Michel
Camilo & Tomatito – Spain Again
(Universal Music
Int’l) When
talents as formidable as Michel Camilo and Tomatito get
together to make music it is an event. These two distinct
voices from different musical worlds reunite on Spain Again,
a scintillating musical conversation between two masters.
Camilo, a brilliant pianist and prolific composer, is renowned
for combining rich jazz harmonies with the Caribbean flavors
and rhythms of his native Dominican Republic. Discovered
at an early age by Paco de Lucía, Tomatito is the
premier flamenco guitarist of his generation and has accompanied
Spain's greatest flamenco singers including the legendary
Camarón
de la Isla. Navigating the boundaries of jazz and flamenco,
Camilo and Tomatito create an experience that is both unique
and unforgettable.
It’s no exaggeration to say that
musically, Camilo and Tomatito come from two very different
worlds. Camilo, who grew up in the Dominican Republic but
has lived
in and around New York since 1979, is classically-trained
as well as a straight-ahead acoustic jazz pianist who incorporates
a wide variety of Latin and Caribbean elements and has
cited Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, Oscar Peterson, Bill
Evans, and Art Tatum as some of his main influences. Tomatito,
however, lives in his native Spain, where he was born into
a family
of Gypsies and is recognized as one of the country’s
top flamenco guitarists.
But as different as their backgrounds
are, Michel Camilo and Tomatito also have a lot in common.
Camilo loves flamenco,
and Tomatito is a major jazz enthusiast. Both appreciate
a variety of Latin music—Camilo’s work, in
fact, has underscored his love of Afro-Caribbean music,
as well as Spanish flamenco, Afro-Cuban salsa, Dominican
merengue, Brazilian samba, and Argentinean tango.
Camilo
and Tomatito have known each other since the early 1990s,
when they met in Spain at a recording session for the nuevo
flamenco group Ketama. They quickly became friends, but
didn’t
start performing together until 1997, when the Barcelona
Jazz Festival asked them to perform a duet tribute to the
late Spanish hard bop pianist Tete Montoliu. With over
40 concerts performed together by the summer of 1999, a
studio
album was inevitable.
So, in August of that year, they traveled
to a studio in Stamford, Connecticut to record Spain.
Putting these two instrumentalists together created an
intimate
duo that has been an exciting experience for both of
them. Throughout the album, Camilo and Tomatito enjoyed
an undeniably
strong rapport.
The New York Times critic Jon Pareles
wrote of their Carnegie Hall performance: “the two
musicians set out luminous melodies and surrounded them
with arpeggios
or darting guitar lines, so that each phrase spawned ripples
like a pebble dropped in a still pond. Together the duo
found an elusive grace.”
In July 2005 the North Sea
Jazz Festival in The Netherlands invited them to perform
an exclusive sold-out concert and after this wonderful
reunion they both agreed it was time to explore the second
chapter of their shared musical adventure. It was their
close friend and filmmaker Fernando Trueba who gave them
the title for the new album: Spain Again.
Spain Again marks
the reunion of two good friends who decided to play
together, see how far they could take it and see how much
they
could discover about themselves. The new album includes
their original compositions, a Tribute to Piazzolla, jazz
standards and a special collaboration
with award-winning
singer/songwriter Juan Luis Guerra.
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