Latin American Guitar Music
The guitar has become inextricably woven into the soul of
Latin American music since its arrival from the Iberian Peninsula. From the
meditative vihuela tablatures to the gut-wrenching songs of gypsy cantaores,
the guitar personified aesthetic opposites, which played a key rôle in the
evolution of its sound in the Americas. European forms and dances were
transformed by the magic realism and inexhaustible angst of the New World into
a unique language full of verve, passion, defiance, pathos and ebullient
sensuality. Valse-Pasillo-Joropo, Milonga-Candombe-Tango...
Salsa-Merengue-Vallenato... Saudade-Samba- Bossa Nova...and so on. No one
collection could possibly represent the sheer breadth and variety of musical
forms we know today as Latin America. The music included here represents
contrasting styles from Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and a timeless ballad from
Cuba's Leo Brouwer.
Astor Piazzolla (1921-1992), the controversial pioneer of
the avant-garde Tango, transformed the music to instrumental high art. His
restless fusion of jazz, modern and traditional Tango yielded some of the most
sought-after compositions for arrangers and performers alike. I arranged this
version of La muerte del angel and Primavera portena for solo guitar from
printed chart editions and Piazzolla's 1973 recording.
The bewitching melancholy of the waltzes of Dilermando Reis
(1916-1977) is hard to resist on a first hearing. Se ela preguntar (If I should
ask her) and Promessa have become standards of Brazilian popular music. Unlike
the music of Gnatali, Gismonti or Pereira, Reis preferred the more traditional
Brazilian guitar style, full of tenderness and with a singular rubato.
Better known for his modern virtuosic solo guitar Sambas and
Chôros, Marta by Marco Pereira (b.1956) reveals an enchanting vulnerability
with its folding half-step harmonies and progressions.
The exceptional pianist Horacio Salgan became one of the
pioneers of the 'New Tango' during the 1960s. His music elevated traditional
Tango to solo and chamber music repertoire. This arrangement of Don Agustin
Bardi came from an old cassette recording which Jorge Morel transcribed by ear.
One of the outstanding singer/composers of the Tango's early
years, Angel Villoldo, composed his El Choclo around 1903 in the
restaurant where it was first played. Referred to as a Tango Criollo (Creole
Tango), El Choclo became a classic and sold over 30,000 printed copies. My
arrangement comes from a printed piano version of the original.
Born in Buenos Aires in 1957, the guitarist-composer Maximo
Diego Pujol creates music that blends old and new with cosmopolitan elegance
and exciting rhythmic urgency. His innate feel for the spirit of milonga can be
heard in much of his music. The haunting sadness of the simple architecture of
Stella australis contrasts with the complex and dynamic mood changes outlined
in the Elegia por la muerte de un tanguero (Elegy for the Death of a Tanguero),
a three-movement homage to Astor Piazzolla.
The admiration shown by Jorge Morel (b.1931) for traditional
American jazz is evident in much of his solo guitar music and orchestral
writing. His roots, however, are deeply embedded in the soul of milonga, and
his knowledge of Argentinian and South American popular style is tastefully
present through his arrangements and original compositions. Milonga del viento
(Milonga of the Wind) evokes nostalgic images through the unique "wind-chime"
effect of campanella fingerings on the guitar.
In sharp contrast to Morel's Milonga, the Uruguyan Abel
Carlevaro's Milonga oriental is a studied and driving bass-milonga with an
Oriental flavour.
Evocative of Gershwin's piano themes, Little Rhapsody is a
player's delight, complete with irresistible triple-meter themes, pseudo-jazz
progressions and idiomatic guitar riffs. The more quietly flowing lines of the
Danza in E minor take us back to a not-so-distant past of South America.
Un dia de noviembre (One Day in November) became an instant
hit with audiences and guitar enthusiasts around the world. With the exception
of its simple and heartfelt lyricism, this gently rocking and evocative ballad
is unlike most of Leo Brouwer's (b.1939) contemporary and rhythmically complex
music.
Ricardo Cobo