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Saturday (tomorrow, 16) at Lehman Center, Bronx: Eddie Palmieri and Friends, plus (quoting the propaganda): "Del Caribe Latin Jazz All Stars, led by Cuban pianist, master arranger and composer Emilio Morales, musical director and tres guitarist Nelson Gonzalez with musicians: Johnny Rodriguez, Ruben Rodriguez, George Delgado, Orestes Vilato, Ricardo Pons, and special invited guest artist, Giovanni Hidalgo." This is a chance to hear two great pianists. You know Eddie Palmieri, and you might know Havana piano hero Emilio Morales, but if you don't, you should. This band of Emilio + Nelson + the cats played Monday night in a tribute to Palmieri at the Bronx Museum, and it's a treat.
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 September 2017 05:06 (six years ago) link
seven months pass...
six months pass...
wow, he's on a roll after sabiduria just last year and full circle earlier this year
this one is way more straight-ahead than those other ones, though
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Saturday, 8 December 2018 01:45 (five years ago) link
He's got an app for music students to use now too---
Palmieri Salsa Jams is billed as “the world’s first interactive salsa music app.”
Available through noted jazz trumpeter Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah’s Stretch Music App platform, Salsa Jams enables students to read sheet music or play along by ear for every song on Palmieri’s “Full Circle” album. They can also mute or fade out altogether any instrument, so that they can play that instrumental part, as well as control the tempo, loop rhythms and melodies, and more.
‘I put salsa on my spaghetti, baby!’
“If students mean anything to you, you want to set them on the right track,” said Palmieri, who — at 81 — is likely the most senior Latin music legend to release an app of any kind, let alone a salsa app.
Never mind that this bearded composer and band leader snorts with derision at the mere mention of the word salsa, which came to the fore in New York in the 1960s. He regards the commercial tag placed on this Cuban-inspired Latin dance music hybrid as simplistic and misleading.
“Fania Records came up with name ‘salsa’ and it’s a complete misnomer,” charged Palmieri, who in 1962 released his debut solo album, “La Perfecta,” on Fania and was later featured on the first Fania All-Stars album.
“Like my great friend, Tito Puente, used to say: ‘I put salsa on my spaghetti, baby!’ It (salsa) comes from rumba, guaracha, danzón, cha-cha, mambo, guaguancó, changüí. They all have their proper names, but we lump it under one name: ‘salsa’.”
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/music/sd-et-music-eddie-palmieri-interview-20181118-story.html
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 8 December 2018 21:15 (five years ago) link
one year passes...