) during the 2020 lockdown in Buenos Aires. Invited to record on one track of the first work, the original idea was to record two free improvisations that would serve as separators of the album's tracks. Having plenty of time in the studio, these sonic experimentations resulted in 7 tracks (3 as a duo and 4 with the full band) that ended up spontaneously becoming the material for a second album. 

The music of Contracara is presented as the complementary opposite of the music of Oxímoron, a very arranged album, with a lot of written passages and a high presence of counterpoint and irregular metrics as main compositional resources. In this case, the common thread of the album is free and spontaneous improvisation, a field in which Joaquin feels very comfortable and which is also a faithful reflection of his profile as an artist.

The soundscapes of Contracara, although very abstract, reflect images and moods representative of the uncertainty that was experienced both emotionally and artistically during the Covid-19 pandemic, it is an album of a dark and melancholic character, with some flashes of luminosity, and all the strength of spontaneous creation.

Finally, the title of this album has its origin in the concept of complementary opposition, being the music conceptually contrary to that of the first work but equally representative of the artist, it is presented as the other side of the same coin.
About the compositions:

Although the music of each track has its own character, the key element that defines this album is the concept of free improvisation and spontaneous creation.

The first track, Brugmansia Arborea (scientific name of the flower popularly known as floripondio) is a duet between Camila and Joaquin in which they explore from the timbre, with a wide use of extended techniques and with a quite psychedelic aesthetic, which could be framed within noise.

Then follows Sonar (la oscuridad del lecho marino), a track of dark character, whose title has its origin in the first notes of the piano, that refer to the sonority that emits a sonar device and that then develops slowly to show, from the abstraction, diverse imaginary landscapes of the marine bottom, lost objects of shipwrecks, shoals of fish and subaquatic mountain ranges. 

Nadie nos baila lo quitado is perhaps the most accessible track on the album, a frenetic uptempo.

Villa Pueyrredon is the second duet between Joaquin and Camila, which in opposition to the first one, here the exploration happens from the melody, to reflect landscapes of the neighborhood of which they were neighbors and even in which they developed meetings of improvisation to duet in the street.

Astenia is an introspective track, which refers to a journey through the subconscious and its depths, with an exploration also from the timbre, but now at a group level.

Passive Aggressive has a very obvious title and perhaps the most graphic and representative of all the tracks. The idea of this improvisation was that while Joaquin and Camila improvised as a duet, the rhythm section would intervene in an aggressive way, entering and then leaving again.

Bruxismo is the last duet and theme of the album, a short and intense track, whose title comes from the first notes, which refer to the sound of teeth clashing and scraping.

1. Brugmansia arborea 2:49
2. Sonar (la oscuridad del lecho marino) 5:35
3. Nadie nos baila lo quitado 4:41
4. Villa Pueyrredon 3:16
5. Astenia 4:46
6. Pasivo agresivo 3:49
7. Bruxismo 1:35

● Joaquin Muro - Trumpet
● Camila Nebbia - Tenor saxophone 
● Pía Hernandez - Piano 
● Diana Arias - Double bass
● Martín Freiberg - Drums

Recorded by Agustin Silberleib at Estudio Doctor F in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Mixed and mastered by Agustin Silberleib at Estudio Doctor F. in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Produced by Joaquin Muro
Original art by Juana Sallies
Album cover painting by Natalia Nicolau

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

El Devenir del Río - Invocación (2021 Ears & Eyes Records)

El devenir del Río is a group of women improvisers, composers, and artist friends. It was formed in 2017 and after several presentations in different spaces in Buenos Aires and festivals. Released their first album AMLA in 2018.

In 2018 they developed a new project that consisted of summoning other women to compose music especially for the group and its particular training (voice, tenor saxophone, piano, cello, and double bass). Thus, Invocación is the result of collective work between El Devenir del Río and other composers and improvisers, all of the owners of a vast and substantial journey in both disciplines: Paula Shocron and Jazmín Prodan from Argentina, Amanda Irrazabal (Chile), and Marilyn Crispell (US). The group experimented with different forms of approach with each one of the works, always opening the space to improvisation, allowing themselves to be traversed by the particularities of each music, and also allowing the personality of the group to be captured in each of the pieces.

It should be noted that this album won the second prize for Unpublished Popular Music in the jazz category of the National Fund for the Arts 2020. (Argentina)

The works of the composers invited to the project are: For Gareth poem by the American pianist Marilyn Crispell, La emancipación de la Rosa by the Argentine pianist Paula Shocron, Círculo Secreto by the Argentine singer Jazmín Prodan, Sin Coartar by the Chilean double bass player Amanda Irrazabal and The pieces that belong to the members of the group are: Caza de Brujas written by the Argentine pianist Pía Hernández, Jardín Incierto written by the Argentine saxophonist Camila Nebbia, Dilatar La Horas by the Argentine cellist Violeta García and Costurera written by the Colombian double bass player Diana Arias . 

1. Resonancias 01:20
2. Para Marilyn 03:02
3. Caza de Brujas 05:47
4. Costurera 05:25
5. Dilatar las horas 05:01
6. Jardín incierto 09:40
7. Sin coartar 06:24
8. Circulo secreto 05:47

Catu Hardoy - vocals
Camila Nebbia - tenor sax
Violeta García - cello
Pia Hernandez - piano
Diana Arias - double bass

Joaquin Muro - Oximoron (2021 Ears & Eyes Records)

Soon after a career of intense activity as a sideman in projects such as Richard Nant's Big Nant, Juan Izkierdo Grupo, and Juan Pablo Arredondo's octet, among others, and after finishing the Superior Technicature in Jazz at the Conservatorio Superior de Música Manuel de Falla, the young trumpet player, and composer Joaquín Muro release his first album as a leader: Oxímoron. For the recording of the same one, he summons the pianist and composer Pía Hernandez, the double-bassist Diana Arias, and the drummer Martín Freiberg. In addition, the album has the guest participation of saxophonist and composer Camila Nebbia, the multi-instrumentalist woodwind musician Patricio Bottcher, in this case playing Bass Clarinet and Soprano Sax, and the also multi-instrumentalist Pablo Quiñones, on the bass drum and percussion accessories.

Oxímoron's music has two clear lines of influences: on the one hand, from the compositional and arranging side, the influence of Guillermo Klein and Richard Nant is evident. The latter was Joaquín's teacher for more than 4 years, both in the instrument and in composition, and also director of the project he has been part of for more than 7 years: La big nant. On the other hand, from the timbral search with the instrument and the language of improvisation, in addition to the obvious influence of Nant, Joaquín's listening and following of the work of trumpet players and composers Jorge Vistel (Cuba) and Ambrose Akinmusire (USA) is evident.

The soundscapes of Oxímoron show the wide range of music that Joaquin has been listening to, studying, and playing over the years: modern jazz in irregular metrics, combined with Argentine folklore, free improvisation, and even the most classical jazz.

Finally, the title of the album is rooted in the incredible irony of launching the first album as a leader, a new group, and a solo career in the middle of a pandemic year, with all that this implies: the impossibility for musicians to get together, to play live, to see their possibilities of expressing and developing their art reduced to practically nothing, to achieve a project of this magnitude, with all the difficulties that this entails. This made that for Joaquín 2020 was the most difficult and at the same time, the best and most prolific year in his musical career (and surely for many other musicians as well): from seeing his career reduced to nothing to the formation of his first band with the recording of an album included make the timeline of this project a true oxymoron in his very own right.

1. Perro Siberiano 07:22
2. Venus en Escorpio 06:55
3. Raíces 06:44
4. La Tierra Colorada y las manos 07:47
5. La Septima 06:14
6. Yagua 06:31
7. Vidala para el velorio de angelito 11:44

Joaquin Muro - trumpet / compositions
Pía Hernandez - piano
Diana Arias - double bass
Martín Freiberg - drums

Guest musicians:
Camila Nebbia - tenor saxophone on “Venus en Escorpio”
Patricio Bottcher - bass clarinet & soprano saxophone on “La Tierra Colorada y Las Manos”
Pablo Quiñones - bombo leguero on “La Tierra Colorada y Las Manos” Y “La Séptima”

Recorded, mixed, and mastered by Agustin Silberleib at Estudio Doctor F. in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Produced by Joaquin Muro
Original art by Juana Sallies
Album cover photo by Florencia Finnegan